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The Year of Tony Bennett

An Appreciation of the Art and Music of Tony Bennett

December 22, 2015 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: Santa Claus Is Coming To Town

On the ninth day of the Twelve Days of a Tony Bennett Christmas, Tuesday, December 22, 2015, the song of the day is “Santa Claus Is Coming To Town.”

About This Song

Written by the songwriting team of J. Fred Coots and Haven Gillespie, “Santa Claus is Coming To Town” had a spectacular debut. The song was first sung on Eddie Cantor’s radio show in November 1934. On the day after the broadcast, there were 100,000 orders for the sheet music; by Christmas, over 400,000 copies of the sheet music had been sold.

About This Version

Tony Bennett recorded this version of “Santa Claus Is Coming To Town” in 1968 for his first Christmas album, Snowfall: The Tony Bennett Christmas Album; it was arranged and conducted by Robert Farnon.

Santa Claus Is Comin" To Town

Listen to Santa Claus Is Comin" To Town on Spotify. Song · Tony Bennett · 1968


“Santa Claus Is Coming To Town,” as well as Snowfall: The Tony Bennett Christmas Album, is available from iTunes.

Filed Under: Song of the Day, The 12 Days of a Tony Bennett Christmas Tagged With: 12 Days of Tony Bennett Christmas, Haven Gillespie, J. Fred Coots, Robert Farnon, Snowfall: The Tony Bennett Christmas Album

December 20, 2015 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: The Snowfall Christmas Medley

On the seventh day of the Twelve Days of a Tony Bennett Christmas, Sunday, December 20, 2015, the song of the day is “The Snowfall Christmas Medley.”

About These Songs

The medley consists of these songs: “We Wish You a Merry Christmas” (traditional 16th century English carol); “Silent Night” (music by Franz Xavier Gruber, lyrics Joseph Mohr. 1818); “O Come All Ye Faithful” (traditional 13th century song); “Jingle Bells” (James Lord Pierpont, 1857) and “Where Is Love” (Lionel Bart, 1968).

About This Version

Tony Bennett recorded this beautiful medley of Christmas songs in 1968 for his album Snowfall: The Tony Bennett Christmas Album, which was arranged and conducted by Robert Farnon.

Medley: We Wish You A Merry Christmas / Silent Night / O Come All You Faithful / Jingle Bells / Where Is Love?

Listen to Medley: We Wish You A Merry Christmas / Silent Night / O Come All You Faithful / Jingle Bells / Where Is Love? on Spotify. Song · Tony Bennett · 1968


“The Snowfall Christmas Medley,” as well as Snowfall: The Tony Bennett Christmas Album, is available from iTunes.

Filed Under: Song of the Day, The 12 Days of a Tony Bennett Christmas Tagged With: 12 Days of Tony Bennett Christmas, Jingle Bells, O Come All Ye Faithful, Robert Farnon, Silent Night, Snowfall: The Tony Bennett Christmas Album, We Wish You a Merry Christmas, Where Is Love

December 18, 2015 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: Christmasland

On the fifth day of the Twelve Days of a Tony Bennett Christmas, Friday, December 18, 2015, the song of the day is “Christmasland.”

About This Song

Today’s song, “Christmasland,” was composed by Robert Farnon, with lyrics by his brother Brian Farnon.

About This Version

Today’s song, “Christmasland,” was recorded in 1968 for Snowfall — The Tony Bennett Christmas Album. The recording was arranged and conducted by the composer, Robert Farnon.

Christmasland

Tony Bennett · Snowfall - The Tony Bennett Christmas Album · Song · 1968


“Christmasland,” as well as Snowfall–The Tony Bennett Christmas Album, is available from iTunes.

Filed Under: Song of the Day, The 12 Days of a Tony Bennett Christmas Tagged With: Brian Farnon, Robert Farnon, Snowfall: The Tony Bennett Christmas Album, The Twelve Days of a Tony Bennett Christmas

September 29, 2015 By Suzanne Leave a Comment

Song of the Day: Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas

The song of the day for Tuesday, September 29, 2015 is “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.”

About This Song

Today’s song, “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” was written in 1943 by Hugh Martin (music) and Ralph Blane (lyrics). It was introduced by Judy Garland in the 1944 movie Meet Me In St. Louis. In a Twitter conversation in November 2012, Tony Bennett said that “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” is his favorite Christmas song.

About This Version

You’re correct: this is September, not December. It is not yet time for the Annual Twelve Days of a Tony Bennett Christmas celebration. Though I suspect it might be here sooner than many of us would care to think. I mean, we’re still have 80 degree days here in Portland.

A few weeks back, I thought it might be fun to start presenting songs in Tony’s career, starting in 1946 with “St. James Infirmary,” to pick one song from each year, up to today. I’ve been doing this five days a week, Monday through Friday. Saturdays and Sundays have their own themes as well: Saturday I present a song and a video and on Sundays I pick a song that Mr. Bennett has recorded more than once and present them together.

Today is 1968 and there is no album more important in Bennett’s career for that year than Snowfall: The Tony Bennett Christmas Album. Critics have noted that Snowfall is not only an excellent Christmas album, but an excellent and outstanding album in its own right. It marked the first of Tony Bennett’s collaborations with the noted composer, conductor and orchestrator Robert Farnon.

And from that album is my favorite Christmas song of all time: “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas.” Like the composer, Hugh Martin, I too am from Birmingham, Alabama and, also like the composer, I studied at Birmingham-Southern College. By the time I started college in 1968, Hugh Martin was a legend at my college. When he was visiting Birmingham, he would visit the campus. I met him several times at the music department and would sometimes see him visiting other professors. (I will put a plug in for the Alabama Tony Bennett connection here: arranger Marion Evans, whose work as an arranger I feature often, is also from Alabama and also attended Birmingham-Southern. What can I say–they had and still have a fantastic music department.)

Tony Bennett recorded “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” on October 1, 1968 in New York at the CBS 30th Street Studio. The album Snowfall was released soon afterwards. The album featured many of the same musicians that were used for his album of the previous year, Tony Makes It Happen!, including Milt Hinton, John Bunch and Joe Soldo.

“Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” is an outstanding song. In the same way that “I Left My Heart in San Francisco” transcends that city and speaks to everyone all over the world, “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” is as much or more about home and family as it is the holiday. Whether it’s Tony Bennett singing it or Judy Garland, you won’t find a better song or a better performance anywhere.

Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas

Listen to Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas on Spotify. Song · Tony Bennett · 1968


“Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,” as well as Snowfall: The Tony Bennett Christmas Album, is available from iTunes.

Filed Under: Song of the Day Tagged With: 1968, Birmingham-Southern College, Hugh Martin, Judy Garland, Marion Evans, Meet Me In St. Louis, Ralph Blane, Robert Farnon, Snowfall: The Tony Bennett Christmas Album

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