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I Got Rhythm

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I Got Rhythm
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{{Short description|1930 song by George and Ira Gershwin}}{{about|the song|the album by Teddy Wilson|I Got Rhythm (album)}}







factoids
"I Got Rhythm" is a piece composed by George Gershwin with lyrics by Ira Gershwin and published in 1930, which became a jazz standard. Its chord progression, known as the "rhythm changes", is the foundation for many other popular jazz tunes such as Charlie Parker's and Dizzy Gillespie's bebop standard "Anthropology (Thrivin' on a Riff)".

Composition

The song came from the musical Girl Crazy, which also includes two other hit songs, "Embraceable You" and "But Not for Me", and has been sung by many jazz singers since. It was originally written as a slow song for Treasure Girl (1928) and found another, faster setting in Girl Crazy. Ethel Merman sang the song in the original Broadway production and Broadway lore holds that George Gershwin, after seeing her opening reviews, warned her never to take a singing lesson.The piece was originally penned in the key of D{{music|flat}} major. The song melody uses four notes of the five-note pentatonic scale, first rising, then falling. A rhythmic interest in the song is that the tune keeps behind the main pulse, with the three "I got..." phrases syncopated, appearing one beat behind in the first bar, while the fourth phase "Who could..." rushes in to the song. The song's chorus is in a 34-bar AABA form.Covach, John (2005), "Form in Rock Music: A Primer", in Stein, Deborah, Engaging Music: Essays in Music Analysis, New York: Oxford University Press, p.70, {{ISBN|0-19-517010-5}} . Its chord progression (although often reduced to a standard 32-bar structure for the sake of improvised solos) is known as the "rhythm changes" and is the foundation for many other popular jazz tunes. The song was used as the theme in Gershwin's last concert piece for piano and orchestra, Variations on "I Got Rhythm", written in 1934. The song has become symbolic of the Gershwins, of swing and of the 1920s.As usual, George Gershwin wrote the melody first and gave it to Ira to set, but Ira found it an unusually hard melody for which to compose lyrics. He experimented for two weeks with the rhyme scheme he felt the music called for — sets of triple rhymes — but found that the heavy rhyming "seemed at best to give a pleasant and jingly Mother Goose quality to a tune which should throw its weight around more". Finally, he began to experiment with leaving most of the lines unrhymed. "This approach felt stronger," he wrote, "and I finally arrived at the present refrain, with only 'more-door' and 'mind him-find him' the rhymes." He added that this approach "was a bit daring for me who usually depended on rhyme insurance".BOOK, Gershwin, Ira, Lyrics on Several Occasions, First, New York, Knopf, 1959, 538209, Ira also wrote that, although the phrase "Who could ask for anything more?" is repeated four times in the song, he decided not to make it the title because "somehow the first line of the refrain sounded more arresting and provocative".

Disputed authorship

The four-note opening riff bears a striking resemblance to the opening melody of the third movement of William Grant Still's Symphony No. 1, "Afro-American." In the 1920s, Still played in the pit orchestra for Shuffle Along, and speculated that Gershwin may have borrowed the melody from his improvisations in the pit, which were later used in his own symphony.NEWS, Johnson, Lawrence, August 21, 2005, FASCINATIN' FILCHIN'?, South Florida Sun-Sentinel,weblink April 19, 2021, WEB, Harpstead, Jen Hitt,Ella, The Dean Of African-American Composers Didn't Think He'd Be Remembered: William Grant Still At 125,weblink 2021-04-19, Colorado Public Radio, en, In 1987 Still's daughter, Judith Anne Still, wrote in a letter that Gershwin stole the song from her father.
  • ... my father said that Gershwin came to the Negro shows in Harlem to get his inspiration, stealing melodies wholesale from starving minority composers and then passing them off as his own. "I Got Rhythm" was my father's creation, according to Eubie Blake.Joan Peyser, The Memory of All That: The Life of George Gershwin'', 1998, ch. 1, p. 43

History

{{Circular reference|date=March 2024}}An instrumental arrangement for piano and orchestra appears in the 1945 Hollywood Victory Caravan.Hollywood Victory Caravan and Bond Rallies, in Hollywood Goes to War: Collector's Edition, 2004 pressing, Diamond Entertainment, Disk 1.The song is featured in the 1951 musical film An American in Paris. Gene Kelly sang the song and tap-danced, while French-speaking children whom he had just taught a few words of English shouted the words "I got" each time they appeared in the lyrics. This version finished at #32 in AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs survey of top tunes in American cinema.The song appears in the fifth episode of the third season of Amazon Prime’s streaming series The Boys. While watching the 1943 version of Girl Crazy, The Female (Karen Fukuhara) daydreams about performing “I Got Rhythm” as a Broadway-style song-and-dance number with Frenchie (Tomer Capone). Fukuhara performed her own vocals for the scene.WEB, Moreau, Jordan, June 18, 2022, 'The Boys' Star Karen Fukuhara Breaks Down the Dildo Fight and Hospital Musical,weblink July 30, 2023, Variety.com, It is also featured in the film Mr. Holland's Opus, during a scene in which students are trying out for a Gershwin revue, and in the movie My Girl, during a dinner scene in which the grandmother sings it, oblivious of the other characters.An extensive list of notable singers have recorded this song. The most popular versions are those of The Happenings (#3 on the US charts in 1967"See You in September", Billboard. Accessed 2007-10-03.), Judy Garland, Ethel Merman, Ella Fitzgerald and, more recently, Jodi Benson.The song immediately became a jazz standard with recordings occurring already the year of publication. One of the first in jazz style (or maybe the very first one) is by Loring “Red” Nichols and his Orchestra on Brunswick (4957) recorded 23 October 1930. Many songs use its chord progression, such as Duke Ellington's "Cotton Tail". Charlie Parker alone based many songs on its chord progression, such as "Moose the Mooche". Gary Larson referenced the song in the Far Side.In 1939, I Got Rhythm was arranged and orchestrated by Bruce Chase for a premiere performance by the Kansas Philharmonic, now the Kansas City Symphony.WEB,weblink "Violinist Arranges Laughter at Symphony:" The Milwaukee Sentinel, April 11, 1984, 1984-04-11, 2012-02-23, A version of the song set to a disco beat was recorded by Ethel Merman for her Ethel Merman Disco Album in 1979.The Ethel Merman Disco Album, Track 7. 1979 recording reissued on CD in 2002 by Universal Music Enterprises, a division of UMG Recordings, Inc.In 1992, the show Crazy for You featured the song sung by Jodi Benson.WEB,weblink London theatre map with what's on, where with official ticket booking, Another version of the song was arranged for solo guitar by Ton Van Bergeyk. It appears on the album Black and Tan Fantasy. Mike Oldfield and Wendy Roberts performed a version on Oldfield's Platinum album.The song was satirized in an episode of The Muppet Show where Rowlf and Fozzie attempt to perform it but Fozzie is unable to keep in tempo. To compensate, Rowlf has him change the lyrics to "I don't got rhythm".Archived at Ghostarchive{{cbignore}} and the weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20140907104717weblink">Wayback Machine{{cbignore}}: WEB,weblink The Muppet Show. Rowlf and Fozzie - I Got Rhythm (s4 ep20), YouTube, {{cbignore}}The song has appeared in several film versions of Girl Crazy:

Other recordings

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

Sources

  • Greenberg, Rodney (1998). George Gershwin. Phaidon Press. {{ISBN|0-7148-3504-8}}.
  • Gershwin, George (1996). The Complete Gershwin Keyboard Works. Warner Brothers Publications. {{ISBN|978-1-57623-743-4}}.
{{Girl Crazy}}{{George Gershwin}}{{authority control}}

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