To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year" is the title of a 1943 traditional pop composition by Frank Loesser, written for and introduced in the 1944 movie Christmas Holiday, the song was largely overlooked for some ten years before being rediscovered in the mid-1950s to become a pop and jazz standard much recorded by vocalists and instrumentalists.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
    34 686
    3 868
    40 889
  • Sarah Vaughan - Spring Will Be A Little Late This Year (Columbia Records 1953)
  • Spring Will Be A Little Late This Year
  • Carly Simon & Jimmy Webb SPRING WILL BE A LITTLE LATE THIS YEAR

Transcription

Composition / theme

An early instance of Frank Loesser writing his own music for his lyrics,[1] "Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year" has been described by singer Michael Feinstein - the "foremost expert on the music of the Great American Songbook" -[2] as "a perfect example of that heart-on-your-sleeve quality evident in so many [Loesser songs]."[3] The composer's daughter: Susan Loesser, classes the song as a rare "melancholy" item in her father's songbook, but one whose lyric is "not without hope".[4] "Spring Will Be ..." belongs to a sub-genre of songs which treat springtime as a metaphor in an ironic context,[5] the most extreme exemplars such as "Spring Is Here" and "Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most" "upend[ing] the conventional view of spring as the season of rebirth [to instead] use spring as the setting for expressions of disenchantment or remorse":[6] however "Loesser's lyric ... follow[s] a middle course, evoking a state of mind neither breezily cheerful nor trite; but not unremittingly dark either."[7]

First recordings and Christmas Holiday

"Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year" was written for the film Christmas Holiday to be sung by the female lead Deanna Durbin, a movie musical star from the age of 14 who at age 23 was making a career shift with an essentially dramatic role as a fallen woman working a taxi dance hall near New Orleans. The film discreetly posits Durbin's character as a singer who is first seen singing "Spring Will Be ..." at the dance hall in a performance which eschews Durbin's established "perky upbeat operetta persona" in favor of a "downbeat bluesy jazz" style.[8] The lyrics of "Spring Will Be ..." touch on the film's plot: Dean Harens plays a serviceman who, just after receiving a Dear John letter, is flying home for Christmas when a storm mandates a layover in New Orleans. Meeting Durbin at the dance hall, Harens treats her chivalrously, and she eventually confides her sad history. Once married to a charming roué (Gene Kelly) who has been jailed for murder, Durbin is now self-indentured at the dance hall as penance for failing to somehow save her husband from himself. Subsequent to a denouement which frees Durbin from her thralldom, with imminent romance with Harens implied, Christmas Holiday ends with Durbin gazing up at an overcast sky whose clouds drift apart as she watches.[9][10]

Completed in February 1944, Christmas Holiday would be released June 1944 to become a box office hit while making only a transient impression on the public consciousness, suggesting that moviegoers anticipating the lighter fare associated with Deanna Durbin and Gene Kelly were disappointed by Christmas Holiday and preferred to forget the film,[11] whose few critical notices virtually ignored "Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year" (Margaret Bean of the Spokesman-Review dismissed the film's "new song" as "not too appealing").[12] The song had already had three recorded versions prior to the film's release, beginning with that by Johnnie Johnston with the Paul Weston Orchestra, released March 1944 (the song serving as B-side to a 78-rpm single entitled "Irresistible You"), followed by recordings by Percy Faith (recorded April 24, 1944), as an instrumental) and Morton Downey (recorded May 8, 1944, for June 8, release). Also recorded in 1944 by Eddy Howard, "Spring Will Be ..." was recorded by Deanna Durbin - in her signature soprano -[13] in a December 1944 session in which Durbin also recorded the other song she'd sung in Christmas Holiday: "Always", with the tracks being paired on a March 1945 single release (on which "Always" was designated as A-side). Durbin's studio recording of "Spring Will Be ..." is the first evident instance of the song's two verses being preceded by a four line song intro which has rarely been included in subsequent recordings of the song. (See sidebox below.)

Rediscovery

As with its parent film, "Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year" seemed to soon lose such attention as it had garnered, the first evident recording of the song subsequent to 1944 being a 1950 release by the Ralph Flanagan Orchestra with vocalist Harry Prime. The song seems to have come to the fore due to its being recorded in the mid-1950s by Sarah Vaughan, who was evidently the first female vocalist to record "Spring Will Be ..." since Deanna Durbin in 1944, Vaughan also evidently being the song's first jazz-influenced interpreter. Vaughan first recorded "Spring Will Be ..." in a January 5, 1953, session with the Percy Faith Orchestra - Faith having made one of the earliest recordings of the song; the track being released as a single March 3, 1953, and appeared on the 1955 album Sarah Vaughan in Hi-Fi. Subsequent to Vaugahn's version, "Spring Will Be ..." has been recorded on a constant basis mostly by jazz-influenced and/or traditional pop vocalists, mostly female. ("Nearly all the best songs about spring are about disappointment, and all the best versions are by tuned-in women who know the score.")[14]

As sung by Deanna Durbin in the film Christmas Holiday, "Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year" featured two verses of four lines. A musically distinct four-line introduction to these two verses evidently debuted on disc on the studio recording of "Spring Will Be ..." made by Durbin in December 1944 (although this musical intro was heard as early as March 31, 1944, in a performance of "Spring Will Be ..." by Georgia Gibbs on the radio program Camel Caravan). Generally omitted by the song's performers, this intro may be heard in the recordings of "Spring Will Be ..." made by Helen Merrill, Eydie Gormé, the Randy Van Horne Singers, Joanie Sommers, Audrey Morris, Lina Nyberg, Barbara Lea and Seth MacFarlane.

Recorded versions

Vocal versions of "Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year" include those recorded by (album titles in italics):

Loesser's widow, singer-actress Jo Sullivan on her favorite Frank Loesser song: "For me, I think it would have to be "Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year" ... It's a hell of a song."[15]

The song has also been established as a favored piece by pop and jazz instrumentalists, exemplified by recorded versions by (album titles in italics):

[16]

References

  1. ^ The New York Times March 27, 2012. "Overlooked Songwriter Finally Gets His Due" by Stephen Holden
  2. ^ "Michael Feinstein saves the Great American Songbook". aarp.org.
  3. ^ (2001) Michael Feinstein with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (liner notes by Michael Feinstein). Los Angeles: Concord Jazz CCD-4987-2 (0 13431 49872 8)
  4. ^ Loesser, Susan (2000). A Most Remarkable Fella: Frank Loesser & the Guys & Dolls in his life. Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard. pp. 60–61. ISBN 978-0634009273.
  5. ^ "StereoTimes". Stereotimes.com.
  6. ^ Hajdu, David (22 April 2011). "Why Are There No Great Easter Songs?". The New Republic.
  7. ^ ""Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year": Song History, Commentary, Discography, Performances on Video". Greatamericansongbook.net. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  8. ^ Chinen Bisen, Sheri (2014). Music in the Shadows: Noir Musical Films. Baltimore MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 57. ISBN 978-1-4214-0838-5.
  9. ^ Greco, Joseph (1999). File on Robert Siodmak in Hollywood, 1941-1951. Dissertation.com. pp. 25–49. ISBN 1-58112-081-8.
  10. ^ "Christmas Holiday". Notcoming.com. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  11. ^ Basinger, Jeanine (2009). The Sate Machine. NYC: Vintage Books. pp. 284–286. ISBN 978-0307388759.
  12. ^ Spokesman-Review (Spokane) October 1, 1944. "Young Deanna Seems to Prefer Muse of Tragedy: in Christmas Holiday she forsakes her delightful pieces of laughter and song to delve into a heavy dramatic role" by Margaret Bean p.6
  13. ^ "Deanna Durbin – Femme Fatal: An interview with film historian, Dale Kuntz". Fabulousfilmsongs.com.
  14. ^ "Lost in a Fool's Paradise". Emscee.com.
  15. ^ Arizona Republic February 25, 2007. "Frank Loesser: the Guy Behind Guys & Dolls" A&E pp.1-9
  16. ^ "Original versions of Spring Will be a Little Late This Year written by Frank Loesser | SecondHandSongs". SecondHandSongs.
This page was last edited on 10 April 2024, at 15:59
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.