Monday, February 26, 2007

Harold Arlen























Great songs are timeless and great songwriters know this. Harold Arlen was one such songwriter. Below are a few selections of his songs spanning 70 years. Arlen was born Hyman Arluck, the son of a cantor from Buffalo, New York. He started his career playing piano in the red hot jazz band The Buffalodians, and moved on to the Cotton Club, Broadway and later Hollywood. If you don't know his name, you know his songs: "One For My Baby (And One For The Road)," "Blues in the Night," "Ac-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive," "It's Only A Paper Moon," "That Old Black Magic," as well as the music from The Wizard of Oz and the selections below. Arlen was a fine soulful singer and a great interpreter of his own songs made famous by others. Check out his vocal performance on "Stormy Weather." The vocals come in at about a minute and a half into the number. Also, we get a reprise of Charlie Parker, playing with Red Norvo's All-Stars; Keith Richards and Bobby Keys on his most famous composition; and Memphis' Reigning Sound, from my favorite record of 2002.

For further reading on Arlen, check out this article from the New Yorker by John Lahr.














Listen: GONE mp3
Buy














Listen: GONE mp3
Buy

Listen: GONE mp3 - Keith Richards and Bobby Keys

Listen: GONE mp3 - Reigning Sound
Buy

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

the Arlen is the best yet.

Cheers,

JSG

Ted Barron said...

thanks jay! keep spreading the "flu."

Bobby D. said...

Thanks for the Link, also the Red Norvo... etc...

Anonymous said...

Harold Arlen's story is amazing. I love it. The New Yorker piece is amazing. "Stormy Weather" is probably my favorite song, ever. On WFMU's blog there are over 70 versions of "Stormy Weather." It's work a look.

Ted Barron said...

Thanks Jordan! The WFMU post missed my radar. I'm downloading it now.