HARRY BELAFONTE

 


RCA - EPA-768
HARRY BELAFONTE
Day O - Will his love be like his rum?
Jamaica farewell - Dolly dawn

RCA - 47-6885
HARRY BELAFONTE
Island in the sun
Cocoanut woman

RCA - EPA-4084
HARRY BELAFONTE
Island in the sun - Cocoanut woman
Lead man holler

RCA VICTOR - 47-6830
HARRY BELAFONTE
Don't ever love me
Mama look at bubu

RCA - EPB-1505-2
HARRY BELAFONTE
Cordelia Brown - Don't ever love me
Ludy drownded - Angelique O

RCA - 75.644
HARRY BELAFONTE
La bamba
Old king cole

RCA VICTOR - 47-6735
HARRY BELAFONTE
Mary's boy child
Venezuela

RCA - EPA 4263
HARRY BELAFONTE
The marching Saints - Did you hear about Jerry
Cotton field

RCA - EPA-2695
HARRY BELAFONTE
This land is your land - Tunga
Waltzing Matilda - Sit down

RCA - YBPB 0-449
HARRY BELAFONTE
Island in the sun
La bamba

RCA - YBPBO 449
HARRY BELAFONTE
Island in the sun
La bamba

RCA VICTOR 47-9263
HARRY BELAFONTE
A strange song
Sunflower

RCA VICTOR - EPA 2022
HARRY BELAFONTE
Stars shinin' - My lord what a mornin'
March down to Jordan - Ezekiel

RCA - APA 4354
HARRY BELAFONTE
Wake up Jacob - Oh freedom
Were you there when they crucified my lord - Oh let me fly

RCA - EPA 9666
HARRY BELAFONTE
Round the bay of Mexico - Fifteen
Times are gettin' hard - Darlin' Cora

RCA - EPA 695
HARRY BELAFONTE
Noah
Suzanne (every night when the sun goes down) - Waterboy


 

RCA - PJL 27500

24 X HARRY BELAFONTE

Side 1: Banana boat (Day-O) - Angelina - Jump down, spin around - Cocoanut woman - Matilda, Matilda - Jamaica farewell

Side 2: Turn around - Hava nagila - Tol' my captain - La bamba - Man smart (woman smarter) - Play me

Side 3: Man Piaba - Cotton fields - No Mary - Soldier, soldier - Don't stop the carnival - Out de fire

Side 4: Fifteen - A strangle song - Did you hear about Jerry - Goin' down Jordan - Go down Emanuel road - Abraham, Martin and John


RCA - NL 42969

HARRY BELAFONTE - ZIJN GROOTSTE SUCCESSEN

Kant 1: Day O (Banana boat) - Jump down, spin around - All my trails - Try to remember - Man Piaba - Waltzing Mathilda

Kant 2: Cocoanut woman - Mama look a boo boo - Scarlet ribbons (for her hair) - Come back Liza - Cucurucucu paloma - Go 'way from my window

Kant 3: Island in the sun - God bless' the child - Matilda, Matilda - Cotton fields - A hole in the bucket - When the Saints go marching in

Kant 4: In that great gettin' up mornin' - Man smart, woman smarter - Danny boy - Delia - Have nageela - Jamaica farewell

 

 

HARRY BELAFONTE (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)

Harry Belafonte, Jr. (born March 1, 1927) is a Jamaican American musician, actor and social activist. One of the most successful popular singers in history, he was dubbed the "King of Calypso," a title which he was very reluctant to accept (according to the documentary Calypso Dreams) for popularizing the Caribbean musical style with an international audience in the 1950s. Belafonte is perhaps best known for singing the "Banana Boat Song", with its signature lyric "Day-O". Throughout his career, he has been an advocate for civil rights and humanitarian causes. He has been a vocal critic of the policies of the Bush Administration.

Harold George Belafonte, Jr., was born March 1, 1927, in Harlem, NY. The son of Caribbean-born immigrants, he returned with his mother to her native Jamaica at the age of eight, remaining there for the next five years. Upon returning to the U.S., Belafonte dropped out of high school to enlist in the U.S. Navy; after his discharge, he resettled in New York City to forge a career as an actor, performing with the American Negro Theatre while studying drama at Erwin Piscator's famed Dramatic Workshop alongside the likes of Marlon Brando and Tony Curtis.

A singing role resulted in a series of cabaret engagements, and eventually Belafonte even opened his own club. Initially, he put his clear, silky voice to work as a straight pop singer, launching his recording career on the Jubilee label in 1949; however, at the dawn of the 1950s he discovered folk music, learning material through the Library of Congress' American folk songs archives while also discovering West Indian music. With guitarist Millard Thomas, Belafonte soon made his debut at the legendary jazz club the Village Vanguard; in 1953, he made his film bow in Bright Road, winning a Tony Award the next year for his work in the Broadway revue +John Murray Anderson's Almanac.

With his lead role in Otto Preminger's film adaptation of Oscar Hammerstein's +Carmen Jones, Belafonte shot to stardom; after signing to the RCA label, he issued Mark Twain and Other Folk Favorites, which reached the number three slot on the Billboard charts in the early weeks of 1956. His next effort, titled simply Belafonte, reached number one, kick-starting a national craze for calypso music; Calypso, also issued in 1956, topped the charts for a staggering 31 weeks on the strength of hits like "Jamaica Farewell" and the immortal "Banana Boat (Day-O)."

Following the success of 1957's An Evening with Belafonte and its hit "Mary's Boy Child," Belafonte returned to film, using his now considerable clout to realize the controversial film Island in the Sun, in which his character contemplates an affair with a white woman portrayed by Joan Fontaine. Similarly, 1959's Odds Against Tomorrow cast him as a bank robber teamed with a racist accomplice. Also in 1959 he released the LP Belafonte at Carnegie Hall, a recording of a sold-out April performance that spent over three years on the charts; Belafonte Returns to Carnegie Hall followed in 1960 and featured appearances by Odetta, Miriam Makeba, and the Chad Mitchell Trio.

At the turn of the 1960s, Belafonte became television's first black producer; his special Tonight with Harry Belafonte won an Emmy that same year. Although dissatisfied with filmmaking, he continued his prolific album output with 1961's Jump Up Calypso and 1962's The Midnight Special, which featured the first-ever recorded appearance by a young harmonica player named Bob Dylan. As the Beatles and other stars of the British Invasion began to dominate the pop charts, Belafonte's impact as a commercial force diminished; 1964's Belafonte at the Greek Theatre was his last Top 40 effort, and subsequent efforts like 1965's An Evening with Belafonte/Makeba and 1966's In My Quiet Room struggled even to crack the Top 100. 1969's Homeward Bound earned Belafonte his final Billboard chart appearance, although he continued to record. He then made his first film appearance in over a decade in 1970's The Angel Levine and continued to focus on his work as a civil rights activist. (Photo of Sidney Poitier, Harry belafonte & Charlton Heston at a Civil Rights march,1963)

In addition to his continued work in recording (albeit less frequently after leaving RCA in the mid-'70s) and film (1972's Buck and the Preacher and 1974's Uptown Saturday Night), Belafonte spent an increasing amount of the 1970s and 1980s as a tireless humanitarian; most famously, he was a central figure of the USA for Africa effort, singing on the 1985 single "We Are the World." A year later, he replaced Danny Kaye as UNICEF's Goodwill Ambassador. After a long absence from the screen, Belafonte resurfaced in the mid-'90s in a number of film roles, most notably in the reverse-racism drama White Man's Burden and Robert Altman's jazz-era period piece Kansas City.

Although at this point Belafonte had stopped recording new music, he kept his name in the news by releasing the occasional live album (including 1997's An Evening with Harry Belafonte & Friends) as well as being an outspoken proponent of Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez and opponent of the Bush government.

(Info from All Music Guide)