• Home
  • About
    • About This Blog
    • About the Authors
  • Song of the Day
  • Videos
  • Album of the Week
  • Music and Art
    • Tony Live!
    • Music
      • Viva Duets
      • Songs
      • Albums
    • Art
  • And More
    • Collaborator of the Month
    • Songwriter of the Month – 2016
    • News
      • Cheek To Cheek
      • Bennett & Brubeck -The White House Sessions Live 1962
      • Life is a Gift
      • Viva Duets
      • Zen of Bennett
      • Other News
    • About His Collaborators
    • Musings
    • Extras
      • Books
      • Interviews
      • Media
  • The Interactive Tony Bennett Discography

The Year of Tony Bennett

An Appreciation of the Art and Music of Tony Bennett

July 3, 2013 By Suzanne 1 Comment

Song of the Day: Yesterdays

The song of the day for Wednesday, July 3, 2013 is “Yesterdays.”

About This Song

“Yesterdays” was written for the 1933 Broadway musical Roberta, with music by Jerome Kern and lyrics by Otto Harbach. The song was introduced by Irene Dunne. The cast of the Broadway production also featured Bob Hope, George Murphy, Sidney Greenstreet and Fred MacMurray. One of Kern’s best outings, Roberta also introduced “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes” and “Let’s Begin.”

About This Version

Tony Bennett’s version of “Yesterdays” is from the 1966 album A Time To Love, though this recording is from 1964. It has a wonderful arrangement by Ralph Sharon and features the Ralph Sharon Trio, with Sharon on piano, Billy Exiner on drums and Hal Gaylord on bass.

http://open.spotify.com/track/7kMbKFR6oWtx3jt3ZeyQ2u
“Yesterdays,” as well as the remastered A Time For Love, is available from iTunes.

Filed Under: Song of the Day Tagged With: A Time For Love, Jerome Kern, Otto Harbach, Ralph Sharon Trio, Roberta

May 20, 2013 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: Nobody Else But Me

The song of the day for Monday, March 20, 2013 is Nobody Else But Me.

About This Song

Nobody Else But Me was written by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II for the 1946 revival of Show Boat; it did not appear in the original 1927 production.

The song quickly became a jazz standard; the recording by Joe Pass on guitar was one of the early significant early recordings.

About This Version

Tony Bennett recorded Nobody Else But Me for his 1964 album with the Ralph Sharon Trio, When Lights Are Low. This is one of favorite of Bennett’s albums from the 1960s; Bennett singing with just the Trio (Ralph Sharon, Hal Gaylord and Billy Exiner) was, and is, a real treat for this author.

Nobody Else But Me

Listen to Nobody Else But Me on Spotify. Song · Tony Bennett · 1964

Nobody Else But Me, as well as the remastered When Lights Are Low album, is available from iTunes.

Just to compare, here’s the same song from the 1988 studio recording of Show Boat:
http://open.spotify.com/track/5gyPWLQy5YEQAnkLmDEVo8

Filed Under: Song of the Day Tagged With: Jerome Kern, Oscar Hammerstein II, Show Boat, When Lights Are Low

May 15, 2013 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: The Folks That Live On The Hill

The song of the day for Wednesday, May 15, 2013 is The Folks That Live On the Hill.

About This Song

While the partnership of Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II probably comes to mind when people first think of Hammerstein, Oscar Hammerstein was nearly 50 before he and Rodgers wrote Oklahoma. Prior to that, he had teamed with composers including Jerome Kern (Showboat in 1927), Vincent Youmans, Rudolf Friml and Sigmund Romberg. Not only a lyric writer, Hammerstein usually wrote the book for the musicals he collaborated on.

220px-High_wide_and_handsome_promo_picture

Today’s song, The Folks That Live On The Hill, was written in 1937 with Jerome Kern for a movie called High, Wide and Handsome, where it was introduced by Irene Dunne. It was recorded that same year by Bing Crosby. Peggy Lee also recorded the song in 1957 on her album The Man I Love.

About This Version

Tony Bennett recorded this song on his 1990 autobiographical album Astoria: Portrait of the Artist. The song is quite touching in the context of the arc of the album: the young man returning home after World War II, exploring his past, planning his future and dreaming of what life might bring.

http://open.spotify.com/track/38kABxg7jKSRBo1Yd5V7k5
The Folks That Live On the Hill, as well as the entire Astoria: Portrait of the Artist album, is available from iTunes.

Filed Under: Song of the Day Tagged With: Astoria: Portrait of the Artist, Jerome Kern, Oscar Hammerstein II

April 12, 2013 By Suzanne 2 Comments

Song of the Day: All The Things You Are

The song of the day for Friday, April 12, 2013, is All The Things You Are.

About This Song

Written for the 1939 Broadway music Very Warm for May, All The Things You Are was written by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II. In American Popular Song, Alec Wilder notes that Very Warm For May must have had a terrible book “since otherwise the show’s failure is incomprehensible. For it had one of Kern’s best scores. Indeed there are five songs worth considering, the greatest of them being All The Things You Are“.

The song has lent itself to numerous jazz interpretations by some of America’s finest jazz musicians, including Artie Shaw, Sonny Rollins and Coleman Hawkins, Dizzy Gillespie and Dave Brubeck. In his book The Jazz Standards, Al Gioia relates that “I recall talking to saxophonist Bud Shank a few months before his death at age 82, when he noted that he never felt he had exhausted the possibilities of this specific son, which he had first recorded almost 60 years earlier.”

About This Version

I was listening to Bennett’s Carnegie Hall concert today at the office; when All The Things You Are started I had to stop working and just listen because I was overcome not only with the beauty of the song itself, but Tony Bennett’s exquisite rendering of the song. When he sings “you are the angel glow that lights the stars” so gently, touching the notes so lightly as if they are sacred, the beauty of the song is fully revealed. While most of the praise for this song goes to the wonderful composition by Jerome Kern, Tony Bennett’s treatment of the song lyrics are a tribute to the greatness of Oscar Hammerstein.

http://open.spotify.com/track/4XohhDSDnbIMP8kIbESsuv
All The Things You Are, as well the complete Tony Bennett At Carnegie Hall album, is available from iTunes.

And yes, if you check the new Reader Poll, I was the first “reader” to choose the Carnegie Hall Concert as my desert island album.

Filed Under: Song of the Day Tagged With: 1962 Carnegie Hall Concert, Jerome Kern, Oscar Hammerstein II

March 18, 2013 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: Ol’ Man River

The song of the day for Monday, March 18, 2013 is Ol’ Man River.

About This Song

Ol’ Man River is, of course, from the great 1927 musical Show Boat by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II.  The song has long been associated with Paul Robeson, who performed it in the London production in 1928 and the 1932 Broadway revival.  He continued to sing it in musical recitals for the rest of his career.

About This Version

Candido Camero
Candido Camero

Today’s version of Ol’ Man River is from Tony Bennett’s 1959 Roulette album with Count Basie: Basie/Bennett. It addition to a very fine treatment by Bennett and Basie, this version features a percussion solo by the great Candido. Bennett worked with Candido on The Beat of My Heart (released in 1957) and would work with him again in 1962 for his Carnegie Hall concert.

http://open.spotify.com/track/1HdO58Yc1gPFBbLkuwbxSK
Ol’ Man River, as well as the full Basie/Bennett album, is available from iTunes.

Filed Under: Song of the Day Tagged With: Candido, Jerome Kern, Oscar Hammerstein II, Paul Robeson, Showboat

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • Next Page »
  • Home
  • About
  • Song of the Day
  • Videos
  • Album of the Week
  • Music and Art
  • And More
  • The Interactive Tony Bennett Discography

Copyright © 2026 The Year of Tony Bennett · Genesis Framework by StudioPress · WordPress