|
|
Any Old Iron |
Splinters & Danny |
Charles Collins [GB2], E.A. Sheppard, Fred Terry |
Originally by Harry Champion |
|
|
Babyface |
Miss Terry Day |
Benny Davis, Harry Akst |
Originally by Jan Garber and His Orchestra - Vocal Refrain by Benny Davis |
|
|
Burlington Bertie |
Miss Julie Fisher |
William Hargreaves |
Originally by Ella Shields |
|
|
Carolina in the Morning |
Miss Terry Day |
Gus Kahn, Walter Donaldson |
Originally by Willie & Eugene Howard |
|
|
Daddy Wouldn't Buy Me a Bow-Wow |
Splinters & Danny |
Joseph Tabrar |
Originally by (unknown) |
|
|
Dolly Grey |
Miss Julie Fisher |
Paul Barnes [US2], Will Cobb |
Originally by Harry Macdonough REL, William Tuson REC |
|
|
Don't Dilly Dally on the Way |
Splinters & Danny |
Charles Collins [GB2], Dick Manning, Fred W. Leigh |
Originally by (unknown) |
|
|
Get Out and Get Under |
Miss Terry Day |
Edgar Leslie, Grant Clarke, Maurice Abrahams |
Originally by Fred Douglas |
|
|
I Belong to Glasgow |
Splinters & Danny |
Will Fyffe |
Originally by Will Fyffe |
|
|
I'll Be Your Sweetheart |
Splinters & Danny |
Frank Dean |
Originally by Lil Hawthorne |
|
|
Maybe It's Because I'm a Londoner |
Splinters & Danny |
Hubert Gregg |
Originally by Billy Cotton and His Band |
|
|
Row, Row, Row |
Miss Terry Day |
Jimmy Monaco, William Jerome |
Originally by Elizabeth Brice |
|
|
The Holy City |
Mr. Bryan Johnson |
Frederic Weatherly, Michael Maybrick |
Originally by (unknown) |
|
|
Toot, Toot, Tootsie Goo' Bye |
Miss Terry Day |
Dan Russo, Ernie Erdman, Gus Kahn |
Originally by Al Jolson PRF,REC |
|
|
Waiting for the Robert E. Lee |
Miss Terry Day |
L. Wolfe Gilbert, Lewis F. Muir |
Originally by Al Jolson |
|
|
When Father Papered the Parlour |
Splinters & Danny |
Fred Barnes, R.P. Weston |
Originally by Billy Williams [AU] |
|
|
When the Red, Red, Robin Comes Bob, Bob, Bobbin' Along |
Mr. Bryan Johnson |
Harry M. Woods |
Originally by Jack Smith (The Whispering Baritone) |
|
|
Who's Your Lady Friend |
Miss Julie Fisher |
Bert Lee, Harry Fragson, Worton David |
Originally by Ted Yorke |