A jazzier, more collaborative fifth album from the U.K. singer/songwriter, informed by working with Logic and Kwes., and inspired by major life events.
One of the vocalist's greatest and least likely successes, this biopic saw her take a dramatic turn after a string of light musical comedies. Though she looked and sounded nothing like the subject, Ruth Etting (whose 1920s and '30s recordings were long out of print by that time), it became the best-selling album of Day's career, spending months at the top of the Billboard album chart with her takes on songs like the title track, "Ten Cents Dance," and "You Made Me Love You (I Didn't Want to Do It)." - Marcy Donelson