What We So Proudly Hail
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Original LP album: 1950
| What So Proudly We Hail | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compilation album by | ||||
| Released | Original 78 rpm album: 1946 Original LP album: 1950 | |||
| Recorded | 1939, 1940 | |||
| Genre | Popular, patriotic | |||
| Length | 16:10 | |||
| Label | Decca | |||
| Bing Crosby chronology | ||||
| ||||
What So Proudly We Hail is a compilation album of phonograph records by Bing Crosby released in 1946 featuring songs that were sung by Crosby in an American-type patriotic style. This album featured Bing singing patriotic songs such as: "Ballad for Americans", "God Bless America" and "The Star-Spangled Banner". The songs were later presented in a 33 1/3 rpm split set with The Man Without a Country.
Crosby did not approach the project lightly. He studied the work before the session, and his concentration in the studio was intense. Usually, Crosby would record up to five tunes in two hours or so, rarely taking more than two takes, but with "Ballad for Americans", he devoted an hour to each of the four segments. New York Post critic Michael Levin wrote:
- This is the finest recorded performance Bing had done to date and shows that in the last few years he has gone beyond binging and has really learned how to sing.
Levin made a comparison with Paul Robeson’s Victor set that would have pleased Decca chief Jack Kapp’s team:
- For all of Robeson’s magnificent voice, we prefer the Crosby version. The recording is better, the orchestration is better, and the chorus is better trained.[1]