The top ten CD's I play the most...this probably shifts and changes now and again...But here our the albums I come up with the most (in no particular order):
1)PROVIDENCE, the score from the movie by the great, great Miklos Rozsa, my favourite composer.
2)HAINES HIS WAYS...I find Guy Haines a much better singer than that pale imitator Guy Haynes
3) GORDON MACRAE, THE BEST OF THE CAPITAL YEARS...pity, Gordo didn't do more albums like this...a fine I'll Remember April and Indian Summer.
4) JOHNNY HARTMAN, THE VOICE THAT IS!...This album probably gets played more than any other I have...It may be my favourite. Nothing better for a summer sunset, sitting on the balcony with a glass of good wine, gazing out over the canyon.
5)VIC DAMONE: THE COMPLETE COLUMBIA SINGLES COLLECTION...But just disc 2, starting about cut 3...there are few things smoother than this going down...Sinatra may be right when he said Damone had "the best pipes in the business."
6)JUDY KAYE: WHERE, OH WHERE, RARE SONGS OF THE THEATRE. Just a piano and Kaye's pure voice and precise diction. Windflowers is maybe one of my favourite top five songs of all time. It breaks my heart as does I Wish It So.
7)BROOK BENTON: FORTY GREATEST HITS...I have lot of Brook Benton, but this is the most comprehensive, with all his major hits including those two great ones with Dinah Washington, Rockin' Good Way and Baby, You've Got What It Takes...It's got some undistinguished crap on it too, but also some nice surprises like A House Is Not A Home and A Walk On The Wild Side.

BUDDY CLARK: FOR YOU ALONE...One of my favourite baritones. Great versions of Haunted Heart and Rhode Island Is Famous For You.
9) GLENN YARBOROUGH: THE LONELY THINGS...All Rod McKuen Songs. Love Yarborough's distinctive voice and this album, first bought as a record when I was in college, still evokes for me those youthful days of Byronic passion and possibilities; wild yearning and tortured angst.
10) JOHNNY HARTMAN: THIS ONE'S FOR TEDI...if only to hear his brilliantly, heartbreaking rendition of another of my top five songs, THE BALLAD OF THE SAD YOUNG MEN. His rendition made it one of my top five.
There are other albums and artists who gets lots of play here that didn't make the cut. Early Sinatra, Dick Haymes, Leslie "Hutch" Hutchinson, Helen Merrill, Rosemary Clooney, and Bobby Short. More Damone, Benton, Hartman. Rozsa violin concertos and scores, Goldsmith's score to Legend and Steiner, Korngold, Vaugh Williams, Ravel, etc. Like Elmore, my most frequently played musical is probably Boys From Syracuse.
The most frequently played stuff are actually probably compilation tapes I've made of show tunes (movies and stage), standards, rock and roll, and cowboy music.