Here is a "HOLIDAY SOR-BAY"
a little spark of madness
that we could use to artificially maintain our Christmas and Chanukah spirit.
the first day of Chanukah/Hanukkah
Adam Sandler - CHANUKAH (HANUKKAH) Song Part 4
December 25, 1941
Bing Crosby introduces "White Christmas" to
the world
"White Christmas," written
by the formidable composer and lyricist Irving Berlin receives its world
premiere on this day in 1941 on Bing Crosby's weekly NBC radio program, The
Kraft Music Hall. It went on to become one of the most commercially
successful singles of all time, and the top-selling single ever until being
surpassed by Elton John's "Candle in the Wind 1997."
"White Christmas" took its first steps
toward becoming a bedrock standard in the American songbook when Crosby first
performed it publicly on Christmas Day, 1941. The song's success couldn't have
surprised Berlin, who despite having already written such songs as
"Alexander's Ragtime Band," "Cheek To Cheek" and "God
Bless America," had raced into his Manhattan office in January 1940 and
asked his musical secretary to transcribe "The best song I ever
wrote...the best song anybody ever wrote." It was nearly two years later,
however, that Crosby finally premiered the song on live radio, and a year after
that that Crosby's recording of "White Christmas" became a smash pop
hit.
Crosby's October 1942 recording of "White
Christmas" received heavy airplay on Armed Forces Radio as well as on
commercial radio during its first Christmas season, becoming an instant #1 pop
hit. It also returned to the Hit Parade pop chart in every subsequent Christmas
season for the next 20 years. Unlike other perennial holiday hits, however,
"White Christmas" strikes a mood that isn't necessarily jolly. As
Jody Rosen, author of the 2002 book White Christmas: The Story of an
American Song, told National Public Radio, "It's very
melancholy....And I think this really makes it stand out amongst kind of chirpy
seasonal standards [like] 'Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer' or 'Let It
Snow.'....I think that's one of the reasons why people keep responding to it,
because our feelings over the holiday season are ambivalent."
This was certainly true of the immigrant Russian
Jewish songwriter Irving Berlin. Though he did not celebrate Christmas, it was
a day that held special meaning to Berlin, who had spent each Christmas Day
visiting the grave of his late son, Irving Berlin, Jr., who died at just 3
weeks old on December 25, 1928. As Jody Rosen has suggested about a beloved
song of great emotional complexity, "The kind of deep secret of
["White Christmas"] may be that it was Berlin responding in some way
to his melancholy about the death of his son." Adam Sandler - CHANUKAH (HANUKKAH) Song Part 4
Stay Tuned
Tony Figueroa
No comments:
Post a Comment