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Show By LINDA NORRIS - r)INAH SHORE has been on --'the entertainment scene long enough now for everyone to know she's from way down south so when Capitol comes up with her latest album of songs and titles it "Dinah Down Home!" music fans just automatically know it's going to be chock full of tuneful ditties of the southland and neither Dinah nor Capitol let us down in quantity or selection. Dinah is at her best with the ' easy-swinging Dixieland tunes and mellow blues of the deep south and her appealing voice does much for such tunes as "Moon Country," "South," "Way Down Yonder in New Orleans," "Carolina "Caro-lina in the Morning," "Mississippi Mud," '"Sunday in Savannah," "Down Home Rag" and others in which she is equally at home doing in her own inimitable style. Dinah has been with Capitol a . good many years now and she's still one of their best bets despite the many new stars that come and go. In singles, Capitol comes up with Lorin and the Robins doing a song whose title we heartily endorse: en-dorse: "Everybody Ought to Have a Maid" . . . There's quite a , change of pace on "Algiers" which appears on the flip side . . . Lou Rawls pulls lightly at the heart strings with "Save Your Love for Me" backed by a rather appealing ditty called "Trust Me" . . . Stan Kenton and his orchestra do a whale of a job on "Warm Blue Stream," a disk that introduces intro-duces Jean Turner to the Kenton clan and a welcome addition she is . . . Reverse has "Come On Back." |