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BERLIN: Say It Isn't So: Songs of Irving




Total playing time: 01:02:43

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'Say It Isn't So' - Songs of Irving Berlin
Original 1919-1950 Recordings
Irving Berlin once wrote a song called 'Say It With Music' and even though it's not one of the 21 selections on this recording, its title does serve as a kind of mission statement. Berlin always did 'say it with music' and this selection of tunes provides some revealing insights into the life and career of the man born Isadore Baline in Russia in 1888.

Alexander's Ragtime Band
At the age of 23, Berlin had his first big hit. He claims the melody 'came to him out of the air' in 1911 and he wrote it first as an instrumental. Then he set words to it, vaudeville star Emma Carus launched it, numerous other entertainers picked it up and it sold over 2,000,000 copies. This 1947 version features Al Jolson & Bing Crosby.

A Pretty Girl is Like a Melody
This was written during the tryout of the 1919 Ziegfeld Follies. The 'great glorifier' wanted a song to link five interludes where his finest showgirls appeared in stunning costumes, each to a piece of classical music. Berlin penned this as a throwaway tune, but it endured and became the anthem of the Follies.

What'll I Do? / All Alone
Both of these songs are from 1924 and were used in Broadway and touring editions of Berlin's popular series, The Music Box Revues, often thought of as the intimate antidote to Ziegfeld's excess. These reflections of deep personal longing came from the period after Berlin's first wife, Dorothy, tragically died of typhoid during their honeymoon in Cuba.

Always
This was written in 1925 to socialite Ellin Mackay, whom Berlin fell in love with despite her father's objections. The elder Mackay sent his daughter to Europe to get her away from Berlin, but love triumphed and the two finally married. He gave her this song as a wedding present.

Remember
Also from 1925, this number initially failed to catch on, but Berlin's song-plugger, partner and friend Max Winslow kept circulating the piece. By the end of the year, three separate recordings of it were all on the charts simultaneously, including this one by 'Cliff Edwards and His Hot Combination'.

Blue Skies
In 1926, vaudevillian Belle Baker was starring in a show called Betsy, but unhappy about the songs Rodgers and Hart had written for her. She turned to Berlin for help and Baker herself claims he penned the tune the very night before the opening. Copyright information indicates he actually wrote it a few weeks earlier than the 28 December première, but it makes a good story - and a great song.

Puttin' On the Ritz
Harry Richman made this a No. 1 hit for Berlin in 1929. Its lyric about 'Lenox Avenue' refers to the custom of Broadway denizens heading up to Harlem for late-night merriment. Later on, Berlin would eliminate the topical (and racial) tinge from the song by changing the locale to 'Park Avenue'.

Say It Isn't So / How Deep is the Ocean?
Berlin often suffered from periods of depression and inactivity in his life. The early 1930s found him in such a state until crooner Rudy Vallee made 'Say It Isn't So' a surprise hit in 1932, and Ethel Merman followed soon after with 'How Deep is the Ocean?' Easter Parade / Heat Wave
Both of these songs are from the smash 1933 Broadway revue, As Thousands Cheer, based on the various sections of a newspaper. 'Easter Parade' was for the Sunday rotogravure color picture section and depicted the annual 'walk of fashion' on Fifth Avenue each Easter Sunday. The tune was rescued from a 1917 effort by Berlin called 'Smile and Show Your Dimple'. 'Heat Wave', of course, was Berlin's response to the weather report. A sizzling saga in which Ethel Waters attributed a major tropical weather condition due to a saucy lady who 'started a heat wave by making her seat wave'. Marilyn Monroe also made a lasting impression with her rendition in the 1954 film catalogue of Berlin's songs, 'There's No Business Like Show Business'.

Cheek to Cheek
Berlin spent most of the late 1930s in Hollywood, writing songs for the charming series of films featuring Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. This is from 1935's Top Hat, often considered the classic of the series. The number won Berlin his first of seven Oscar nominations for best song.

I've Got My Love to Keep Me Warm
This has remained one of Berlin's most popular creations over the decades, being reinterpreted by everyone from Ella Fitzgerald to Rod Stewart. But it was first written as a minor number for Dick Powell and Alice Faye in a nearly forgotten 1937 film called On the Avenue.

Marie
This was initially penned by Berlin as the theme for a 1928 Vilma Bankey film called The Awakening. It did well enough then, but it wasn't until Tommy Dorsey and his Orchestra recorded it in 1937 that it really took off and reached No. 1 on the charts.

God Bless America
Berlin wrote an early version of this song in 1918 after his Army service, but it seemed too earnest to him at the time. But in 1938, with the threat of World War II becoming imminent, Berlin created a new set of lyrics and, thanks to Kate Smith's tireless performing of it, the inspiring number became one of his most lasting hits. The version on this recording features Berlin himself in a concert of ASCAP composers from 1940. All the royalties went to the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts and Campfire Girls of America because Berlin 'refused to make money off of patriotism'.

White Christmas
Another Berlin classic, this was written in 1940 and first heard in the 1942 film, Holiday Inn, starring Bing Crosby. But some biographers have suggested that the underlying melancholy in the melody can be traced to the fact that Berlin's son, Irving Jr, died of crib death in the early hours of 25 December 1928 and the date would always be haunted with sadness for the composer.

Oh, How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning
Berlin originally wrote and performed this in the 1918 soldiers' revue, Yip Yap Yaphank. He admits this is how he truly felt about army life. The song acquired even greater fame when he revived it in the 1942 military revue This Is The Army, and performed it again, wearing his uniform from World War I.

I've Got the Sun in the Morning
The 1946 musical Annie Get Your Gun was the greatest stage hit in Berlin's career, but he wasn't even supposed to have been the composer. Jerome Kern was originally slated, but he died of a stroke before the show went into production. Berlin quickly turned out a score containing many durable hits, including this one, given a zippy reinterpretation by Artie Shaw and his Orchestra, with Mel Torme and the Mel-Tones providing the vocals.

You're Just in Love
The 1950 musical Call Me Madam had a weak second act on the road until star Ethel Merman suggested Berlin write a number for her and costar Russell Nype. He fell back on the 'quodlibet' style he had used ever since 1914's 'Play A Simple Melody'. Two distinctive tunes are heard separately, then together, usually to show-stopping effect. The voices here belong to Mary Martin and her son Larry Hagman.

There's No Business like Show Business
Although now known as the anthem of the theatrical profession, the song as first written for Annie Get Your Gun was intended as a mere scene-changing number. It also nearly got lost forever, when Berlin thought that director Joshua Logan wasn't enthusiastic enough about it and asked his secretary to throw his manuscript out. She didn't listen, the song survived and here's how it sounded in the 1950 film version of the show, with Betty Hutton and the cast.

Richard Ouzounian

Disc 1


    Alexander’s Ragtime Band (more info)
    Performed by: Morris Stoloff Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Bing Crosby,
    Al Jolson,
    Recording date: 24-Mar-1947
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  1. Alexander’s Ragtime Band - 02:57


  2. Ziegfeld Follies: A Pretty Girl Is Like A Melody (more info)
    Performed by: Joseph Pasternack Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Josef A. Pasternack
    John Steel, vocals
    Recording date: 29-Jun-1919
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  3. Ziegfeld Follies: A Pretty Girl Is Like A Melody - 02:28


  4. What’ll I Do? (more info)
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Walter Pidgeon, vocals
    Lester Hodges, piano
    Recording date: 14-Jul-1924
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  5. What’ll I Do? - 03:11


  6. All Alone (more info)
    Performed by: Nathaniel Shilkret Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Nathaniel Shilkret
    John McCormack, tenor
    Recording date: 16-Dec-1924
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  7. All Alone - 02:42


  8. Always (more info)
    Performed by: George Olsen Music
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: George Olsen
    Bob Rice, vocals
    Edward Joyce, vocals
    Fran Frey, vocals
    Recording date: 04-Feb-1926
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  9. Always - 03:26


  10. Remember (more info)
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Cliff Edwards,
    Recording date: Oct-1925
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  11. Remember - 03:15


  12. Blue Skies (more info)
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Jack Smith,
    Recording date: 16-Jun-1927
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  13. Blue Skies - 03:13


  14. Puttin’ On The Ritz (more info)
    Performed by: Earl Burtnett's L.A. Hotel Biltmore Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Earl Burtnett
    Harry Richman,
    Recording date: 10-Dec-1929
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  15. Puttin’ On The Ritz - 02:19


  16. Say It Isn’t So (more info)
    Performed by: Rudy Vallee Connecticut Yankees
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Rudy Vallee,
    Recording date: 08-Sep-1932
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  17. Say It Isn’t So - 03:33


  18. How Deep Is The Ocean (more info)
    Performed by: Nathaniel Shilkret Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Nathaniel Shilkret
    Ethel Merman, vocals
    Recording date: 28-Sep-1932
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  19. How Deep Is The Ocean - 03:22


  20. As Thousands Cheer: Easter Parade (more info)
    Performed by: Leo Reisman Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Leo Reisman
    Clifton Webb, vocals
    Recording date: 02-Oct-1933
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  21. As Thousands Cheer: Easter Parade - 03:20


  22. As Thousands Cheer: Heat Wave (more info)
    Performed by: Studio Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Ethel Waters,
    Recording date: 09-Oct-1933
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  23. As Thousands Cheer: Heat Wave - 02:59


  24. Top Hat: Cheek To Cheek (more info)
    Performed by: Leo Reisman Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Leo Reisman
    Fred Astaire,
    Recording date: 25-Jun-1935
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  25. Top Hat: Cheek To Cheek - 03:15


  26. On The Avenue: I’ve Got My Love To Keep Me Warm (more info)
    Performed by: Red Norvo Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Red Norvo
    Mildred Bailey, vocals
    Recording date: 07-Jan-1937
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  27. On The Avenue: I’ve Got My Love To Keep Me Warm - 02:55


  28. The Awakening: Marie (more info)
    Performed by: Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Tommy Dorsey
    Jack Leonard, vocals
    Recording date: 28-Jan-1937
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  29. The Awakening: Marie - 03:18


  30. God Bless America (more info)
    Performed by: Howard Hanson Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Howard Hanson
    Irving Berlin,
    Recording date: 23-Sep-1940
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  31. God Bless America - 01:57


  32. White Christmas (more info)
    Performed by: John Scott Trotter Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Bing Crosby,
    Recording date: 28-May-1942
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  33. White Christmas - 02:59


  34. Yip, Yip, Yaphank: Oh, How I Hate To Get Up In The Morning (more info)
    Performed by: Milton Rosenstock Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Milton Rosenstock
    Irving Berlin,
    Recording date: 27-Jul-1942
    Produced by: Lennick, David
    Produced by: Soloduo

  35. Yip, Yip, Yaphank: Oh, How I Hate To Get Up In The Morning - 03:08


  36. Annie Get Your Gun: I’ve Got the Sun In The Morning (more info)
    Performed by: Artie Shaw Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Artie Shaw
    Mel Torme,
    Recording date: 29-Apr-1946
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  37. Annie Get Your Gun: I’ve Got the Sun In The Morning - 02:57


  38. Call Me Madam: You’re Just In Love (more info)
    Performed by: Mitch Miller Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Larry Hagman, vocals
    Mary Martin, vocals
    Recording date: 30-Nov-1950
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  39. Call Me Madam: You’re Just In Love - 02:50


  40. Annie Get Your Gun: There’s No Business like Show Business (more info)
    Performed by: MGM Studio Orchestra
    Composed by: Irving Berlin
    Conducted by: Adolph Deutsch
    Howard Keel, vocals
    Keenan Wynn, vocals
    Louis Calhern, vocals
    Betty Hutton, vocals
    Recording date: 06-Oct-1949
    Produced by: Lennick, David

  41. Annie Get Your Gun: There’s No Business like Show Business - 02:32

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