Belle Baker

Belle Baker

##time## ##title##
  1. Belle Baker 1923 Yes We Have No Bananas Blues
  2. Belle Baker 1924 Sweet Little You
  3. Belle Baker 1925 My Kid
  4. Belle Baker 1925 Those Panama Mamas
  5. Belle Baker 1927 Baby Your Mother
  6. Belle Baker 1927 There Must Be Somebody Else
  7. Belle Baker 1928 My Man
  8. Belle Baker 1928 Thats How I Feel About You
  9. Belle Baker 1929 Arent We All
  10. Belle Baker 1929 I Still Go On Wanting You
  11. Belle Baker 1929 If I Had A Talking Picture Of You
  12. Belle Baker 1929 Ill Always Be In Love With You
  13. Belle Baker 1929 Im A Dreamer Arent We All
  14. Belle Baker 1929 Im Walking With The Moonbeams
  15. Belle Baker 1929 Love Your Magic SpellIs Everywhere
  16. Belle Baker 1929 My Sin
  17. Belle Baker 1929 Old Fashioned Lady
  18. Belle Baker 1929 Take Everything But You
  19. Belle Baker 1929 Underneath The Russian Moon
  20. Belle Baker 1930 Cheer Up
  21. Belle Baker 1930 Cryin For The Carolines
  22. Belle Baker 1930 Im Needin You
  23. Belle Baker 1930 Laughing At Life
  24. Belle Baker 1930 Sing You Sinners
  25. Belle Baker 1930 Sweetheart Of My Student Days
  26. Belle Baker 1930 The One I Love Cant Be Bothered With Me
  27. Belle Baker 1930 You Brought A New Kind Of Love To Me
  28. Belle Baker 1931 Overnight I Found You
  29. Belle Baker 1931 Youre The One I Care For
  30. Belle Baker 1932 As Long As Love Lives On
  31. Belle Baker 1935 Carroll Gibbons Orch Blue Moon
  32. Belle Baker 1940 Mad About Him
  33. Belle Baker Baby Your Mother
  34. Belle Baker Bei Mir Bist Du Schon
  35. Belle Baker Hard Hearted Hannah
  36. Belle Baker In A Shanty In Old Shanty Town
  37. Belle Baker Laughing At Life
  38. Belle Baker Old Fashioned Lady
  39. Belle Baker Sing You Sinners

 

 


Belle Baker was born on December 25, either in 1893 or 1895, in New York City, and died on April 29 1957. She performed in the Ziegfeld Follies, had her own radio show in the early 1930's and advanced ragtime music and torch songs. By 1917 she was one of the top performers in New York, and was known as “The Ragtime Singer.” Eddie Cantor said of her that she was, “Dinah Shore, Patti Page, Peggy Lee, Judy Garland all rolled into one.” She appeared on Broadway, in silent films, and in three later movies.

Scroll
to Top