Summertime performed by Louis Armstorng and Ella Fitzgerald.
Today
is the Summer Solstice in the Northern Hemisphere and we would be remiss if we didn’t take musical note of the occasion. There are so many great summertime songs that
it would be hard to choose among them, except for the one great American classic that stands head and
shoulders above them all—George Gershwin’s
Summertime.
Porgy and Bess colaborators George Gershwin and DuBose Heyward in Charleston, South Carolina. |
Summertime is Gershwin’s aria 1935 opera Porgy and Bess with
lyrics by DuBose Heyward the white
South Carolinian author of the novel Porgy
on which the opera was based. Ira Gershwin was also credited as a co-lyricist by Heyward, who was also a poet, was the sole author of
Summertime.
The
song was first sung in the opera by Abbie
Mitchel as Clara and later reprised by Anne Brown as Bess singing
to Clara’s orphaned baby after she
and her husband drowned in a storm.
Mitchel made the first recording of the song with Gershwin at the piano and conducting the orchestra
on the 78 rpm album George Gershwin Conducts Excerpts from Porgy & Bess.
Abbie Mitchel as Clara first sang Summertime on stage and recorded it with Gershwin. |
Porgy and Bess, although not a
hit in its first Broadway production went on to be one
of the towering achievements of the American musical theater, oft revived as
both a stage musical and as a full-blown opera.
Gershwin’s great gamble was
to synthesize Black folk blues and jazz and to dare to present a Black cast of classically trained singers
mostly stripped of minstrel show
stereotypes on Broadway. His devotion to Heyward’s text and vision and his generosity
in collaboration created something magical.
Billie Holiday’s 1936 recording
was the first to hit the US pop charts, reaching #12. Other
versions to make the pop charts include those by Sam Cooke in 1957, Al
Martino 1960, The Marcels in 1961, Ricky
Nelson in 1962), and the Chris
Columbo Quintet in 1963. The most commercially
successful version was by Billy
Stewart, who reached #10 on the Billboard
Hot 100 chart and # 7 on the R&B
chart in 1966. But perhaps the most beloved recent version was by Janis Joplin with Big Brother and the Holding Company.
Critic David Starkey wrote that Joplin sang the song “with the
authority of a very old spirit.”
Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong's 1958 Verve LP was one of several collaborations between the two jazz greats. |
There
have been many other outstanding versions, but this collaboration by Louis
Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald is
truly extraordinary.
Then
maybe we will get to some of those also-ran
summertime songs later.
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