By John on December 2, 2009 |
[Another in a series of occasional posts about popular American songs with long histories. And if you are seeking information on the Justin Timberlake song by the same name, believe me, you are 100% in the wrong place.] On paper, it doesn’t appear to be a “big” song. Nearly always, the arrangement features a single [...]
Posted in Celebrities, Language, Movies, Music, The Missus, What's in a Song | Tagged Arthur Hamilton, coincidence, Cry Me a River, Julie London, The Girl Can't Help It |
By John on October 27, 2009 |
I had occasion this morning to hear a song I haven’t heard in a couple years, and this made me think of the guy who introduced me to it. Like many friends these days, he’s not one I’ve ever actually met: I know him only through his online handle, “FLJerseyBoy” (three guesses what first got [...]
Posted in The Online World, What's in a Song | Tagged A Dog Starv'd, FLJerseyBoy, Henry & June, Je M'Ennuie |
By John on August 8, 2009 |
[This is another in an occasional series on popular songs with long histories. Part 1 -- which focused on the song's composition and lyrics -- appeared on Wednesday.] How many times and by which performers has “Begin the Beguine” been covered? It is to laugh. The most comprehensive list I’ve seen was on the page [...]
Posted in Comics, Movies, Music, Theater, What's in a Song | Tagged Begin the Beguine, Broadway Melody of 1940, Cole Porter, divineMAGgees, Eleanor Powell, Elvis Presley, Fred Astaire, Meher Baba, Pete Townsend, Team D.U.D.E., Twin Peaks, Xavier Cugat, You'll Be Gone |
By John on August 5, 2009 |
[Cole Porter at the piano, sometime in the 1930s. For me, it's easy to see in him, from this photo, the song "Begin the Beguine" -- but not the beguine itself.] [This is another in an occasional series on popular songs with appeal across the generations. This post will be broken into two parts; Part [...]
Posted in Language, Movies, Music, Theater, What's in a Song | Tagged Artie Shaw, Begin the Beguine, beguine, Cole Porter |
By John on February 19, 2009 |
[This is another in an occasional series on popular songs with long histories. Part 1 -- on the song itself as finally recorded by numerous artists -- appeared on Tuesday.] Hoagy Carmichael published “I Get Along Without You Very Well” in 1938. (The copyright date was November 18.) But the song’s history stretched back over [...]
Posted in Celebrities, Looking Backward, Music, Radio, Research/Resources, The Business, The Media, The Online World, What's in a Song, Writing | Tagged copyright, Dick Powell, Goodnight Sweetheart, Guy Lombardo, Hoagy Carmichael, I Get Along Without You Very Well, Jane Brown Thompson, Walter Winchell, What's in a Song |
By John on February 17, 2009 |
[Another in an occasional series on popular songs with appeal across the generations. This post will be broken into two parts; Part 2, about this song's composition, appears tomorrow [edit to add:] or the next day Thursday.] There’s a trick performed by some songwriters — I don’t know the term for it, if there is [...]
Posted in Music, Poetry, What's in a Song, Writing | Tagged Carly Simon, Hoagy Carmichael, I Get Along Without You Very Well, Rosemary Clooney, songwriting, What's in a Song |
By John on November 3, 2008 |
[This is the first in a series of every-now-and-then posts about popular songs with long lives.] Some great songs go through subtle changes over time: the original lyrics are updated to correspond to more modern diction and taste; rhymes get improved or dropped altogether; refrains are added and subtracted; and of course new arrangements can, [...]
Posted in History, Looking Backward, Music, What's in a Song | Tagged Blue Moon, Rodgers and Hart, What's in a Song |