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THE LADY FROM 29 PALMS (Allie Wrubel)
EB: The first time I heard this song was Doris Day's version from a "Your Hit Parade" collection. I was no more than 17 years old but I knew that the lady in question was everything that I longed to be glamorous beyond belief with countless men pining for me and showering me with gifts. Fast forward to Spring of 1998....I handed Fred Miss Day's recording along with that of the Andrews Sisters, to see if we couldn't find a way to reinvent this forgotten classic. We began to perform it at the club and mold it to our liking. Fred: "How would you like to end it?" Me: "How about a whole bunch of key changes and we wrap the ending around 'til we get there?" And here it is, from the lone bass trombone intro to the glorious Technicolor finale. Whether you are this Lady or merely know her, you'll never forget the address.
FB: This quintessential "bad girl" song was written in 1947 by Allie Wrubel, the undersung songmeister who wrote "The Lady in Red," "Why Don't We Do This More Often," and his biggest hit, "Zippity-Doo-Dah." "29 Palms" was introduced by the Freddy Martin band, known for being slightly to the left of the Lombardo sound. We've given the Lady in question more of a Glenn Miller fantasy treatment.
OH! YOU CRAZY MOON (Johnny Burke Jimmy Van Heusen)
EB: I learned this number from the lovely band singer, Bea Wain, and always thought it the ideal song about a lost love devastatingly matter-of-fact, ironically accusatory, and deceptively light-hearted in melody and feel. The collaboration of Burke on the lyric and Van Heusen on the tune provides one of the era's brilliant numbers, if not one of its better-known, despite its presence on Frank's "Moonlight Sinatra" album. Van Heusen, a.k.a. Curtis Babcock, was Frank's favorite composer (and one of mine) and close friend (I wish).
FB: For two years in Los Angeles, I listened religiously to Bea Wain's radio show, dedicated to the best of the Big Band years (one of the only such programs in the country). How I wish I could have peered into the future and seen Elena Bennett's and my "Crazy Moon." This one's for you, Bea.
NOT I (Dick Manning Sammy Gallop)
EB: Heartbreak and June Christy go together in the most sophisticated way. Broken promises and undying love; who could resist? Certainly not I; and, happily, not Fred, once I'd played June's version for him. We began to perform it and, before you could say "torch song", we'd worked up this dramatic new arrangement.
FB: Pete Rugolo and June Christy go together in the most sophisticated way, too. His ground-breaking arrangements for Christy brought the big band sound into the Sixties, and I've given him a humble tribute in Elena's version of this sensational, little-performed song.
SHAKE DOWN THE STARS (Eddie DeLange Jimmy Van Heusen)
EB: As mentioned, Sinatra loved singing Van Heusen's songs. That goes double for me, especially when combined with Eddie DeLange's brilliant lyric. As a bobby-soxer trapped in the Eighties, I had all of the Frankie/Tommy Dorsey session records; I always thought this an exceptional cut, its rapid swing driving home the urgency of its request a big band version of the W. H. Auden poem....
FB: Those boys wrote a million songs in those days; just scratch a few and a classic will jump out at you. This song couldn't be more my type of thing, and we gave it the full treatment, with a tip of the hat to Mr. Dorsey.
YOU'RE FOLLOWING ME (Bob Hilliard Burt Bacharach)
FB: This one's mine. EB: No, I'll tell. FB: I found the song, I'll tell. EB: Hit it. FB: I heard this mysterious obscurity played over and over on a now-defunct New Rochelle radio station that played songs without ever announcing them. I managed to throw a tape on and record 3/4 of the song, and for eight years I played it for every musician in town, trying to discover the identity of the song and its singer. This marks the sole occasion on which I stumped even the Mighty Elena.... the consolation prize is that Elena immediately loved and learned the song, filled in the missing lyrics, and it instantly became one of our signatures. My great thanks go to singer Maggie Wirth, a dear friend who rummaged around in the library and put an end to my eight-year quest: "You're Following Me" was written by lyricist Bob Hilliard and a swinging Burt Bacharach, astoundingly enough, and was introduced on the Jack Paar Show in 1962 by Catarina Valente.
EB: He got it right. I'll only add that both of us knew Bacharach mainly for his Dionne Warwick hits and for being Marlene Dietrich's arranger and conductor during her glorious cabaret years. We really had no idea that he had written something so cool and vampily swinging. Note to Burt: "Come back, Baby! We'll treat you right this time!"
I HAD THE CRAZIEST DREAM (Mack Gordon Harry Warren)
EB: Gordon & Warren don't get enough recognition, despite having created some of the most enduring standards (two of which we include herein). Another favorite of mine since my high school days, Helen Forrest's beautiful hit is usually performed at a slower tempo. We decided to give it a hot swing treatment, keeping the verse in its traditional central location. Proving that it's never too late to tinker, the night before this recording session, I called Fred and asked, "How about a little delusional trumpet solo after '"...the oddest things appear?" You can hear for yourself Fred's response, as performed by Larry Lunetta.
FB: I am actually brought to you in part by Harry Warren, who left an annual scholarship for promising film composer/arrangers at U.S.C. I won with a full-orchestra old-style showtune of mine, so I feel the presence of the grand master even more than I already did. Here's back atcha, Harry.
HOLD ME, HOLD ME, HOLD ME (Betty Comden & Adolph Green Jule Styne)
EB: One of the first songs Fred and I realized we both knew was "There Never Was A Baby," which I had learned from Ella Fitzgerald's recording, but which Fred also knew from the Comden-Green-Styne revue Two on the Aisle, starring the spectacular Dolores Gray and the ever-lovable and seldom cowardly Bert Lahr. Fred made me a tape of his treasured, out-of-print LP and I fell immediately in love with this jewel of a song. A more sophisticated plea for what really counts, I have seldom, if ever, heard.
FB: Anyone who has wandered in to hear us knows that my favorite songwriter is Jule Styne, who had at least four songwriting careers: as a big-band writer for Harry James during World War II, as a writer of "B" musicals on Broadway in the Fifties, as one of Sinatra's principal composers, and as a powerhouse composer of top-drawer Broadway shows beginning with "Gypsy" in 1959 (with a Harry James trumpet solo in every overture). "Hold Me" was written in 1951 and orchestrated by the legendary Philip J. Lang, to whom I've left a little tribute deep in the middle of our big band version.
THE SONG IS YOU (Oscar Hammerstein II Jerome Kern)
EB: Once you meet someone new, how do you explain the music they have brought back to your life, just when you had abandoned all hope of ever hearing it again? Even Oscar and Jerry didn't know the answer, but they sure knew how to phrase the question! One night, Fred and I got to the lyric "Why can't I let you know the song my heart would sing?" and found ourselves repeating it until we had thoroughly shaken the song, each other, and our audience by the shoulders in hopes of finding the answer.
FB: Particularly during an ASCAP strike, some of the most unlikely material became grist for the swing mill, including piano concertos and Mexican Hat Dances. One of the happiest translations from operetta to big band was this exquisite ballad from the most harmonically advanced popular composer of the day, Jerome Kern, and his kid sidekick Oscar Hammerstein (who thirty-five years later wrote about the sound of music in another context).
FOOLS RUSH IN (Where Angels Fear To Tread) (Johnny Mercer Rube Bloom)
EB: This wrenching ballad has brought tears to my eyes since I was a teen who thought she understood the perils love holds for a heart that dares to leap at the chance for happiness. I have long admired the Dorsey-Sinatra version of this completely perfect union of lyrical and musical expression, and am thrilled at the current re-appreciation of the poetic genius of Johnny Mercer.
FB: To put it very casually, Rube Bloom wrote one of this century's great popular songs, which is seeing a well-deserved resurgence long after the original fox-trot recording of the Forties. We have restored the verse, which until Rosemary Clooney's recent version was rarely recorded.
AND THE ANGELS SING (Johnny Mercer Ziggy Elman)
EB: Another Mercer beauty (once the Angels get over their fear of treading, they start some glorious singing no doubt they've learned a few numbers from Johnny over the years). Benny Goodman's trumpet player, Ziggy Elman, said he adapted the tune from a folk song he learned playing at Jewish weddings, as his Eastern-inflected solo indicates in the original recording. Add to the tune some Mercer magic, and Martha Tilton (one of Goodman's seemingly endless supply of spectacular girl singers) and you'll know why I've always treasured this jubilant gem.
FB: We wanted to start where the original arrangement left off, so trumpeter Bob Millikan tees off with the last four bars of the original, and we're off. That's also Bob recreating Ziggy's closing solo in the middle section of our version.
I'LL TELL THE MAN IN THE STREET (Lorenz Hart Richard Rodgers)
EB: As a young girl, I saw the Nelson EddyJeanette MacDonald movie musical I Married An Angel (I like angels) and heard this song. Nelson sings it to the people in the streets of Paris after he weds Jeanette (complete with her fluffy white wings). The early jaunty fox-trot versions are the only recordings known to me, but I always thought it would make a perfect ballad. Fred insists it's the first song he heard me sing (FB: Well, it was). EB: It became a great favorite of ours and we never doubted that it would be on "the album". I've traded Eddy for Freddy and wings for strings.
AT LAST (Mack Gordon Harry Warren)
EB: I loved this song first from the lush Glenn Miller arrangement, but in '91 my musical director and dear friend, the late Scott Traudt, asked if I had heard the Etta James recording. I'm ashamed to admit that I had not, so he proceeded to educate me by showing me a video of Miss James belting it out as a guest on a Diana Ross television special. You can bet that I promptly changed the way I sang it to pay tribute to the great lady, and performed it frequently up until Scott's passing, when I retired it for several years. When I again took it up as a request from a longtime fan, I felt I needed to find a new style for the song, and merging and adding to the two versions mentioned, Fred and I came up with this. We agreed that it seemed best suited to a smaller group and, as you can hear, Fred works his magic with a half-dozen musicians just as easily as with two or three dozen.
FB: Another for you, Harry.
THE WAY YOU LOOK TONIGHT/MY FOOLISH HEART (Dorothy Fields Jerome Kern/Ned Washington Victor Young)
EB: The grand Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers movie Swingtime provided me with my first hearing of "The Way You Look Tonight;" I immediately stopped the video and rewound so I could write down all the lyrics. Of course there's also Frank's big, fast swing version with Nelson Riddle, which is great fun; but I always preferred the song's original ballad format. Some years later I saw the Susan HaywardDana Andrews melodrama My Foolish Heart, throughout which the title song is used to such unbearably perfect effect that I found myself completely obsessed. During my preoccupation, I realized that the Fields lyric "...and that laugh that wrinkles your nose touches my foolish heart" ran magically into the WashingtonYoung song. Over numerous years, with as many pianists, I sought to work up an arrangement, to no avail, until I described the idea to Fred Barton. Within the hour we were performing it and perfecting it. And "this time, it isn't fascination,"... I know we have.
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