1944 in Music - Top Hit Records

Top Hit Records

  • "Amor" recorded by
    • Andy Russell
    • Bing Crosby
  • "And Her Tears Flowed Like Wine" by Stan Kenton
  • "Artistry In Rhythm" by Stan Kenton
  • "Besame Mucho" performed by
    • Jimmy Dorsey
    • Andy Russell
  • "Cherry" by Harry James
  • "D-Day" by Nat King Cole
  • "Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me" by Duke Ellington
  • "Don't Fence Me In" by Bing Crosby & the Andrews Sisters
  • "Don't Sweetheart Me" by Lawrence Welk
  • "First Class Private Mary Brown" by Perry Como
  • "G.I. Jive" by Louis Jordan
  • "Goodnight Irene" by Leadbelly
  • "A Hot Time In the Town of Berlin" by Bing Crosby & the Andrews Sisters
  • "I Love You" performed by
    • Bing Crosby
    • Perry Como
  • "I'll Be Seeing You" by Bing Crosby
  • "I'll Get By" by Harry James
  • "Long Ago" performed by
    • Dick Haymes and Helen Forrest
    • Bing Crosby
    • Jo Stafford
    • Perry Como
  • "Is You Is or Is You Ain't" by The Andrews Sisters
  • "It Could Happen To You" by Jo Stafford
  • "It Had To Be You" by Dick Haymes and Helen Forrest
  • "It's Love-Love-Love" by Guy Lombardo
  • "Mairzy Doats" by Merry Macs
  • "My Heart Tells Me" by the Casa Loma Orchestra
  • "San Fernando Valley" by Bing Crosby
  • "Saturday Night (Is the Loneliest Night of the Week)" by Frank Sinatra
  • "Shoo-Shoo Baby" by The Andrews Sisters
  • "Speak Low" by Guy Lombardo
  • "Straighten Up and Fly Right" by Nat King Cole
  • "Swinging on a Star" by Bing Crosby
  • "(There'll Be A) Hot Time in the Town of Berlin" by The Andrews Sisters
  • "The Trolley Song" by Judy Garland
  • "Time Waits For No One" by Helen Forrest
  • "You Always Hurt the One You Love" by The Mills Brothers

Read more about this topic:  1944 In Music

Famous quotes containing the words top, hit and/or records:

    I sweep. One gyrates like a top and falls
    And stunned, stone blind, and deaf
    Buzzes its frightful F
    And dies between three cannibals.
    Karl Shapiro (b. 1913)

    I do not say a proverb is amiss when aptly and reasonably applied, but to be forever discharging them, right or wrong, hit or miss, renders conversation insipid and vulgar.
    Miguel De Cervantes (1547–1616)

    In America, the photographer is not simply the person who records the past, but the one who invents it.
    Susan Sontag (b. 1933)