Helen Morgan - Body and Soul (1930) video free download


44,201
Duration: 03:11
Uploaded: 2010/04/04

"Body and Soul"

Words and Music by Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Frank Eyton and John Green

Performed by Helen Morgan

with orchestra conducted by Leonard Joy

Recorded September 12, 1930, New York

Helen Morgan (1900 - 1941) was born in Danville, Illinois. She worked for a while in mail order houses and in other mercantile establishments before trying her hand at show business. Her first experiences with the stage were without any particular distinction and to make something happen she entered a beauty contest and won it. The contest was won in Canada and those in the Dominion to whom it mattered much were somewhat chagrined when her birthplace was revealed. That didn't matter to Miss Morgan; all that mattered was that she'd had her first break.

By the early 1920s she had firmly established her reputation as a top-flight night-club singer, both in America and abroad. In Europe, at a Command Performance before the Duke of Windsor (then the Prince of Wales), a member of the Royal household approached her and warned her not to sing any vulgar songs. She replied, "If I did, you'd have to teach them to me." Returning to the States after that triumphant European jaunt, Miss Morgan appeared in "Show Boat", the Ferber-Kern masterpiece which was to become her most successful and famous venture.

Until her untimely death at the age of forty-one, Helen Morgan graced many Broadway shows, radio programs and Hollywood films.

Comments

9 years ago

kimmo framelius

All in One 

10 years ago

Wayne Brasler

This is my favorite song. So many brilliant recordings have been made of it--this one, which many consider the definitive recording; Polly Bergen for her Helen Morgan album; Anita O'Day (surrealistically brilliant); Billie Holiday (several times, all them genius); Joni James (one of the more heart-breaking; she was so moved by the song she could barely get it out and she used the British lyric as she was recording at Abbey Studios in London). It is a song that will always live on.

10 years ago

Charles Almon

Tastes change over the decades

10 years ago

NosHabebitHumus

You can hear and SEE Helen Morgan singing "Bill" in the 1936 film of Jerome Kern's "Showboat". It's here on YT. She was the original Julie LaVerne in the Broadway show (1927).

10 years ago

StarLightSylvie

The Ann Blyth marathon on TCM brought me here. I was curious as to what her voice sounded like. I know Gogi Grant was used in The Helen Morgan story but she's quite different. Her voice is a bit high for me but I still like it. It grows on you.

10 years ago

Steve Bell

INTERESTING BORN IN DANVILL ILL. MANY STARS, DICK AND JERY VAN DYCK, AND OTHERS. IT WAS A PRETTY MID WEST TOWN, AND MANY INTERESTING THINGS INVOLVED IN DANVILLE. I KNOW AS MY WONDERFUL GRANDPARENTS LIVED AND FARMED THERE. THANKS FOR THEINFO. AND WHAT A PASSIONATE , STORMY MOVIE.

12 years ago

bsgs98

Thank you Aad!

12 years ago

Aad Juijn

Thank you Bill...great upload (good quality) and a very nice performance by Helen! Grtz, Aad

12 years ago

13loomisst

Excellent version. Thanks very much.

12 years ago

bigcity233

I was wrong - the composer Eddie Heyman, Sour, Eyton and Green....I was mixing it up with some other song.

12 years ago

bigcity233

BEYOND beautiful!!...what a great voice and personality!!...I love the orchestra arrangements used to accompany her ..they were perfect...the 30's were a highpoint in popular music! This song is absolutely gorgeous...I think written by Hoagy Carmichael.

12 years ago

Brian Reinecke

Wonderful. What an amazing voice and timeless performance. Loved the slide show. Masterfully arranged. Her smiling at the end was perfect. Thank you!!

12 years ago

operamichael

Beautiful, sweet, sad Helen.

13 years ago

irishsetterarchie

Thank you for posting this! Helen was such a classic beauty and very talented indeed. What a wonderful time this must have been. Just look at the lovely way she dressed and the hairstyles and makeup. Everything flattered her and made her look even more beautiful. Helen Morgan should be unforgettable.

13 years ago

ThePeaceableKingdom

Whiteman, Etting, Hanshaw, Holman... a nod to its life as a jazz standard (Allen, Coleman, Holiday, Goodman... as well as somebody who recorded it yesterday)... There's nothing I can add so I'll shut up, close my eyes (after watching the slideshow), and listen to a great version of a great song...

14 years ago

Dejan Jovanovic

I like this version, too!:)

14 years ago

Hein Overbeek

@bsgs98 I did already know the Whiteman version with verse. But Helen Morgan was new for me Thank you for uploading. Hein

14 years ago

bsgs98

@heinbanjo12 The jazz standard we are familiar with today usually omits the verse. This is the original 1930 version, also recorded by Ruth Etting, Annette Hanshaw and Libby Holman.

14 years ago

Hein Overbeek

Very interesting. i know this song of course, The jazz standard. But this version is new to me. Thanks Hein

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