Liberty Records was pleasantly surprised when
Julie London's debut album was such a big hit.
Julie Is Her Name did contain the hit single "Cry Me a River," but each featured mellow jazz guitar and bass backing -- which was considered commercial suicide in 1955. So, instead of changing direction and recording the follow-up
Lonely Girl with a full orchestra, Liberty wisely allowed
London to strip the accompaniment down even more on the album by dropping the backing down to one instrument. Lone guitarist
Al Viola plays gentle Spanish-tinged acoustic behind the hushed vocalist, and it suits
London perfectly. While the singer was often chided for her beauty and lack of range, she deftly navigates these ballads without any rhythmic underpinnings to fall back on.
London's intense focus on phrasing and lyrics recalls
Chet Baker's equally telescopic approach. So while most of the album contains the usual midnight standards,
London sings them in her own way. The title track is the one unfamiliar tune here, and it's a real gem, penned by
Bobby Troup (he was
London's producer, paramour, and future husband). The low-key
Lonely Girl beat the sophomore slump and initially did almost as well in the charts as
Julie Is Her Name. Instead of stripping away the guitar in order to make
London's next release be the first a cappella torch album,
Troup crafted
Calendar Girl, a big-budget orchestral affair that was more in keeping with the thematic pop albums released at the time. ~ Nick Dedina