1. The Lady Is A Tramp
2. Too Young
3. If I Could Be With You One Hour Tonight
4. These Foolish Things
5. Just One More Chance
6. A Guy Is A Guy
7. Shanghai
8. It Never Happened To Me
9. Make The Man Love Me
10. It's All Over Now
11. It Takes A Long Long Train With A Red Caboose
12. Golden Earrings
13. Love, Your Magic Spell Is Everywhere
14. What Is This Thing Called Love
15. I Got Lucky In The Rain
16. He's Just My Kind
17. Linger In My Arms A Little Longer, Baby
18. For Sentimental Reasons
19. My Last Affair
20. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
It has often been said that the secret to the success of Peggy Lee lay in her ability to get inside the character of a song. Certainly, she was equally at home singing jazz and R&B as she was pop, but her own songwriting skills gave her an edge over many of her contemporaries. In 1941 she replaced Helen Forrest in the Benny Goodman Orchestra and fronted the hits 'I Got It Bad And That Ain’t Good' and 'Why Don’t You Do Right?' before retiring in 1943 following her marriage to Goodman’s guitarist Dave Barbour. Peggy was lured back in 1945, this time as a solo artist signed to Capitol and racked up a series of hits, including the smash 'Mañana', a number one hit in 1948 that was co-penned by Peggy and Barbour. It was Capitol’s refusal to allow her to record 'Lover' that prompted her departure for Decca, a move that brought a further succession of hits in a wide variety of musical styles. Peggy returned to Capitol in 1958 with the definitive version of 'Fever', but she is perhaps better known for her contribution to the Disney film Lady And The Tramp and the subsequent court case pursuing royalties from the video release of the film.