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Patti Page albums discography
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The albums discography of American singer Patti Page contains 47 studio albums, 40 compilation albums, two live albums, three video albums, one box set and has made four album appearances. Page's self-titled debut studio album was released in 1950 and featured several of her charting singles from the previous two years. Mercury Records released all of Page's albums during the fifties decade. Many of the album were centered around themes, such as 1951's Folk Song Favorites and Christmas with Patti Page. Only some of her studio albums featured her popular singles, such as 1952's Tennessee Waltz. Instead, her singles were collected on a series of compilations such as 1955's Page 1 – A Collection of Her Most Famous Songs. Three more of these compilations appeared. The 1956 concept studio album, Manhattan Tower, was Page's first to make any album chart. It reached number 18 on the Billboard 200. Several more studio albums appeared on Mercury through 1959.
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In 1960, Mercury released Page's first album of spiritual music titled Just a Closer Walk with Thee. The label also issued two albums of country music: Patti Page Sings Country and Western Golden Hits (1961) and Go on Home (1962). Her next disc to make the Billboard 200 was 1962's Patti Sings Golden Hits of the Boys. In 1963, she released her first album with Columbia Records titled Say Wonderful Things. It reached number 83 on the Billboard 200. Her highest-charting album on the Billboard 200 was 1965's Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte, which peaked at number 27. Page's second Christmas-themed disc was also released in 1965. It was followed by a studio album of hymns and a re-recorded studio project of her greatest hits.
Page remained with Columbia through 1970, releasing 1968's Gentle on My Mind. It was her final charting disc on the Billboard 200. Page returned to the Mercury label in the early seventies. The label issued only one studio album of her material in 1971 called I'd Rather Be Sorry. Another album of country material, it reached number 37 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart. Another studio album of country music appeared in 1979 on the 51 West label called A Touch of Country. Moving briefly to Plantation Records, the label released No Aces in 1981. They also issued two studio albums of re-recorded singles. Over the next two decades, her previous labels issued a variety of compilation projects. Page returned in 1998 with the live album Live at Carnegie Hall: The 50th Anniversary Concert. In the 2000s decade, three studio albums by Page were released. Her final studio album was released on Curb Records in 2008 called Best Country Songs.
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Studio albums
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
2000s
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Compilation albums
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
2000s
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Live albums
Video albums
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Box sets
Other album appearances
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Notes
- Patti Page's Greatest Hits was not a compilation album, but rather a studio album of re-recordings.[16]
- Golden Hits Volume 1 was not a compilation album, but rather a studio album of re-recordings.[20]
- Golden Hits Volume 2 was not a compilation album, but rather a studio album of re-recordings.[21]
- Not to be confused with Page's studio album of the same name.[25]
References
External links
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