In her earliest recordings, Anita O'Day was the featured vocalist with the big bands of Gene Krupa (1941-1942 and 1945-1946) and Stan Kenton (1944). In the 1940s, Columbia and Capitol Records released the recordings of Krupa and Kenton, respectively, on 78 rpm disks with one song per side. In later decades the tracks were anthologized in albums in other media.
In her first years as a solo act, Anita O'Day recorded several dozen live and in-studio songs, including ten tracks produced by Bob Thiele in Fall 1947 for the Signature label.
This time period brought O'Day to the attention of the Jazz world, making 14 records. O'Day became the first artist to record for Norman Granz's newly formed Verve Records.
O'Day founded Emily Records, named after her dog, in 1975.[1] This time period would document her strong comeback, with her first studio recordings, since leaving Verve Records in 1963. Most of her recordings in the 1970s would take place in Japan, as jazz became popular in the country.
^Whitburn, Joel (1986). Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories, 1890-1954 The History of American Popular Music : Compiled from America's Popular Music Charts 1890-1954. Record Research Inc. ISBN978-0898200836.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (September 1941). ""Stop! The Red Light's On"/"Who Can I Turn To?" (78 RPM single)". Okeh Records. 6411.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (November 1941). ""Two in Love"/"This Time the Dream's on Me" (78 RPM single)". Okeh Records. 6447.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (December 1941). ""Thanks for the 'Boogie' Ride"/"Keem 'em Flying" (78 RPM single)". Okeh Records. 6506.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita; Du Lany, Howard (March 1942). ""Rumba Fox Trot"/"Fox Trot" (78 RPM single)". Okeh Records. 6222.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (March 1942). ""Skylark"/"Harlem on Parade" (78 RPM single)". Okeh Records. 6607.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (March 1942). ""Pass the Bounce"/"Me and My Melinda" (78 RPM single)". Okeh Records. 6619.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (April 1942). ""Fightin' Doug MacArthur"/"Night Of Nights (Tura Lura Li)" (78 RPM single)". Okeh Records. 6635.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (June 1942). ""That's What You Think"/"All Those Wonderful Years" (78 RPM single)". Columbia Records. 36621.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (September 1942). ""Massachusetts"/"'Murder', He Says" (78 RPM single)". Okeh Records. 6695.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (July 1944). ""Side by Side"/"Bolero at the Savoy" (78 RPM single)". Columbia Records. 36726.
^Kenton, Stan; O'Day, Anita (November 1944). ""Sweet Dreams Sweetheart" [Gene Howard vocal]/"Gotta Be Gettin'" [Anita O'Day vocal] (78 RPM single)". Capitol Records. 178.
^Kenton, Stan; O'Day, Anita (February 1945). ""Are You Livin' Old Man"/"Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye" (78 RPM single)". Capitol Records. 187.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (October 1945). ""(Did You Ever Get) That Feeling In The Moonlight"/"I Don't Want To Be Loved (By Anyone But You)" (78 RPM single)". Columbia Records. 36862.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (December 1945). ""Harriet (A Western Novelty Song)"/"Are These Really Mine?" (78 RPM single)". Columbia Records. 36890.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (February 1946). ""Hop, Skip, and Jump"/"Yesterday" (78 RPM single)". Columbia Records. 36931.
^Krupa, Gene; O'Day, Anita (January 1947). ""Opus No. 1"/"Valse Triste" (78 RPM single)". Columbia Records. 37224.
^Carter, Benny; O'Day, Anita (August 1948). ""I Ain't Gettin' Any Younger"/"It's Different When It Happens to You" (78 RPM single)". Signature Records. 15217.
^O'Day, Anita; Jordan, Paul (1950). ""Blues for Bojangles"/"Your Eyes Are Bigger Than Your Heart" (45 RPM single)". London Records. 30078.