Songwriter: Ira Gershwin

Producer: Norman Granz

Don't mind telling you, in my humble fash
That you thrill me through, with a tender pash
When you said you care, 'magine my emoshe
I swore then and there, permanent devoshe
You made all other men seem blah
Just you alone filled me with ahhhhhhhh

'S wonderful, 's marvellous
You should care for me
'S awful nice, 's paradise
'S what I love to see

You've made my life so glamorous
You can't blame me for feeling amorous
Oh 's wonderful, 's marvellous
That you should care for me

'S magnificque, 's what I seek
You should care for me
'S elegant, 's what I want
'S what I love to see

My dear, it's four leaved clover time
From now on my heart's working overtime
'S exceptional, 's no bagatelle
That you should care for
That you should care for
That you should care for me

Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong

Both household names at the time of their first recording together, the dynamic duo of Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong recorded their eponymous debut on August 16, 1956, in Hollywood’s then newly-built Capitol Studios. The record covered eleven standards with the backing of the Oscar Peterson Quartet. Although they had previously collaborated in the late 1940s for the Decca label, Ella and Louis began a critical and commercial streak for the pair, with many follow-ups under Norman Granz’s Verve Records; including 1957’s Ella and Louis Again and their 1959 collection of songs from the Porgy and Bess.