Min 19th Century American sheet music for Home, Sweet Home. |
Perhaps
the biggest international hit of the
19th Century made its public bow on May 8, 1823 in London with the premier of the opera Clari, or the
Maid of Milan. That
opus is long forgotten but one aria
leapt to immediate popular acclaim. The librettist
was an American-- John Howard Payne,
and actor, poet, and playwright who had taken up residence in England
and enjoyed considerable success
there. The aria set to music a poem he had scribbled a year earlier.
Payne’s
partner was Englishman Henry Rowley
Bishop, a prolific composer of opera and light opera who in
1842 became the first musician to be
knighted for his work. Bishop also borrowed from his own earlier work, a more elaborate art song which he had published anonymously as A Sicilian
Air.
Composer Henry Rowley Bishop saw his tune become a hit twice. |
Due
to its popularity the simple aria
dubbed Home, Sweet Home was rushed
to publication in piano sheet music and
earned an astonishing £2,100 in its first year—a veritable fortune. The publisher,
the producer
of the opera, and Bishop all did
very well. But the profligate Payne, who had little
or no business sense quickly squandered
his share. “While his money lasted, he was a prince
of bohemians,” noted an acquaintance.
The
opera quickly jumped the puddle and
premiered in Philadelphia on October
29, 1823 at the fashionable Winter
Tivoli Theatre and was sung by Mrs.
Williams. Americans quickly took the
song to heart and were very proud that
a countryman had achieved success at the pinnacle of British high culture.
John Howard Payne won acclaim for his song, but pissed away the fortune it might have Brought him |
Not
long after a broke Payne returned to
the United States and Quixotically took up residence with the
Cherokee just as Andrew Jackson’s Indian Removal policies were
coming into place. He found new notoriety for his articles in defense of
the tribe which hypothesized that they were one of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel. In
1842 John Tyler, probably in an
attempt to shore up shaky Whig support for his Presidency appointed him to the post of
American Consul to Tunis, an undemanding sinecure he held until his
death on April 10, 1852.
The
same year that Payne died in North
Africa, Bishop re-introduced the
song with a simplified arrangement
as a popular parlor piano piece. The sentimental,
family idealizing Victorian Age was
in full swing and the song with
Payne’s plaintive lyrics was perfect for family sings after Sunday
dinner.
Mid pleasures and palaces though we may
roam
Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home
A charm from the skies seems to hallow us there
Which seek thro’ the world, is ne’er met elsewhere
Home! Home!
Sweet, sweet home!
There’s no place like home
There’s no place like home!
An exile from home splendor dazzles in vain
Oh give me my lowly thatched cottage again
The birds singing gaily that came at my call
And gave me the peace of mind dearer than all
Home, home, sweet, sweet home
There’s no place like home, there’s no place like home!
Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home
A charm from the skies seems to hallow us there
Which seek thro’ the world, is ne’er met elsewhere
Home! Home!
Sweet, sweet home!
There’s no place like home
There’s no place like home!
An exile from home splendor dazzles in vain
Oh give me my lowly thatched cottage again
The birds singing gaily that came at my call
And gave me the peace of mind dearer than all
Home, home, sweet, sweet home
There’s no place like home, there’s no place like home!
The
sheet music flew off of store shelves on both sides of the Atlantic. It was a bigger hit than the first exposure,
much like Queen’s Bohemian Rhapsody scored higher on the charts in 1992 when it
was used in Wayne’s World than on its first release in 1976.
Home, Sweet Home was taken all over the far flung British Empire where it was
sung by homesick colonial officials,
soldiers, missionaries, merchants and their families like another sentimental ballad,
Robert Burns’ Auld Lang Syne was spread.
A classic Home Sweet Home sampler. |
During
the Civil War in America it became both a favorite campfire ballad and a song of the families left behind by the troops.
The power of the song was shown when desertions
sky rocketed when the tune swept
camps leading some Yankee commanders
to ban it from their bivouacs.
Home, Sweet Home had an impact on popular culture in many ways.
Notable were the ubiquitous sewing samplers that were made and hung homes humble and grand.
The refrain “There’s no place like hope” entered the American vocabulary and was soon being referenced in literature, most famously
in L. Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz published in 1900.
In
1909 in the early Edison Studio western The House of Cards when a saloon brawl breaks out a title card was flashed reading “Play Home, Sweet Home!” followed by a shot of
a fiddler and the melee breaking up as men stream
out of the tavern, some with tears
in their eyes. That established a tradition of playing
the song at last call that persisted
in many joints through the Depression years sort of like Semisonic’s
Closing Time is now played by weary
bartenders trying to clear the place out.
Home, Sweet Home had a good run—more than a century of popularity during which time
just about everyone was as familiar
with the lyrics as with Happy
Birthday. But times and tastes change. It is far too
sweet and sentimental to the point
of maudlin for modern culture that favors cool
ironic detachment and suspects
that every home is just nest of dysfunction
and angst.
Folks
don’t sing Home, Sweet Home any more.
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