Jimmy McHugh is one of the lesser-known songwriters to be included in the
Capitol Sings series of compilations, but several of his songs, including "I Can't Give You Anything But Love," "On the Sunny Side of the Street," and "I'm in the Mood for Love," are standards, and many more, written during a 40-year career mostly devoted to Broadway and Hollywood, are familiar.
McHugh's most successful work was written with lyricist
Dorothy Fields in the late '20s and early '30s, and much of his catalog predates the founding of Capitol Records in 1942. So, necessarily, most of the selections here are 1950s recreations of songs written in previous decades. (One exception:
Nat "King" Cole's popular recording of "Too Young to Go Steady," drawn from
McHugh's unsuccessful attempt to return to Broadway with Strip for Action in 1956.) That means lots of vibrant studio orchestra music conducted by
Nelson Riddle and
Billy May, among others, and lots of bravura singing by people like
Judy Garland,
Peggy Lee,
Dinah Washington, and
Sarah Vaughan. But there are also some performances that provide a change of pace, such as
Julie London's smoky "I'm in the Mood for Love," accompanied only by bass and guitar, and
Chet Baker's jazzy reading of "Let's Get Lost." The result is more a grab bag than a definitive
McHugh compilation, but there are some excellent individual interpretations. ~ William Ruhlmann