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CAESAR, IRVING  BIOGRAPHY

(1895 - 1996)

Lyricist
(1895-1996)

Irving Caesar lived through the era of the great American song, when our music was exported and loved around the world, and through its demise, when great composers and lyricists became pass. He is quoted as saying, “…we have a form of musical juvenile delinquency abetted by adult delinquency.” He should know. He lived to 101.

Caesar was a Tin Pan Alley man and a friend of George Gershwin with whom he wrote his first hit, “Swanee” (1919). It didn’t catch on until Al Jolson took it over. Caesar’s next success was with Vincent Youmans. In an attempt to salvage No, No Nanette, they added “Tea for Two” and “I Want to Be Happy” to the 1925 show and it received rave reviews. They also wrote “Sometimes I’m Happy” for 1927’s Hit the Deck.

In 1928 Caesar wrote “Crazy Rhythm” with Joseph Meyer and Roger Wolfe Kahn, and in 1930 he gave English lyrics to a German tune, calling it “Just a Gigolo.” With Ted Koehler he also wrote “Animal Crackers in My Soup” for Shirley Temple’s film, Curly Top (1935). With Sammy Lerner’s music he created another Jolson hit in 1936, “Is It True What They Say About Dixie?”

During the ‘30s Caesar created a series of “songbooks” for children, intended as teaching aids—“Sing a Song of Safety,” “Songs of Health,” and “Sing a Song of Friendship”-- inspired by the efforts of the League of Nations and an urge to promote tolerance and unity. He tirelessly toured schools around the country with his message. His offer of the materials to the federal government was turned down, but they were later published by the Anti-Defamation League of the B’nai B’rith.

He served a cumulative 33 years on the Board of ASCAP, retiring in 1966, and was a founder of the Songwriters Guild of America.

-- Sandra Burlingame

Courtesy of JazzStandards.com


 
Albums featuring this composer are available for download from ClassicsOnline.com
YOUNG, Lester: Lester Leaps Again (1942-1944) 8.120764 Jazz Legends
HAWKINS, Coleman: Hawk In the 30s (1933-1939) 8.120626 Jazz Legends
KING COLE TRIO: Transcriptions, Vol. 3 (1939) 8.120629 Jazz Legends
REINHARDT, Django: H. C. Q. Strut (1938-1939) (Reinhardt, Vol. 5) 8.120707 Jazz Legends
TATUM: Improvisations 8.559130 Instrumental
BRITISH DANCE BANDS, Vol. 1 (1930-1943) 8.120603 Nostalgia
WILSON, Teddy: I Want to Be Happy (1944-1947) 8.120538 Jazz Legends
REINHARDT, Django: Americans in Paris (1935-1937) (Reinhardt, Vol. 7) 8.120734 Jazz Legends
WALLER, Fats: Transcriptions (1935) 8.120577 Jazz Legends
LEWIS, Ted: Is Everybody Happy? (1923-1931) 8.120770 Jazz Legends
TATUM, Art: Fine And Dandy (1937-1944) 8.120730 Jazz Legends
CROSBY, Bing: Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams (1927-1931) 8.120697 Nostalgia




 
 
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3:20:49 PM, 24 July 2008
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