I've Got You Under My Skin - Other Recorded Versions

Other Recorded Versions

  • Eartha Kitt - "The Romantic Eartha" 1962
  • Josephine Baker
  • Steve Barton
  • Michael Bolton - Bolton Swings Sinatra (2006)
  • Chris Botti - Chris Botti in Boston (featuring Katharine McPhee) (2009)
  • Al Bowlly - The Al Bowlly Story 1928-1941
  • Clifford Brown - Ultimate Clifford Brown
  • Michael BublĂ© - It's Time (2005)
  • Cab Calloway
  • Neneh Cherry (Cherry's reworked version, produced by Morris Temple, was lead single for the Red Hot + Blue charity album (1990) and reached number 25 in the UK Singles Chart.
  • Perry Como - Papa Loves Mambo - The Very Best of Perry Como (2004)
  • James Darren - This One's from the Heart (1990)
  • Sammy Davis Jr.
  • Bill Evans and Jim Hall - Intermodulation (1966)
  • Ella Fitzgerald - Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Cole Porter Songbook (1956)
  • The New Four Freshmen - Voices in Standards
  • Rita Reys - The Great American Songbook, volume 1 (1992)
  • The Rutles - The Rutles Archaeology (recorded 1996; released 2007)
  • Gloria Gaynor - I Will Survive: The Anthology (1998)
  • Stan Kenton - Rendezvous Of Standards And Classics
  • Diana Krall - When I Look In Your Eyes (1999)
  • Peggy Lee - Black Coffee - (1953)
  • Maysa
  • Landau Eugene Murphy, Jr. - That's Life (2011)
  • Louis Prima and Keely Smith - Capitol Collectors Series: Louis Prima (1996)
  • Lauri Beth Quinlivan (Rearranged for classical guitar on 2006 CD "On Angel's Strings")
  • Cesare Siepi
  • Cliff Richard - Bold as Brass
  • Dinah Washington - Dinah Jams (1954, remastered 1990)
  • Lee Wiley
  • Seether
  • Jamie Cullum - Heard It All Before (1999)
  • Rod Stewart - Fly Me To The Moon ... The Great American Songbook - Volume V (2010)
  • Carly Simon
  • Helen Merrill - Parole E Musica (With Fernando Caiati, 1960)
  • Jermaine Jackson - I Wish You Love (2012)

Read more about this topic:  I've Got You Under My Skin

Famous quotes containing the words recorded and/or versions:

    He that is born to be hanged shall never be drowned.
    14th-century French proverb, first recorded in English in A. Barclay, Gringore’s Castle of Labour (1506)

    The assumption must be that those who can see value only in tradition, or versions of it, deny man’s ability to adapt to changing circumstances.
    Stephen Bayley (b. 1951)