This two-fer CD from reissue label Collectables Records licenses a couple of 1954 albums originally issued in the 10" LP format by Columbia Records containing music from films featuring
Rosemary Clooney, Red Garters and White Christmas (or, as the songwriter who ruled over the latter project would have it, Irving Berlin's White Christmas). Neither of the two discs is exactly a full-scale "original soundtrack" album, although
Red Garters was billed as such. In fact, of the eight tracks on that LP, only four ("Red Garters" itself; "This Is Greater Than I Thought," ably sung by
Joanne Gilbert; "Bad News"; and "Man and Woman," a feisty duet by
Clooney and
Guy Mitchell) actually came directly from the movie. The rest had been recorded subsequently in a studio. As for
White Christmas, the
Clooney album was the product of a contractual anomaly: since Decca Records had rights to the soundtrack album and
Clooney was an exclusive Columbia artist, Decca simply replaced
Clooney with
Peggy Lee on its "soundtrack" album with other stars
Bing Crosby and
Danny Kaye, while Columbia had
Clooney record her own solo album of songs from the film. Happily, it turned out to be one of
Clooney's best efforts. She effectively re-created her two big ballad moments in the film, her solo "Love -- You Didn't Do Right by Me" and "Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep," done in the movie as a duet with
Crosby. She borrowed "The Best Things Happen While You're Dancing," which had been taken by
Kaye. And, best of all, she dragged her sister
Betty Clooney, once her partner in
the Clooney Sisters, out of retirement temporarily to perform the clever "Sisters." Of course, with selections such as the title song and "Snow," the album also functioned as a
Rosemary Clooney Christmas album.
Red Garters' score of songs by
Jay Livingston and
Ray Evans, sometimes sounding like a pale imitation of
Berlin's Annie Get Your Gun, is not in the same league, but the two albums make for an appropriate matching of
Clooney "soundtrack" albums.