The Voices of Patti Page

The Voices Of Patti Page was a Patti Page LP album, issued by Mercury Records as catalog number MG-20100.

Patti Page albums
Albums on Mercury
  • Patti Page
  • Folk Song Favorites
  • Tennessee Waltz (1952)
  • Just Patti (1954)
  • Patti's Songs (1954)
  • So Many Memories (1954)
  • The Waltz Queen (1955)
  • Romance on the Range (1955)
  • Christmas with Patti Page
  • Page One - Sings a Collection of Her Most Famous Songs (1956)
  • Page Two - Sings a Collection of Her Most Famous Songs (1956)
  • Page Three - Easy Listening (1956)
  • You Go to My Head (1956)
  • Music for Two in Love (1956)
  • The Voices of Patti Page (1956)
  • Page Four (1956)
  • This Is My Song (1956)
  • Manhattan Tower (1956)
  • Let's Get Away From It All
  • I've Heard That Song Before
  • On Camera ... Favorites From TV
  • Indiscretion
  • I'll Remember April
  • Three Little Words
  • Golden Hits (1958)
  • Patti Page With The Pete Rugolo All Stars (reissue of In the Land of Hi-Fi)
  • The West Side (reissue of EmArcy album of same name)
  • The East Side (reissue of EmArcy album of same name)
  • Just a Closer Walk with Thee (1960)
  • Sings and Stars in Elmer Gantry
  • Sings Country and Western Golden Hits
  • Sings Country and Western Golden Hits, Vol. 2
  • Golden Hits of the Boys
  • On Stage
  • Blue Dream Street
  • The Nearness of You
  • Make Me Your Kind of Woman
Albums on EmArcy
  • In the Land of Hi-Fi (1956)
  • The East Side
  • The West Side
Albums on Wing
  • The Waltz Queen (1958)
  • Patti Page Sings
  • Y'All Come
Albums on Columbia
  • Say Wonderful Things (1963)
  • Love After Midnight (1964)
  • Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte (1965)
  • Today My Way (1967)
  • Gentle on My Mind (1968)
  • Honey Come Back (1970)

Famous quotes containing the words voices and/or page:

    To you, God the Singer, our voices we raise,
    to you Song Incarnate, we give all our praise,
    to you, Holy Spirit, our life and our breath,
    be glory for ever, through life and through death.
    Peter Davison (20th century)

    When you’ve been blind as long as I have, you learn to see through your senses. I can’t explain it exactly, but you get a feeling about people when you meet them. You see a picture of them in your mind. Not just what they look like, but what they really are. You see them much more clearly than you do with your eyes. Maybe that’s why they say looks are deceptive.
    —George Bricker. Jean Yarbrough. Helen Page (Jane Adams)