Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Joni James

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Birth name
  
Joan Carmella Babbo

Name
  
Joni James

Years active
  
1952–1964I be

Role
  
Singer


Labels
  
Genres
  
Traditional pop music

Website
  
Official site

Record label
  
MGM Records

Joni James Joni James LP Cover Art


Born
  
September 22, 1930 (age 93) Chicago, Illinois, U.S. (
1930-09-22
)

Albums
  
100 Strings and Joni, Merry Christmas From Joni

Nominations
  
NME Award for Favourite US Female Singer

Similar People
  
Kitty Kallen, Kay Starr, Patti Page, Julie London, Billie Holiday

i can t help it if i m still in love with you joni james


Joni James (born Joan Carmella Babbo, September 22, 1930, Chicago, Illinois) is an American singer of traditional pop music.

Contents

Joni James httpsiytimgcomviFMKKldTYv2Ymaxresdefaultjpg

Joni james when we come of age 1954


Biography

Joni James Joni James Biography Albums amp Streaming Radio AllMusic

Joan Carmella Babbo was born to an Italian-American family in Chicago, one of six children supported by her widowed mother. As an adolescent, she studied drama and ballet, and on graduating from Bowen High School, located in the South Chicago neighborhood, went with a local dance group on a tour of Canada. She then took a job as a chorus girl in the Edgewater Beach Hotel in Chicago.

Joni James When I Fall in Love Joni James Songs Reviews

After doing a fill-in in Indiana, she decided to pursue a singing career. Some executives at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) spotted her in a television commercial, and she was signed by MGM in 1952. Her first hit, "Why Don't You Believe Me?" sold over two million copies. She had a number of hits following that one, including "Your Cheatin' Heart" (a cover of Hank Williams' hit) and "Have You Heard?".

Joni James httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons44

She was the first American to record at London's Abbey Road Studios, and recorded five albums there. She was also very popular across parts of the Asia-Pacific region, particularly in the Philippines where she performed at Manila's now defunct EM Club in 1957. She also scored a big hit in Manila with Filipino composer Salvador Asuncion's work entitled "In Despair."

Joni James Joni James Hollywood Star Walk Los Angeles Times

James had seven Top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. "Why Don't You Believe Me?" (#1 in 1952) "Have You Heard?" (#4 in 1953) "Your Cheatin' Heart" (#2 in 1953) "Almost Always" (#9 in 1953) "My Love, My Love" (#8 in 1953) "How Important Can It Be?" (#2 in 1955) and "You Are My Love" (#6 in 1955) as well as sixteen other Top 40 hits from 1952 to 1961. She has sold more than 100 million records and recorded more than 25 albums.

Joni James Joni James In the Still of the Night Album Nostalgia and Now

James married composer-conductor Tony Acquaviva at St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City in 1956. In 1964 she retired from the music industry in part because Acquaviva was in bad health and needed her attention. She cared for him until his death in 1986.

Joni James Interview With Joni James

In 1986 she met, and on October 5, 1997, she married retired Air Force General Bernard Adolph Schriever, 20 years her senior, the leader of the crash program that developed U.S. ballistic missiles — both ICBMs and IRBMs in 1953–1962. They honeymooned in France and the Greek Isles, then took up residence in Schriever's home in northwest Washington, D.C. Schriever died on June 20, 2005, at the age of 94.

For many years she was out of the public eye, but began touring again in the mid-1990s some years after she was widowed, performing memorable concerts at New York's Town Hall, Carnegie Hall and Avery Fisher Hall.

In October 2001, just a few weeks after 9/11, she appeared at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia, accompanied by the Count Basie orchestra. The streets of the city were still lined with armed soldiers, and she was a guest of honor at the American Film Institute's Life Achievement Tribute to Barbra Streisand. With her renewed popularity, nearly her entire body of work was released on the Capitol-EMI, DRG and Taragon labels under her personal supervision and in 2000 she released a brand-new recording, "Latest and Greatest".

For her contributions to the entertainment industry, James has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Albums

  • "Let There Be Love" MGM (1954)
  • "Joni James' "Award Winning Album"" MGM 3346 (1954)
  • "Little Girl Blue" MGM (1955)
  • "When I Fall in Love" MGM (1955)
  • "In the Still of the Night" MGM (1956)
  • "Songs by Victor Young and Songs by Frank Loesser" MGM (1956) – later reissued as "My Foolish Heart"
  • "Merry Christmas from Joni" MGM (1956)
  • "Give Us This Day" (Songs of Inspiration) MGM (1957)
  • "Sings Songs by Jerome Kern and Songs by Harry Warren" MGM (1957)
  • "Among My Souvenirs" MGM (1958)
  • "Je T'aime... I Love You" MGM (1958)
  • "Songs of Hank Williams" MGM (1959)
  • "Joni Swings Sweet" MGM (1959)
  • "Joni Sings Irish Favo(u)rites" MGM (1959)
  • "100 Strings and Joni" MGM 3755 (1959)
  • "Joni at Carnegie Hall" MGM (1960)
  • "I'm In the Mood for Love" MGM (1960)
  • "100 Strings & Joni In Hollywood" MGM (1960) – also known as "Joni Sings Hollywood"
  • "One Hundred Voices... One Hundred Strings & Joni" MGM (1960) – also stylized as "100 Voices, 100 Strings & Joni"
  • "100 Strings & Joni On Broadway" MGM (1960)
  • "The Mood is Blue" MGM (1961)
  • "The Mood is Romance" MGM (1961)
  • "The Mood is Swinging" MGM (1961)
  • "Folk Songs by Joni James" MGM (1961) – also known as "Joni Sings Folksongs"
  • "Ti Voglio Bene... I Love You" MGM (1961)
  • "Joni After Hours" MGM (1962)
  • "I'm Your Girl" MGM (1962)
  • "Country Style" MGM (1962)
  • "I Feel a Song Coming On" MGM (1962)
  • "Like 3 O'Clock in the Morning" MGM (1962)
  • "Something for the Boys" MGM (1963)
  • "Beyond The Reef" MGM (1964)
  • "Joni Sings the Gershwins" MGM (1964)
  • "My Favorite Things" MGM (1964)
  • "Put On A Happy Face" MGM (1964)
  • "Italianissima!" MGM (1964)
  • "Bossa Nova Style" MGM 4286 (1965)
  • "Why Don't You Believe Me?" Bygone Days BYD77053 (2010) – compilation
  • References

    Joni James Wikipedia