Jump to content

Come Rain or Come Shine: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Some Notable Recordings: Corrected date of the Brown album
Line 54: Line 54:
* [[Wes Montgomery]] (''[[Full House (Wes Montgomery album)|Full House]]'', 1962)
* [[Wes Montgomery]] (''[[Full House (Wes Montgomery album)|Full House]]'', 1962)
* [[Peggy Lee]] (''[[I'm a Woman (Peggy Lee album)|I'm a Woman]]'', 1963)
* [[Peggy Lee]] (''[[I'm a Woman (Peggy Lee album)|I'm a Woman]]'', 1963)
* [[James Brown]] (''[[Cold Sweat (album)|Cold Sweat]]'', 1964)
* [[Monica Zetterlund]] with the Bill Evans Trio (''[[Waltz for Debby (1964 album)|Waltz for Debby]]'', 1964)
* [[Monica Zetterlund]] with the Bill Evans Trio (''[[Waltz for Debby (1964 album)|Waltz for Debby]]'', 1964)
* [[James Brown]] (''[[Cold Sweat (album)|Cold Sweat]]'', 1967)
* Stan Getz (''[[Pure Getz]]'', 1982)
* Stan Getz (''[[Pure Getz]]'', 1982)
* [[Diane Schuur]] (''[[Timeless (Diane Schuur album)|Timeless]]'', 1986)
* [[Diane Schuur]] (''[[Timeless (Diane Schuur album)|Timeless]]'', 1986)

Revision as of 20:36, 13 December 2024

"Come Rain or Come Shine"
Single
from the album St. Louis Woman
Released1946
Composer(s)Harold Arlen
Lyricist(s)Johnny Mercer

"Come Rain or Come Shine" is a popular music song and jazz standard with music by Harold Arlen and lyrics by Johnny Mercer.[1] It was written for the Broadway musical St. Louis Woman, which opened on March 30, 1946, and closed after 113 performances.[1] The show also produced another notable standard, "Any Place I Hang My Hat Is Home."

"Come Rain or Come Shine" is one in a series of enduring songs with meteorological themes that Arlen composed through the course of his career, including "Stormy Weather" (1933), "Ill Wind" (1934), "Over the Rainbow" (1939), "When the Sun Comes Out" (1941), and "I Never Has Seen Snow" (1954).[2]

Chart performance

The song "became a modest hit during the show's run, making the pop charts with a Margaret Whiting (Paul Weston and His Orchestra) recording rising to number seventeen, and, shortly after, a Helen Forrest and Dick Haymes recording rising to number twenty-three."[1]

Structure

"Come Rain or Come Shine" begins most unusually: As Ted Gioia notes, "Arlen delivers the same note—flogging an A natural until it is bloody—13 times in a row .... And, as if that isn't enough, he tosses out a half-dozen more of the same note in bar five, and another six over the next two bars. This isn't a melody; it's a musical starvation diet."[3]

Nonetheless, as Alec Wilder observes, this "superb ballad ... could never be so great unless the device of those repeated notes were the principal single element in the melody. The second section is without them, providing an essential contrast. ... The whole last half of the song builds inexorably to the final f natural." He also notes that the song's harmony "is opulent throughout."[4]

Legacy

The song has gone on to become a major jazz standard, covered many hundreds of times.[5] As Gioia notes, "Given the paucity of melodic material and the richness of the harmonic underpinnings, the composition tends to resist grandstanding, and instead appeals to the more introspective improviser. Recordings by Bill Evans, Stan Getz, and Ralph Towner testify to the pastoral qualities of Arlen's tune."[6]

Some Notable Recordings

References

  1. ^ a b c "Come Rain or Come Shine (1946)". JazzStandards.com. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
  2. ^ Zinsser, William, Easy to Remember: The Great American Songwriters and Their Songs, David R. Godine Publisher, Inc., 2000, p. 245.
  3. ^ Gioia, Ted. The Jazz Standards: A Guide to the Repertoire, Oxford University Press, 2012, pp. 64-65.
  4. ^ Wilder, Alec. American Popular Song: The Great Innovators, 1900-1950, Oxford University Press, 1990, p. 283.
  5. ^ "Come Rain or Come Shine," SecondHandSongs.com, https://secondhandsongs.com/work/6031/versions#nav-entity, accessed December 13, 2024.
  6. ^ Gioia, p. 65.