Al Bowlly - Blue Moon 1935 Ray Noble video free download


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Duration: 02:49
Uploaded: 2011/05/14

Ray Noble New Mayfair Dance Orchestra - Al Bowlly

January 12, 1935

Victor 24849

"Blue Moon" is a classic popular song. It was written by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart in 1934, and has become a standard ballad.

The lyrics presumably refer to an English idiomatic expression: "once in a blue moon" means very rarely. (The origin of the expression is unclear; see article blue moon.) The narrator of the song is relating a stroke of luck so unlikely that it must have taken place under a blue moon. The title relies on a play on words, since Blue is also the colour of melancholy, and indeed the narrator is sad and lonely until he finds love.

Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart were contracted to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in May 1933. They were soon commissioned to write the songs for Hollywood Party, a film that was to star many of the studio's top artists. Richard Rodgers later recalled "One of our ideas was to include a scene in which Jean Harlow is shown as an innocent young girl saying—or rather singing—her prayers. How the sequence fitted into the movie I haven't the foggiest notion, but the purpose was to express Harlow's overwhelming ambition to become a movie star ('Oh Lord, if you're not busy up there,/I ask for help with a prayer/So please don't give me the air...')." The song was not even recorded and MGM Song #225 "Prayer (Oh Lord, make me a movie star)" dated June 14, 1933, was registered for copyright as an unpublished work on July 10, 1933.

Lorenz Hart wrote new lyrics for the tune to create a title song for the 1934 film Manhattan Melodrama: "Act One:/You gulp your coffee and run;/Into the subway you crowd./Don't breathe, it isn't allowed".

The song, which was also titled It's Just That Kind Of Play, was cut from the film before release, and registered for copyright as an unpublished work on March 30, 1934. The studio then asked for a nightclub number for the film. Rodgers still liked the melody so Hart wrote a third lyric: The Bad In Every Man, (Oh, Lord .../I could be good to a lover,/But then I always discover/The bad in ev'ry man which was sung by Shirley Ross made up in blackface. The song, which was also released as sheet music, was not a hit.

Comments

8 years ago

Linhombre69

Al...sadly missed but fondly remembered, thanks to the treasure trove of his many fine performances, like this one, which we can still enjoy on CDs and YT. Not just for us now but for future generations.

9 years ago

Keith T

He'd never have dreamed we still seek out his voice the world over 60 years after he's gone. He's not been replaced....and undoubtedly, he never will be. And this.....from a Bing Crosby fan.

9 years ago

Richard Brighton

I love this guy... 

9 years ago

Bill Pollock

I love these pieces. The orchestral work here is not heard anymore. Listening to this and other Al Bowlly numbers, the orchestra plays such an important part. Something not seen or heard in music nowadays though Burt Bacharach came close.

9 years ago

dick12235

Brain needed this: Thanks.

10 years ago

dkmeller1

Blue Moon, sung the way it ought to be sung-by a master of the craft!Thank you, Al Bowlly-and the Ray Noble Orchestra! Love it!

10 years ago

coffeescup

I feel like he sings to me personally.

10 years ago

Bob Jones

Thanks for posting, Al Bowlly was a great artist. The tune is the theme song for Manchester City Football Club in England, whose strip is blue. Until recently they were the underdogs against their local rivals Manchester United, - the Reds.

10 years ago

Cakes In The Rain

Galvanizing lyrics! Timeless tune! Bowlly was one of the greatest men of all aeons. "Isle of Capri" is a trillion dollar tune. What a true soul Al Bowlly.

10 years ago

Schellack100

Thank you for giving so much background information on this song.

11 years ago

Mike Stuart

*Ray Noble AHO, **Blue Moon**, 1935* 

11 years ago

Deborah Hamilton

When. I played this video my mother Edith came around and started humming the whole song she is 85 yrars on july. I THANK YOU FOR SHARING. Deborah Hamilton (Elvis Flower Lady) Oshawa Ontario Canada

11 years ago

Michael O'Flaherty

Great song. Great singer. Thanks.

11 years ago

thegossamertearoom

The phrase "blue moon" is the second full moon in a month. It does indicate a rarity because it does not happen very often. My husband and I were married on the night of a blue moon!

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