Showing posts with label Piano Playing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Piano Playing. Show all posts

Thursday, June 22, 2017

Too Late Now



We think of Lerner and Lowe as a team, but lyricist Alan Jay Lerner worked with other composers such as Burton Lane on the film Royal Wedding in 1951.  It includes this gem of a song, a memorable contribution to the Great American Songbook, touching lyrics by Lerner and a suitable Burton Lane melancholic melody.  Supposedly, they wrote it over the telephone. 

Although it’s been recorded by many, it’s Judy Garland’s sad rendition I think of as the song was written for her but she dropped out before Royal Wedding was filmed and was replaced by Jane Powell.  This YouTube recording was from her TV show, performed some dozen years later.  It takes on a genuine sadness given the back-story.

Too Late Now
Too late now to forget your smile
The way we cling when we danced awhile
Too late now to forget and go on with someone new

Too late now to forget your voice
The way one word makes my heart rejoice
Too late now to imagine myself away from you

All the things we've dreamed together
I relive when we're apart
All the tender words together
Live on in my heart

How could I ever close the door
And be the same as I was before?
Darling, no, no I can't anymore
It's too late now

My rendition in the “recording studio” of my living room has its technical drawbacks, but I tried to capture the pure simplicity of this wonderful melody.


Friday, June 16, 2017

I Love My Wife



Cy Coleman’s I Love My Wife is the title song from his 1977 musical about wife swapping – a very popular “sport” in those days, the same year NYC’s Plato's Retreat opened for swingers.  After the fantasying by the husbands in the show, they come to the conclusion that they have the best in their own wives.  Thus this song.  If it were not for Frank Sinatra perhaps the song would be as forgotten as the musical but, thankfully, Sinatra saw the genius of this beautiful ballad, the repeated musical phrases resulting in such a haunting melody.  He recorded it as a single using a Nelson Riddle chart. The lyrics, by Michael Stewart, latch onto those musical phrases (these of course are not the entire lyrics):

But just in case, you didn't know
I love my wife

and later in the song….

But just in case, you hadn't heard
I love my wife

and later again…

But just in case, you couldn't guess
I love my wife

and the concluding

But just in case, you couldn't guess
Or hadn't heard
Or didn't know
I love my wife
I love my wife
I love my wife

mmm….
I love my wife

My piano rendering of this wonderful melody is dedicated to my wife of nearly 50 years, Ann.


Thursday, December 22, 2016

Christmas Lullaby



Talk about unknown Christmas songs.  Christmas Lullaby was written for Cary Grant by none other than Peggy Lee (Lyrics) and Cy Coleman (Music).  It is the simplest of tunes and lyrics but therein is its beauty.  And the story of how it came to be written and recorded by Cary Grant is told by Jessica Pickens in her blog, Comet Over Hollywood. YouTube captures Grant’s recording for posterity

James Gavin, in his biography of Peggy Lee, Is That All There Is?: The Strange Life of Peggy Lee, said “Christmas Lullaby as Lee called it, wasn’t anything too special. ‘Angles bless you, little one…my little one, sleep well.’ But as Lee sat alongside Grant at a Hollywood studio and gazed at him while he talk sang her words, he could have been intoning Emily Dickinson.”

Although Christmas is not the same for me as it was when I was growing up and then for us as parents raising two sons (happily both visiting us this holiday), the spirit indelibly left its mark.  I posted YouTube piano versions of two of my favorite Christmas pieces, one two years ago --  a Bill Evans composition, It’s Love It’s Christmas, and, last year, Vince Guaraldi’s classic Christmas Time Is Here. 

So I offer one of Christmas Lullaby, a lovely one minute waltz.  Lyrics are below.  Happy and Healthy Holidays to all!

Angels bless you little one / while you’re fast asleep.
You’ll awake to dancing toys, candy canes, Christmas joys.
And I pray your whole life through, Angels will watch over you,
loving you the way I do my little one, sleep well.
Angels bless you little one / while you’re fast asleep.
You’ll awake to dancing toys, candy canes, Christmas joys.
And I pray your whole life through, Angels will watch over you,
loving you the way I do my little one, sleep well.

Copyright © 1967 by Notable Music Co. Inc. and Denslow Music Co. Inc.

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Rhythm on Record




My review of Satchmo at the Waldorf by Terry Teachout concluded with this photograph of the great Louis Armstrong.  Attribution was given to an obscure discography, Rhythm on Record (London, 1936).  I didn’t want to mix information on that work in the review, so here is the rest of the story.

In the mid 1970s I was running a publishing company in Westport, CT (later known as Greenwood Publishing Group).  At that time we were slowly transitioning from reprinting out of print books and journals into becoming a full-fledged academic and reference publishing house.  I happened to be in London before (or was it after?) the Frankfurt Bookfair in 1975 and I had an afternoon free of appointments to rummage through the antiquarian bookshops in the Charing Cross Road and Bloomsbury areas.  In one of those spellbinding stores I came across Rhythm on Record.  The proprietor said it was very rare and that it was the world’s first discography.  Looking through it I was fascinated to see so many great early jazz musicians, dance bands and singers so well represented, including some striking black and white plates.  I bought it on the spot and made it the central focus of a large reprint program of discographies, classical as well as jazz, which were out of print. 

Later we developed our own original discography works.  I learned there was a whole coterie of discography specialists such as Michel Ruppli in France who ultimately compiled a number of works for us, including a 6 volume 6,000 page guide covering the Decca record labels as well as Brian Rust in the UK who wrote the definitive Guide to Discography which we published in 1980

This kind of reference publishing has been obviated by the Internet, but, at the time, it was precious information for collectors and enthusiasts which could only be communicated in printed form. It is amazing to step back and see the whole progression and to recognize the achievements of the discography pioneers, in this case, Hilton R. Schleman.  The subtitle of the work is long: “A complete survey and register of all the principal recorded dance music from 1906 to 1936, and a who’s who of the artists concerned in the making.”  It is indeed all those things and more given the numerous illustrations.

I can’t reproduce all of them here, but, first, here are the text pages which were devoted to Louis Armstrong.  They show the detail that went into this pioneering work:



Here are but a few of the illustrations:











Finally, the other thing I did not want to mix with my review was the happy circumstance that I was asked to play the piano in the lobby of Dramaworks on opening night, so I had a dual role as reviewer and entertainer. 

I choose to perform an “all Louis Armstrong” program, songs that he is either closely associated with, and/or recorded by him such as “What a Wonderful World,” Star Dust,” "Won't You Come Home Bill Bailey," and about a dozen more including “Ain't Misbehavin'” and “Hello, Dolly.” There are truncated videos in links to the last two songs.

All in all, it was a special night -- in a way, a full circle for me from my publishing days.