After
Carmen Miranda opened in her first and only Broadway show, singing "South American Way" in the 1939 revue The Streets of Paris, she was signed to a contract by Decca Records and held her first American recording session, backed by her musical group
Bando da Lua, on December 26, 1939. Thus, when she signed to 20th Century-Fox in 1940 and made her way to Hollywood to appear in her first American film, Down Argentine Way, she was already established as a recording artist, unlike fellow Fox performers like
Betty Grable and
Alice Faye, who did not have recording careers. (Hollywood tended to discourage the competition, if it could.) When
Miranda would make a picture for Fox, she would quickly troop over to a Decca studio and cut recordings of the songs from it (this being before the days of the original motion picture soundtrack). She also recorded other material. It is those Decca recordings that this compilation draws from, albeit without saying so. European copyright law on recordings extends only 50 years, so the tracks are in the public domain and prey to budget reissue labels like Prism Leisure to press up and sell. Relying on the Decca recordings, the album is incomplete as a collection of
Miranda's best-known film songs, however. When she made The Gang's All Here, for example, there was a recording ban that prevented her from cutting "The Lady in the Tutti-Frutti Hat." Still, many of her familiar numbers are included, plus some excellent Brazilian material and performances with
the Andrews Sisters. And though most of the collection is drawn from Decca recordings made between 1939 and 1950, the last four tracks, made between 1931 and 1938, give a sense of the music she recorded back in Brazil for RCA Victor before coming to America.