View Full Version : What is the name of this song ?
Hello Kaleuns
Can you tell me what is the name of this song ??
http://www.megaupload.com/?d=M1UDEZQ5
Thanks in advance mates.
:cool:
:salute:
Jimbuna
06-22-11, 04:36 PM
Never heard it before :nope:
Bakkels
06-22-11, 05:13 PM
'I surrender dear' (I just listened to the chorus, googled the line they sang and got lucky :03:) The file says it's Lionel Hampton, but if you search for that, you get an instrumental. So I don't know if it's actually him. Seems like more people performed this song. Most versions I came across were instrumental btw (Louis Armstrong for example) The title I'm pretty sure is correct though.
Sailor Steve
06-22-11, 05:35 PM
This is obviously the same version. If the person who uploaded it is to be trusted, it's Charlie Spivak and orchestra, with vocals by The Stardusters.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-oGuBXkdA44&feature=related
The version on this recording seems to confirm it.
http://www.cduniverse.com/search/xx/music/pid/3402831/a/Okeh+And+Columbia+Years,+1941-1942.htm
I looked at several for-sale listings on Amazon just to compare the 3:21 length of the song, but not one of them had time listings. Still it seems fairly certain.
You are wonderful men !
I luv you.
BIG THANKS !
What a song mates, what a song !!!
Listen this so sweet voices, it's marvelous
Thank you very much.
:yeah:
I try to decode the song on my piano, but I
had only found the range, it is in F# major.
But the Chords are very difficult to find. A bemol
minor - G minor but after...
No musician here to help me ?
Bakkels
06-22-11, 07:06 PM
And thank you for bringing it to my attention. This field of music isn't my expertise but I really like this tune! :yeah:
Sailor Steve
06-22-11, 08:53 PM
Sorry, I don't currently have an instrument to make chords on. Electric bass doesn't help with this problem. You might check around online for the sheet music.
Oh, here's Bing Crosby performing his very first hit, circa 1931.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8HtC__8CuA&feature=related
frau kaleun
06-22-11, 09:11 PM
Is this it?
http://cdn.freehandmusic.com/preview/530x4/warner/wfocv3p15.png
I hope the pic shows up. If not, here's the URL:
http://www.freehandmusic.com/sheet-music/i-surrender-dear-fats-wallers-316976
And what the heck is "Tempo di Beethoven swing"? I haz an intrigued. :hmmm:
Edit: if you google 'i surrender dear sheet music' you'll find some different variations, some have lyrics but I can't tell from the first page (which is often all they'll show you) if it's the same song sung in the Spivak video. OTOH it was not uncommon with big band tunes for the vocal portions to consist only of selected parts of the lyrics rather than verses (or all the verses) plus the chorus. So I really can't tell. If you play piano though maybe you can get enough from the one page of sheet music to ID the melody for sure.
Sailor Steve
06-22-11, 09:16 PM
I found several of those. Unfortunately none of them are complete. You want the whole thing, you have to buy it.
frau kaleun
06-22-11, 09:23 PM
I think the really important question here is what constitutes the tempo of Beethoven Swing and where can I find a sample to listen to. :O:
I've already googled videos for the song title + Fats Waller and got nothin.' Harumph.
I have something like a tears at the corner of my eyes because you are really a great community.
I gonna try to read this partition and if I can play it I'll be back later with the result, only for you.
Thank you all.
:yeah::yeah::yeah:
Sailor Steve
06-22-11, 11:30 PM
Maybe this will help.
http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a325/SailorSteve/MusicScore.jpg
For best results download and enlarge.
Mittelwaechter
06-23-11, 01:43 AM
@Frau Kaleun/Beethoven Swing
There is a variation (the third variation) in the second movement of Beethoven's 32nd piano sonata that "swings" to a modern listener.
It seems to anticipate a Jazz variation 100 years before the 1920's.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/de/Beethoven_-_Sonata_opus_111_-2.ogg
'I surrender dear' (Harry Barris, Gordon Clifford) is composed to be played in 'Beethoven Swing':
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dd5tUVDpahc&feature=related
sublynx
06-23-11, 02:08 AM
Wow, I just have to admire all the knowledge in this forum :DL Is there a question that don't get answered here!!
Maybe I'll once post a thread here with the title "What's the meaning of life?"
:salute:
Alpha Von Burg
06-23-11, 05:13 AM
Wow, I just have to admire all the knowledge in this forum :DL Is there a question that don't get answered here!!
Maybe I'll once post a thread here with the title "What's the meaning of life?"
:salute:
You can always count on Subsim
And Google...:D
:salute:
@Frau Kaleun/Beethoven Swing
There is a variation (the third variation) in the second movement of Beethoven's 32nd piano sonata that "swings" to a modern listener.
It seems to anticipate a Jazz variation 100 years before the 1920's.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/de/Beethoven_-_Sonata_opus_111_-2.ogg
'I surrender dear' (Harry Barris, Gordon Clifford) is composed to be played in 'Beethoven Swing':
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dd5tUVDpahc&feature=related
Very interessting !
Thanks to the search.
To Sublynx: this song was in my Gramophone in SH3 without name.
The link is made.
:O:
EDIT
Beethoven swing is also on YT in real video.
Begining at 5'10".
Fastest at 7'10".
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R9GYArGlM7g&feature=related
Sailor Steve
06-23-11, 12:26 PM
@'I surrender dear' (Harry Barris, Gordon Clifford) is composed to be played in 'Beethoven Swing':
We knew that, because it said so on the sheet music. What we didn't know was what it meant, which was why she asked.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dd5tUVDpahc&feature=related
That's as good an explanation as any. It's nice to see a modern band still doing this stuff, especially with the tuba. Thanks! :sunny:
frau kaleun
06-23-11, 04:47 PM
@Frau Kaleun/Beethoven Swing
There is a variation (the third variation) in the second movement of Beethoven's 32nd piano sonata that "swings" to a modern listener.
It seems to anticipate a Jazz variation 100 years before the 1920's.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/de/Beethoven_-_Sonata_opus_111_-2.ogg
'I surrender dear' (Harry Barris, Gordon Clifford) is composed to be played in 'Beethoven Swing':
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dd5tUVDpahc&feature=related
I actually found something referring to that very piece when I kept googling "Beethoven swing" later on, in a music forum thread somewhere. I think someone said they'd heard a bit of what was supposed to be a Beethoven composition for piano but it sounded like it had been jazzed up and they wondered if that was how it was originally written. Apparently the answer was, yes, that's how he wrote it.
Oh, Ludwig, was there anything you couldn't do?*
Going to check out all the linkies, thanks!
*Don't say "hear" or I will CUT YOU. :O:
Edit: :hmmm: :o :rotfl2: OMG BEETHOVEN INVENTED JAZZ. :rock:
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