Blue Skies sung by Willie Nelson.
We
are celebrating Irving
Berlin’s birthday over at the Heretic,
Rebel, a Thing to Flout blog. And
what better way these days than to celebrate with maybe his most cheerful song—Blue Skies.
The
song was composed in 1926 as a last-minute addition to the Rodgers and Hart musical Betsy. The show
running for only 39 performances but Blue
Skies was an instant success leaving the principal composing team’s work in
the dust. On opening night audience demanded 24 encores from star Belle Baker.
The song was also a celebration, after the death of his first born son
as an infant, of the birth of Berlin’s daughter
Mary Ellin.
Irving Berlin at the piano belting out one of his own songs. |
In
1927, the music was published and Ben Selvin’s recorded version was a
hit. That same year, it became one of the first songs to be featured in a talkie, when Al Jolson performed it in The Jazz Singer. The song was
recorded for all of the major and dime store labels of the time. In 1935 Benny
Goodman recorded a big band swing
version.
A lobby card for the 1945 Paramount musical Blue Skies. |
In
1946 it became the title song of a Paramount Technicolor musical starring Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, Joan Caulfield,
and Billy DeWolfe with a slew of
other Berlin hits including Putting on the Ritz danced
spectacularly by Astaire. Crosby did it
again six years later with Danny Kaye in
White
Christmas.
Willie Nelson recorded it in
1972, 52 years after it was written, had
a #1 Billboard
Hot Country chart hit with it.
He also included it on a Greatest
Hits compilation and on his beloved 1978 Stardust album of
material from the Great American
Songbook.
No comments:
Post a Comment