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Articles by "1935"

Bing Crosby - Silent Night
Bing Crosby - Silent Night


Bing Crosby - Silent Night Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

Album: Greatest Hits
Released: 1935

Silent Night Lyrics


(Sleep in heavenly peace)
(Sleep in heavenly peace)

Silent Night, holy night
All is calm, all is bright
'Round yon virgin mother and child
Holy infant so tender and mild
Sleeps in heavenly peace
Sleeps in heavenly peace

Silent night, holy night
All is calm, all is bright
'Round yon virgin mother and child
Holy infant so tender and mild
Sleeps in heavenly peace
Sleeps in heavenly peace

Writer/s: SMITH, JASON / WASSE, ANDREA / TRADITIONAL
Publisher: Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, HAL LEONARD CORPORATION, O/B/O APRA AMCOS
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Silent Night
  • Halfway through December 1818, the church organ in St. Nicholas in Oberndorf, 11 miles north of Salzburg in what is now Austria, broke (a popular version of the story claims that mice had eaten out the bellows). The curate, 26-year-old Josef Mohr, realized it couldn't be repaired in time to provide music on Christmas Eve. He told his troubles to his friend, a headmaster and amateur composer named Franz Gruber, while giving him as a present a poem he had written two years earlier. Gruber was so taken by the rhythm of the poem that he set it to music, and on Christmas Eve there was music after all. Mohr played his guitar while the pair sang the song. It was the first public performance of "Stille Nacht" or as we know it "Silent Night."
  • It is believed that the carol has been translated into over 300 languages around the world, and it is one of the most popular carols of all time.
  • Bing Crosby's version became his best-seller of the 1930s.
  • Music licensing company PPL announced in December 2010 that this carol tops the list of Britain's "most recorded Christmas song of all time." Said Mike Dalby, Lead Reporting Analyst at PPL: "Silent Night is a beautiful carol which encapsulates the feeling of Christmas entirely. Everyone from punk band The Dickies right through to Sinead O'Connor has recorded it, which exemplifies just how much it resonates with all different types of artists."

    According to PPL, Sinead O'Connor's 1991 recording was the most popular version of the carol in Britain.

  • George Gershwin Songs - It Ain't Necessarily So
    George Gershwin - It Ain't Necessarily So


    George Gershwin - It Ain't Necessarily So Lyrics and Youtube Music Videos

    Album: Porgy and Bess
    Released: 1935

    It Ain't Necessarily So Lyrics


    It Ain't Necessarily So
    It ain't necessarily so
    The t'ings dat yo' li'ble
    To read in de Bible
    It ain't necessarily so.

    Li'l David was small, but oh my!
    Li'l David was small, but oh my!
    He fought big Goliath
    Who lay down an' dieth!
    Li'l David was small, but oh my!

    Wadoo, zim bam boddle-oo
    Hoodle ah da wa da
    Scatty wah!
    Oh yeah!

    Oh Jonah, he lived in de whale
    Oh Jonah, he lived in de whale
    Fo' he made his home in
    Dat fish's abdomen
    Oh Jonah, he lived in de whale

    Li'l Moses was found in a stream
    Li'l Moses was found in a stream
    He floated on water
    Till Ol' Pharaoh's daughter
    She fished him, she said, from dat stream

    Wadoo...
    Well, it ain't necessarily so
    Well, it ain't necessarily so
    Dey tells all you chillun
    De debble's a villun,
    But it ain't necessarily so!

    To get into Hebben
    Don' snap for a sebben!
    Live clean! Don' have no fault!
    Oh, I takes dat gospel
    Whenever it's pos'ble
    But wid a grain of salt

    Methus'lah lived nine hundred years
    Methus'lah lived nine hundred years
    But who calls dat livin'
    When no gal will give in
    To no man what's nine hundred years?

    I'm preachin' dis sermon to show
    It ain't nece-ain't nece
    Ain't nece-ain't nece
    Ain't necessarily...so!

    Writer/s: GERSHWIN, IRA / HEYWARD, DU BOSE / HEYWARD, DOROTHY / GERSHWIN, GEORGE
    Publisher: Warner/Chappell Music, Inc., IMAGEM U.S. LLC
    Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

    It Ain't Necessarily So Song Chart
  • This song comes from the Gershwin brothers' 1935 opera Porgy and Bess. Ira Gershwin's bible-doubting lyrics are sung by the sleazy dope-dealing character Sportin' Life.
  • The role of Sportin' Life was first performed by John W. Bubbles in the inaugural 124 date run of Porgy and Bess at New York's Alvin Theater in 1935. Bubbles was a dancer and couldn't read music. He had to be taught the aria through his feet, dancing the accents of the song structure.
  • George Gershwin's life work culminated in the three act opera Porgy and Bess, which was based on the 1926 novel Porgy by DuBose Heyward. A jazzy fusion of classical opera and Broadway musical, the work is set in the fictional all-black slum dwelling of Catfish Row in Charleston, South Carolina. The opera tells of the disabled beggar Porgy's desperate attempts to rescue the beautiful Bess from her twin dependency upon her violent and possessive lover Crown and the aforementioned Sportin' Life.
  • The song has been covered a number of times including notably by UK band Bronski Beat, who reached #16 on the UK singles charts. Their version was recorded with a 20-piece gay choir, The Pink Singers. Other versions include ones by:

    The Moody Blues for their 1965 album, The Magnificent Moodies. Their version is notable for the fact that it was their first recording with band member Ray Thomas singing the lead vocals.

    Aretha Franklin and Bobby Darin on the latter's 1959 album That's All. Aretha also recorded the tune for her Aretha (with the Ray Bryant Combo) record.

    Sarah Vaughan sung this on her 1982 album Gershwin Live!, for which she won Best Jazz Vocal Performance, Female at the 1983 Grammy Awards.
  • George Gershwin originally wanted the Metropolitan Opera to perform Porgy and Bess, until they stipulated they would only use white opera singers in blackface. Michael Feinstein, a pianist and singer who worked as an archivist for Ira Gershwin in the '80s, explained in an NPR Fresh Air interview: "There was no way [George] was going to allow Porgy and Bess performed by whites in blackface, because he felt it was demeaning to the race, demeaning to the subject of the opera, and he felt that it would become a caricature, even though he loved the voice of Lawrence Tibbett.

    And Lawrence Tibbett actually made the first commercial recordings of Porgy and Bess, supervised by George. And there was even talk later on, after George's death, of Tibbett doing it in blackface. But the family - Ira actually put a stop to that.

    The point is that George had a very special feeling for Porgy and Bess, and he felt that it was his great masterwork. And he wanted to depict these characters in a way that was taken very seriously at a time when many people didn't want to know or see a work that consisted entirely of an all African-American cast."
  • Porgy and Bess seemed destined to fail as George faced opposition from all sides. Feinstein continued:

    "It's a very volatile period in our history, because it's 1935. It's the Depression. And when George undertook the writing of Porgy and Bess, everybody was against him. He was considered by some to be a Tin Pan Alley guy, and how could he have the nerve to try and write an opera? The classical world said, oh, this is absurd. Who does he think he is?

    The Jewish community was agog. Of course, the black community said our own people should be writing about our race. Who is this guy to do it? I mean, everybody was against him. Except he had this vision and he had to fulfill it. And he absolutely believed in what he knew was inside of him. And that's what's so extraordinary.

    And even after it opened and it was financially a failure, he still maintained that it would one day be regarded as his greatest work. And, of course, he was right."

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