Do It Again Lyrics April Stevens

Song

"Practice It Again"
Poster The French Doll 1922.jpg
Song
Linguistic communication English language
Composer(s) George Gershwin
Lyricist(s) Buddy DeSylva

"Do It Once again" is an American pop song past composer George Gershwin and lyricist Buddy DeSylva. The song premiered in the 1922 Broadway show The French Doll, every bit performed by actress Irène Bordoni.

Background [edit]

Gershwin recounted the origin of the song in 1934:

I was in the office of Max Dreyfus, my publisher, one day when Buddy DeSylva walked in. DeSylva said jokingly to me, "George, let'southward write a hit!" I matched him past maxim, "O.One thousand.!" I sabbatum downward at the piano, and began playing a theme which I was composing on the spot... Buddy listened for a few minutes and then began chanting this title—"Oh, Do It Once again!," which he had just fitted to my theme.[1]

Gershwin began playing the song, described equally "innocently sensual", [ citation needed ] at parties. Upon hearing the vocal, Irène Bordoni insisted that she perform the song in her bear witness.[2] "Do It Again" showtime appeared in the Broadway play The French Doll, which premiered on Feb twenty, 1922 at the Lyceum and ran for a total of 120 performances.[1]

Construction [edit]

In Edward Jablonski's book Gershwin: With a New Disquisitional Discography, he writes that "Exercise It Once again" has "bar-to-bar modulations, distinctive harmonies and un-Can Pan Alley long-lined melody that mark it as one of Gershwin'due south finest creations."[3]

Success [edit]

Bordoni, the actress who performed the vocal in The French Doll, earned praise and success with the song's premiere. Alice Delysia's performance of the song (retitled as "Please Exercise It Over again") in the 1922 London revue Mayfair and Montmartre was also well received. That same year, the Paul Whiteman Orchestra's recording found success and helped forge an "auspicious association" between the bandleader and Gershwin.[ane] While Bordoni never recorded the vocal, Delysia did in 1933.[one] [ii] Other notable performances include Marilyn Monroe's 1952 live rendition earlier thousands of marines at Camp Pendleton in Southern California, which caused a "near anarchism", as well as the version that appears on Judy Garland's 1961 live anthology Judy at Carnegie Hall.[ane]

Notable recordings [edit]

  • June Christy – 78 rpm single, with Shorty Rogers and His Giants, recorded September eleven, 1950 in Los Angeles (1950), Day Dreams, Blue Notation/Capitol CD compilation (reissued 1995), Absurd Christy Proper Records CD compilation (reissued 2002)
  • Sarah Vaughan – Sarah Vaughan Sings George Gershwin (1958) and Gershwin Alive! (1982)
  • April Stevens – Teach Me Tiger (1960)
  • Judy Garland – Judy at Carnegie Hall (1961, reissued many times since)
  • Julie London – Whatsoever Julie Wants (1961) (reissued 2012)
  • Shirley Horn – Loads of Dearest (1963)
  • Carol Channing – Thoroughly Modernistic Millie film soundtrack (LP 1967), (CD 1992)
  • Nancy Wilson – But Cute (1969)
  • Michael Feinstein – Michael & George: Feinstein Sings Gershwin (1998)
  • Diana Krall – When I Wait in Your Optics (1999)
  • George Gershwin – The Essential George Gershwin (2002)
  • Linda Eder – By Myself: The Songs of Judy Garland (2005)
  • Rufus Wainwright – Rufus Does Judy at Carnegie Hall and Rufus! Rufus! Rufus! Does Judy! Judy! Judy!: Alive from the London Palladium, concert album and DVD (2007)
  • Mark Isham and Kate Ceberano – Bittersweet (2009)

Run across likewise [edit]

  • List of 1920s jazz standards
  • List of compositions by George Gershwin

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Pollack, Howard (2006). "14: From The French Doll to Our Nell (1922)". George Gershwin: His Life and Piece of work. University of California Press. pp. 263–265. ISBN0-520-24864-3 . Retrieved October 25, 2010.
  2. ^ a b Hyland, William (2003). "2: Song Plugging". George Gershwin: A New Biography. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 32–33. ISBN0-275-98111-8 . Retrieved Oct 26, 2010.
  3. ^ Jablonski, Edward (1998). Gershwin: With a New Critical Discography. Da Capo Press. pp. 48–49. ISBN0-306-80847-1 . Retrieved October 26, 2010.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Do_It_Again_(George_Gershwin_and_Buddy_DeSylva_song)

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