Lyric Spanish
Same tune, different lyrics (very long post)
Date: 13 Jun 2003 08:07:33 -0700Newsgroups: rec.music.rock-pop-r+b.1950s
Size: 4,039 bytes
Well, my post on "Just Because" still hasn't really gotten the desired response: one guy seems to think I don't want to be educated, though my whole point in the post was to find something out about this song and the artist who recorded it other than just that the song was based on the same original tune as "Here" and the artist's name was Lloyd Price, while another seems to be dumbfounded that I've never heard of Lloyd Price, but still won't say who he was! But this still leads me to bring up the question about songs with the same tune, but different lyrics. There seem to be 4 categories: 1. Independent compositions based on a (usually Classical) original. Two pairs (besides "Here" and this mysterious "Just Because") come to mind: The song "This Is My Beloved" (like everything from the musical "Kismet," of course) derives from a piece by the composer Alexander Borodin. That same piece was used, many years earlier, as the basis for a song called "Spring Magic." I've only heard it once (played by a local DJ whose program was devoted to '30s, '40s, and '50s music) and it was a weird experience because the melody was so familiar and the lyric so unfamiliar. The best-known pair (counting both songs together) is the two songs deriving from the Italian "O Sole Mio." "There's No Tomorrow" (was this recorded by Tony Martin? I think so) and "It's Now or Never" (a hit for Elvis) have titles that mean about the same thing (and nothing like the original Italian!) but very different lyrics. I'm not sure whether to include this in this category, because the _original_ version was recorded by a Pop artist (around 100 years after it first came out), but this one involves another of Elvis' hits: "Love Me Tender." I know that Connie Francis recorded a version of "Aura Lee," the original, which I've heard, and I think it's quite good. I don't know if it ever made it onto a single, but it is in an album of hers. 2. Follow-on or otherwise-related songs. The best example of this is "Slipping Around" and "I'll Never Slip Around Again," both recorded by Margaret Whiting and Jimmy Wakely (now, is this Pop or Country? She was a Pop singer, and he was Country!) Doris Day recorded the second one, but I have never heard of her doing the first. And the lyric of the second is clearly a follow-on to the first, set at a later time in the life of the subject of the first song. There was also "Woman" and "Man" - the same idea from the man's and woman's point of view, recorded back to back on the same single by Jose Ferrer and Rosemary Clooney (who were married to each other in real life at the time!) 3. Doubles by the same composer. Usually from the same play or movie, a composer might do the same tune, often in styles so different that they don't _seem_ like the same tune. I had to be told by a friend that "76 Trombones" and "Goodnight My Someone" from "The Music Man" were the same tune; even the clue where in a later reprise the lines from the two are interleaved didn't give that away to me. It took me less to discover that "The Glass-Bottom Boat" and "Soft as the Starlight" from the Doris Day movie of the same title as the first song were the same tune. It was in fact when I mentioned this to my friend that he told me about the pair from "The Music Man." 4. "Moon over Naples" and "Spanish Eyes," a category all by itself. Because it charted as an instrumental, I've never heard the actual lyrics of "Moon over Naples" _sung_ (except when I sang them myself, to get a feeling for the sound!) but there _are_ such lyrics, I saw them on a piece of sheet music, and I _like_ them probably better than the lyrics of "Spanish Eyes." I'd _love_ to know the story there. The sheet music shows the _same_ three names as composer/lyricists for both. I'll bet that one lyricist wrote one and one the other, and arranged to put both names on both songs' sheet music for royalty reasons, but I have no proof. I invite anyone to name more pairs. Bruce
