Maya Angelou was an exceptional writer and human being and her inspiration will continue to enrich us all.
— Tony Bennett (@itstonybennett) May 28, 2014
What We’re Listening To
As is our habit, we were listening to the local Portland jazz station, KHMD, during dinner. At one point, we both stopped as one of the most beautiful songs we’d heard in a long time started to play.
It was Rosemary Clooney singing “For All We Know” from her 1991 album For The Duration. This album consists of songs that were popular during World War II. The song selection is terrific and the arrangements are lovely. Most feature a small combo with Scott Hamilton on tenor sax and Warren Vaché on cornet, though some tracks use strings. Her musical director is John Oddo.
Back to “For All We Know.” This song was written by J. Fred Coots (“You Go To My Head” and “Santa Claus Is Coming To Town”) with lyrics by Sam M. Lewis. It’s a really wonderful song sung by one of America’s great female vocalists.
It’s Jazz Day
Today, April 30, 2014 is Jazz Day, a yearly event sponsored by the United Nations. The Year of Tony Bennett would like to wish all of our readers a very happy Jazz Day!
You can read more about the festivities here.
Remembering Yip Harburg
Today, The Year of Tony Bennett remembers one of America’s finest lyricists, Yip Harburg, who was born on the Lower East Side of New York on April 8, 1896. His birth name was Isadore Hochberg, but he later adopted the name of Edgar Yipsel Harburg and thus the nickname Yip, as he was widely known.
His parents, both Orthodox Jews, had emigrated from Russia and spoke only Yiddish. As the oldest son, he was always called upon when they needed to communicate to anyone outside of their community. He attended high school with Ira Gershwin (born Israel Gershowitz); they both wrote on their school paper and remained lifelong friends. After high school, married and with two children, he became the co-owner of an electric appliance company. That business, along with many others, went under following the stock market crash of 1929.
At that time, his friend Ira intervened and suggested that Yip start writing song lyrics. Ira introduced Yip to songwriter Jay Gorney and the two wrote “Brother, Can You Spare A Dime?” which became a kind of anthem of the Great Depression. Here’s Al Jolson’s recording from 1931:
Based on the success of “Brother, Can You Spare A Dime?” Harburg was offered a contract in Hollywood. He was very successful, writing lyrics for music by Harold Arlen, Vernon Duke, Jerome Kern, Jule Styne and Burton Lane. His biggest success came with the partnership with Harold Arlen to write the score for The Wizard of Oz. Arlen and Harburg won the Academy Award for Best Music, Best Original Song for “Over the Rainbow.”
In the 1940s, Harburg was more active on Broadway, writing Bloomer Girl with Harold Arlen and Finian’s Rainbow with Burton Lane. He also became more politically active. His father had been a socialist and Yip was heavily involved in social activism. Though he never joined the Communist Party, he was called before the infamous House UnAmerican Activities Committee and was blacklisted in Hollywood.
Yip Harburg died of a heart attack in Los Angeles on March 5, 1981.
In addition to his wonderful body of work, he also left us a remarkable social consciousness, which is reflected in the Yip Harburg Foundation, which supports world peace and works to end discrimination and social injustice. From their website:
Yip fought for social and economic justice for all people his whole life. The Yip Harburg Foundation was created to promote educational opportunity, social and economic justice, world peace and Yip’s artistic legacy.
We leave you today with Yip singing “Over The Rainbow.”
Remembering Billie Holiday
Billie Holiday would be 99 years old on April 7, 2014. Happy birthday to the great Billie Holiday.
Eleanora Fagan was born on April 7, 1915 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to a single mother, who when she became pregnant, was thrown out of her parent’s house in Baltimore.
Better known as Billie Holiday, she had a difficult childhood and was raised in part by her mother’s half sister who lived in Baltimore. To say that the young Billie Holiday had a difficult childhood is an understatement. She was sent to reform school for truancy before she even reached the age of 10 and dropped out of school completely at the age of 11. She was raped by a neighbor soon thereafter and spent a year in protective custody. After that, she worked running errands in a brothel, where she was exposed to the music of Louis Armstrong and Bessie Smith. In 1929, when Billie was 14, she and her mother moved to Harlem. Her mother became a prostitute; Billie became one soon after.
Living in Harlem, she began to sing at local nightclubs and took the name of Billie for the actress Billie Dove, and the last name of her father, Holiday. She sang as much as she could and began to be noticed: by Benny Goodman in 1931 and Chick Webb. She made her first recording when she was just 18. Producer John Hammond, who arranged for Billie to be recorded, said that “her singing almost changed my music tastes and my musical life, because she was the first girl singer I’d come across who actually sang like an improvising jazz genius.”
She got a record contract with Brunswick Records in 1935 and began to record with Teddy Wilson and his orchestra; their first recordings were “What A Little Moonlight Can Do” and “Miss Brown To You.” They were successful and began to launch Billie Holiday as a major artist and not just a “girl singer.” She also worked with saxophonist Lester Young, who gave her the nickname Lady Day. She, in turn, gave him the nickname Prez and these both stuck with the performers from then on. In 1937, she worked briefly with Count Basie. Out of this relationship, she recorded “Summertime,” “I Can’t Get Started” and “I Must Have That Man.”
She next started working with Artie Shaw, becoming the first black singer to appear with a white orchestra. It was during this time that she discovered one of her most important songs, “Strange Fruit,” which describes movingly a lynching. In spite of its disturbing images, the song sold quite well and was a big hit for her. Her success continued into the 1940s with songs including “Lover Man,” “Good Morning, Heartache” and “Trav’lin’ Light.”
At the height of her success in the late 1940s, she was arrested in her home for narcotics possession. Her trial was a disaster; her lawyer didn’t even appear in court to plead her case. Holiday, who was ill, pled guilty and asked to be put in a hospital. Instead, she was sent to the Alderson Federal Prison. Her sentence was reduced due to good behavior. Her manager got her a concert in Carnegie Hall in 1948, which sold out and was a critical and monetary success. Her drug problems continued, however, resulting in an arrest in San Francisco. As a result, she lost her Cabaret Card in New York, meaning that she was unable to perform in any New York club that served alcohol.
She began to deteriorate physically, which also affected her voice. However, she did work on her autobiography Lady Sings The Blues (written by friend and ghostwriter William Duffy). The book was published in 1956, She released an album of the same name in June 1956, including several new tracks and the best of her older ones.
Later in 1956, she appeared again at Carnegie Hall for two sold-out concerts. Recordings of the concert were released in the UK in 1961 as The Essential Billie Holiday.
Billie Holiday entered the hospital in 1959 with liver and heart disease. She was arrested for drug possession while in the hospital; her room was raided and she remained under police guard until she passed away on July 17, 1959.
Having been swindled out of most of her earnings by producers and husbands, she had 70 cents in the bank and $750 on her person when she died.
Billie Holiday’s effect on jazz is as important as that of Louis Armstrong. She showed generations of singers, including Tony Bennett, what a true jazz vocalist was.
For more information about Billie Holiday, visit her official website maintained by The Estate of Billie Holiday at www.billieholiday.com.
We include links to a few of our favorite songs of hers.
You are loved by jazz fans everywhere.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- …
- 8
- Next Page »