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“In 1946 Lester Young played it in a swinging, improvisational treatment, and that same year, trumpeter Roy Eldridge recorded his big band version.” | |  | - Chris Tyle |
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| Evelyn Herbert introduced “Lover Come Back to Me” on September 19, 1928, at the Imperial Theater. She performed the song (which was reprised byRobert Halliday) as part of the Broadway musicalThe New Moon. | | | | | | | | | | “Lover Come Back to Me” was recorded numerous times during the show’s run with three recordings making the Top Ten: Later recordings of “Lover Come Back to Me” to make the pop charts included: - Perry Askam (1930,The New Moon Company chorus, vocals, #20)
- Nat “King” Cole (1953, with Billy May and His Orchestra, #16)
| | | | | Loosely based on an eighteenth century autobiography,The New Moon tells the story of a French aristocrat with revolutionary sympathies who is arrested by the French authorities for being an enemy of the state. While being returned to France on a ship named “New Moon,” the crew mutinies, and the hero escapes to an island where he lives until his pardon from the newly formed Republican French government. For its out-of-town tryouts,The New Moon opened in Philadelphia on December 22, 1927, but was closed down for reworking nearly a year before its New York opening. The show was generally well received in the Big Apple and had a healthy run of 509 performances. J. Brooks Atkinson, theater critic for theNew York Times, called the show ... an unusually pleasing musical comedy ... bedecked with flowing and brocaded costumes, sung, for the most part, beautifully, and acted with a grandeur that verges upon grandiloquence.
Other hit songs from Romberg/Hammerstein score were “Marianne” (the B-side to “Lover Come Back to Me” by the Arden-Ohman Orchestra), “Stout-Hearted Men” (the B-side to “Lover Come Back to Me” by Perry Askam), and “Softly As in a Morning Sunrise,” and “One Kiss” (both on a recording by Nat Shilkret and His Orchestra). It would seem Romberg was not above borrowing from other composers; the opening bars for the melody for “One Kiss” are virtually identical toVincent Youmans’ “No, No, Nanette.” “Softly As in a Morning Sunrise” endures as an oft-recorded jazz standard. Preceding theThe New Moon was an unrelated 1919 silent film with the same name, but following the stage musical there were two MGM screen adaptations. The first was the then-successful but now largely forgotten 1930 film starring Grace Moore, Lawrence Tibbett, Adolph Menjou, and Roland Young. The setting was changed to Russia and the similarities to the original stage plot were few, but “Lover, Come Back to Me” was retained and sung by Moore. The second was released in 1940 and starred Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy. A mostly faithful adaptation,New Moon, as it was titled, is a generally well-reviewed Eddy/Mac Donald vehicle. In 1989 a videotaped performance of the New York City Opera’s production ofThe New Moon was aired, this being most faithful to the original libretto of the operetta. According to David Ewen in his book,All the Years of American Popular Music, “Lover Come Back to Me” was ... one of Romberg’s most beloved melodies, though not his most original, since its middle section makes more than a passing reference to Tchaikovsky’s piano pieceJune Baracolle.
Beyond his melody, jazz musicians appreciate the “Lover Come Back to Me” chord progressions, which are often used as the basis for improvisations; one example is Art Blakey’s “Quicksilver.” | | | | | William Zinsser inEasy to Remember: The Great American Songwriters and Their Songs relates how Hammerstein turned over his lyrics for “Lover Come Back to Me” to Romberg, only to have the composer prop them on the piano, mumble them as he played the corresponding notes, and then declare, “It fits.” | | | | | |
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More information on this tune... |
| Robert Gottlieb, Robert Kimball Reading Lyrics Pantheon Hardcover: 736 pages
(This book includes a short biography of Hammerstein and over 20 pages of his lyrics, including those for “Lover Come Back to Me.”) | |
See theReading and Research page for this tune for additional references. |
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- Jeremy Wilson |
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This section suggests definitive or otherwise significant recordings that will help jazz students get acquainted with“Lover Come Back to Me.” These recordings have been selected from theJazz History andCD Recommendations sections. |
Billie Holiday recorded “Lover, Come Back to Me” on several occasions, beginning with a classic, gently-swinging combo performance in 1944 ( 1944). “Gently swinging” also aptly describes Ben Webster’s wonderful rendition from 1957 ( Soulville (Dig)). Often, though, the tune is interpreted at a much brighter tempo, as demonstrated wonderfully by Jimmy Smith and his trio in 1956 ( At the Organ, Vol. 3). Noah Baerman - Jazz Pianist and Educator |
Music and Lyrics Analysis |
| OriginalKey | Four flats:“A” is in Ab major, changing to F minorin the “B” section | Form | A – A – B- A | Tonality | Half major,half minor | Movement | Primarilystep-wise, moving up and down in gracefularcs; over 50% of the melody consists oflong, sustained pitches. | Comments (assumedbackground) | Originally a slow ballad, this tune is frequentlyplayed “Tempo de Bitch” (quarter note =250 b.p.m. +) because of its many sustainedpitches and slow harmonic movement. Thereis nothing exotic or unusual about the harmonicprogression. Romberg had been trained asa classical composer and follows all the“rules” of proper voice leading, makingguide-tone lines particularly easy to hear.The first eight measures use the basic I– III7 – vi – II7 with embellishments (half-diminishedand diminished seventh chords), returningto I by way of a common-tone diminishedchord modulation. Section “A” ends withnot one, buttwo“turnarounds” thatare so common, they’re nearly cliches: I– vi – ii7 – V7, followed by I – I (firstinversion, i.e. 3rd in the bass) – IV –ct˚7 – I (Db – D#˚7 – Ab). Both of thesechordal sequences do, however, use enoughembellishing chords to maintain interest. Section “B” is another simple harmonicsequence. At its most basic, when all embellishingharmonies are discounted, it’s nothing morethan i – iv – i – V7 in the first four measuresand i – iv –i for the next two measures,after which the iv of the minor key turnsinto its parallel major, becoming a II7and ultimately a ii7 of the song’s initialmajor tonic key. | K. J. McElrath - Musicologist for JazzStandards.com |
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A group of 1940s recording sessions illustratesthe concept of “how many ways can a song be played?” Billie Holiday’s 1944 version of “Lover ComeBack to Me” is given a vocal ballad performance.Two years later, Holiday’s sometime musical partnerLester Young played it in a swinging, improvisationaltreatment, and that same year, trumpeter Roy Eldridgerecorded his big band version.Erroll Garner visited the tune in 1945 in asolo piano version. Dizzy Gillespie’s 1948 version has a mixtureof many elements: Latin rhythm and sweet melodicballad playing alternating with uptempo bebop improvisation.A little something for everyone on Diz’s recording! Chris Tyle - Jazz Musician and Historian |
Additional information for "Lover Come Back to Me" may be found in:
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| Robert Gottlieb, Robert Kimball Reading Lyrics Pantheon Hardcover: 736 pages
(Includes the following types of information: song lyrics.) | |
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“Lover Come Back to Me” was included in these films:
- The New Moon(1930, GraceMoore, Lawrence Tibbett)
- New Moon(1940, Jeanette MacDonald,Nelson Eddy)
- Deep in My Heart(1954, TonyMartin, Joan Weldon)
- That’s Entertainment II(1976,Jeanette MacDonald, Nelson Eddy fromNewMoon, 1940)
- U-571(1999)
And on stage: - The New Moon(1928, RobertHalliday, Evelyn Herbert) Broadway operetta
- The New Moon(2003, ChristianeNoll, Rodney Gilfry) revival
And on television: - The New Moon: Live from Wolf Trap(1988, Richard White, Leigh Munro) PBSGreat Performances
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Recommendations for This Tune |
Click on any CD for more details at Amazon.com |
John Coltrane Black Pearls 1991 Original Jazz Classics 352 Original recording 1958
| Coltrane was at the peak of his “sheets of sound” period and in the midst of his successful tenure withMiles Davis’ group when he went into the studio for this session. His cohorts here are trumpeter Donald Byrd, pianist Red Garland, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Art Taylor. The tempo is burning, but his band is more than up to the task. |
Sun Ra Arkestra Sound Sun Pleasure 1992 Evidence 22014 Original recording 1957
| Sun Ra was starting to establish himself as a composer and bandleader at the time that this live performance was recorded. The appealing vocals of Hattie Randolph are accompanied here only by bass, congas and Sun Ra himself, who takes a surprisingly straight-ahead piano solo as well. |
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Mildred Bailey Me & the Blues 2000, Savoy Original recording, 1946
| The sweet voice of Mildred Bailey lends elegance to this airy version of “Lover Come Back to Me.”’ Trombonist Henderson Chambers adds a little heat. |
Ben Webster Soulville 2003 Verve 314521449 Original recording 1957
| Ben Webster blows a breathy, romantic tenor sax on this mid-tempo, swing version of the song. PianistOscar Peterson, guitarist Herb Ellis, bassist Ray Brown and drummer Stan Levey make up the perfect rhythm section. |
Jimmy Smith At the Organ, Vol. 3 2005 Blue Note 63811 Original recording 1956
| This romping performance is a good example of the breadth of Smith’s organ skills. While he became famous largely for soulful blues, his bop abilities were substantial, as shown here. |
Hampton Hawes Everybody Likes Hampton Hawes: Vol. 3, The Trio 1991 Original Jazz Classics 421 Original recording 1956
| This charming performance begins with over two minutes of rhapsodic piano, making it all the more effective when the trio launches unexpectedly into an infectious swing groove. Hawes’ playing is consistently creative throughout. |
Ralph Burns Bijou 1999, Original Jazz Classics Original recording, 1955
| Pianist Burns trades some snappy solos with guitarist Tal Farlow on this high-energy rendition of the song. Bassist Clyde Lombardi and drummer Osie Johnson keep the furnace stoked. |
Arnett Cobb More Party Time 1998, Original Jazz Classics 979 Original recording, 1960
| Tenor saxophonist Cobb leads his group through a hip, swinging interpretation of the song that reads slightly off-tempo due, in part, to the intriguing drumming of Arthur Taylor. |
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