You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby Album

Song past Dick Powell

"You lot Must Take Been a Beautiful Baby"
You-Must-Have-Been-A-Beautiful-Baby.jpg

Featured in the 1938 motion picture Hard to Get

Song by Dick Powell
Published 1938
Composer(due south) Harry Warren
Lyricist(s) Johnny Mercer

"You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby" is a pop vocal with music by Harry Warren and lyrics by Johnny Mercer, published in 1938. It was featured in the Warner Brothers motion-picture show Difficult to Get, released November 1938, in which it was sung past Dick Powell.[1]

The biggest-selling striking version was recorded by Bing Crosby,[1] [2] with Bob Crosby and his orchestra while other contemporaneous hit versions included recordings by Tommy Dorsey (with vocal past Edythe Wright) and Russ Morgan.[1] Information technology was also revived past Bobby Darin in 1961, reaching the charts over again that year.[i] The vocal has been recorded past many other artists (see below for a partial listing) and is considered a pop standard. It was used frequently in the Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons, also produced by Warner Brothers, under the musical direction of Carl W. Stalling.[iii]

Recorded versions [edit]

  • Russ Morgan and his orchestra (recorded Baronial 26, 1938, released by Decca Records as catalog number 2125A,[1] with the flip side "This Is Madness"[four])
  • Tommy Dorsey and his Clambake vii with song by Edythe Wright (recorded September 29, 1938, released by Victor Records equally catalog number 26066,[ane] with the flip side "Sailing at Midnight"[5])
  • Bluish Barron and his orchestra (recorded October 1, 1938, released by Bluebird Records every bit itemize number 7886[6] and past Montgomery Ward Records as catalog number 7537,[7] both with the flip side "It's Time to Say Aloha"[half dozen] [7])
  • Bing Crosby with Bob Crosby and his orchestra (recorded October xiv, 1938,[8] released by Decca Records every bit catalog number 2147A,[1] with the flip side "Summertime"[4])
  • Chick Bullock (recorded Oct twenty, 1938, released by Conqueror Records equally itemize number 9149, with the flip side "I Won't Tell a Soul"[9])
  • Dorothy Carless and Sam Costa ("ii voices and a pianoforte") in February 1939, released by Regal Zonophone (MR 2984).
  • Robert Clary (released by Capitol Records as itemize number 891, with the flip side "Alouette"[10])
  • Perry Como (recorded March 21, 1946, released by RCA Victor Records as catalog number 20-1916, with the flip side "A Garden in the Rain"[11])
  • Bobby Darin (recorded on June 19, 1961 released equally Atco 6206, with the flip side "Sorrow Tomorrow";[12] the biggest hit version, reaching U.S. #5 and UK #10)
  • Joe Loss & his Band with vocal by Chick Henderson (recorded Jan 21, 1939 released on Imperial Zonophone MR-2992)
  • The Dave Clark Five (released in 1967 as a U.S. single on Epic Records, catalog number 10179, with the flip side "Man in the Pin-Stripe Suit"). Their version peaked at number xxx-five and was their seventeenth and last Pinnacle 40 striking [xiii]
  • Johnny Mercer (recorded January, 1974, released on the album My Huckleberry Friend.)
  • Red Norvo and his orchestra (song: Mildred Bailey; released past Brunswick Records as catalog number 8240, with the flip side "Just You, Only Me"[14])
  • Bob Smith and the Herman Chittison Trio (released by RCA Victor Records as catalog number 20-2266, with the flip side "Where's Sam?"[fifteen])
  • A encompass by Dr. John appears during the finish credits of The Little Rascals (1994).

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d east f g Gardner, Edward Foote (2000). Pop Songs of the 20th Century: Nautical chart Detail & Encyclopedia, 1900-1949. St. Paul, Minnesota: Paragon Business firm. ISBNane-55778-789-1.
  2. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1999). Joel Whitburn Presents a Century of Popular Music. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Research. ISBN0-89820-135-7.
  3. ^ "The Looney Tunes Songbook".
  4. ^ a b Decca Records in the 2000 to 2499 series
  5. ^ Victor Records in the 26000 to 26499 serial
  6. ^ a b Bluebird Records in the 7500 to 7999 series
  7. ^ a b Montgomery Ward Records in the 7500 to 7999 series
  8. ^ "A Bing Crosby Discography". BING mag. International Club Crosby. Retrieved August 15, 2017.
  9. ^ Conqueror Records in the 9000 to 9499 series
  10. ^ Capitol Records in the 500 to 999 series
  11. ^ RCA Victor Records in the 20-1500 to 20-1999 series
  12. ^ Atco Records in the 6050 to 6792 series
  13. ^ Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book of Elevation twoscore Hits: Eighth Edition. Record Research. p. 129.
  14. ^ Brunswick Records in the 8000 to 8517 series
  15. ^ RCA Victor Records in the twenty-2000 to twenty-2499 series

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Must_Have_Been_a_Beautiful_Baby

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