At age 87, Doris Day is not exactly pop music's latest hot young artist. But this week the star of film, TV and music returns to the U.S. record world she conquered more than 60 years ago with a new album, “My Heart.” The CD, which hits record stores and websites Dec. 2, is filled with old standards like “My Buddy,” previously unreleased tunes such as “Stewball,” about a race horse Day loved, and pop hits of the 1960s and ‘70s such as “Daydream” and “You Are So Beautiful.” “I like the music when I was working and singing,” she told Reuters. “I think the writers were so incredibly brilliant, and when you sang a song of theirs that you loved, it really meant something. And love songs, I love love songs.” Day, whose first hit was 1945's “Sentimental Journey,” went from big band singer to movie star of the 1950s and '60s. She became the quintessential All-American girl and a major box office draw with films such as “Calamity Jane” and “Pillow Talk,” opposite Rock Hudson. In the late 1960s, she moved to TV where she starred in “The Doris Day Show. __