1921 in music
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
See also: 1920 in music, other events of 1921, 1922 in music and the list of 'years in music'.
Contents |
[edit] Events
- Clarence Williams makes his first recordings
[edit] Published popular music
- "Ain't We Got Fun?" w.m. Richard A. Whiting, Raymond Egan & Gus Kahn
- "All By Myself" w.m. Irving Berlin
- "And Her Mother Came Too" w. Peter Dion Titheradge m. Ivor Novello
- "Any Time" w.m. Herbert Happy Lawson
- "April Showers" w. B. G. De Sylva m. Louis Silvers
- "Baltimore Buzz" w.m. Noble Sissle & Eubie Blake
- "Bandana Days" w.m. Noble Sissle & Eubie Blake
- "Bimini Bay" w. Gus Kahn & Raymond Egan m. Richard Whiting
- "Blue Jeans" w. Harry D. Kerr m. Traveller
- "Coal-Black Mammy" by Laddie Cliff
- "Dancing Time" w.(Eng) George Grossmith, Jr. (US) Howard Dietz m. Jerome Kern US words written 1924.
- "Dapper Dan" w. Lew Brown m. Albert Von Tilzer
- "Dear Old Southland" w. Henry Creamer m. Turner Layton
- "Down South" w. B. G. DeSylva m. Walter Donaldson. Introduced by Al Jolson in the musical Bombo
- "Down Yonder" w.m. L. Wolfe Gilbert
- "Everybody Step" w.m. Irving Berlin
- "Hawaiian Chimes" w. Irving Bibo m. Eva Applefield
- "I Ain't Nobody's Darling" w. Elmer Hughes m. Robert A. King
- "I Found A Rose In The Devil's Garden" w.m. Fred Fisher & Willie Raskin
- "I Wonder If You Still Care For Me" w.m. Harry B. Smith & Francis Wheeler
- "I'll Forget You" w. Annelu Burns m. Ernest R. Ball
- "I'm Just Wild About Harry" w.m. Noble Sissle & Eubie Blake
- "I'm Missin' Mammy's Kissin'" w. Sidney Clare m. Lew Pollack
- "I'm Nobody's Baby" w.m. Benny Davis, Milton Ager & Lester Santly
- "Jazz Me Blues" m. Tom Delaney
- "Keep Movin'" Helen Trix
- "Kitten On The Keys" m. Zez Confrey
- "Laughin' Rag" S. Moore, H. Skinner
- "Learn To Smile" w. Otto Harbach m. Louis A. Hirsch
- "Leave Me With A Smile" w.m. Charles Koehler & Earl Burtnett
- "Love Will Find A Way" w.m. Noble Sissle & Eubie Blake
- "Ma! He's Making Eyes At Me" w. Sidney Clare m. Con Conrad
- "Make Believe" w. Benny Davis m. Jack Shilkret
- "Mandy 'N' Me" w. Bert Kalmar m. Con Conrad
- "My Sunny Tennessee" w.m. Bert Kalmar, Harry Ruby & Herman Ruby
- "Peggy O'Neill" w.m. Harry Pease, Ed G. Nelson & Gilbert Dodge
- "Sally" w. Clifford Grey m. Jerome Kern
- "Say It With Music" w.m. Irving Berlin
- "Second Hand Rose" w. Grant Clarke m. James F. Hanley
- "The Sheik Of Araby" w. Harry B. Smith & Francis Wheeler m. Ted Snyder
- "She's Mine, All Mine" w.m. Bert Kalmar & Harry Ruby
- "Shimmy With Me" w. P. G. Wodehouse m. Jerome Kern from the musical The Cabaret Girl
- "Shuffle Along" w.m. Noble Sissle & Eubie Blake
- "Song Of Love" w. Dorothy Donnelly m. Sigmund Romberg
- "Strut Miss Lizzie" w. Henry Creamer m. Turner Layton
- "Swanee River Moon" w.m. H. Pitman Clarke
- "Sweet Lady" w. Howard Johnson m. Frank Crumit & Dave Zoob
- "Ten Little Fingers And Ten Little Toes" w. Harry Pease & Johnny White m. Ira Schuster & Ed G. Nelson
- "There'll Be Some Changes Made" w. Billy Higgins m. Benton Overstreet
- "Tuck Me To Sleep In My Old 'Tucky Home" w. Sam H. Lewis & Joe Young m. George W. Meyer
- "Wabash Blues" w. Dave Ringle m. Fred Meinken
- "When Big Profundo Sang Low C" w. Marion T. Bohannon m. George Botsford
- "When Buddha Smiles" w. Arthur Freed m. Nacio Herb Brown
- "When Francis Dances With Me" w. Ben Ryan m. Sol Violinsky
- "When Shall We Meet Again" w. Raymond B. Egan m. Richard A. Whiting
- "Whip-poor-will" w. B. G. De Sylva m. Jerome Kern
- "Yoo-Hoo" w. B. G. De Sylva m. Al Jolson
[edit] Top Hit Recordings
- "Wang Wang Blues" by Paul Whiteman's Orchestra, featuring Gussie Mueller
- "Look for the Silver Lining" by Marion Harris
- "Margie" by Eddie Cantor
- "Margie, introducing Singing the Blues/Palesteena" by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band
- "The Wabash Blues" by Isham Jones & His Orchestra
- "Say It with Music" by Paul Whiteman & His Orchestra
- "All by Myself" by Ted Lewis & His Jazz Band
- "Everybody Step" by Paul Whiteman & His Orchestra
[edit] Classical music
- Agustín Barrios - La Catedral
- Howard Hanson - Before the Dawn
- Sergei Prokofiev - Piano Concerto No. 3 in C Major
- Edgard Varèse - Offrandes; Amériques (1918-21)
- Heitor Villa-Lobos - Fantasia de Movimentos Mistos, for violin & orchestra
[edit] Opera
- Franco Alfano - La leggenda di Sakùntala
- Nicolae Bretan - Luceafarul
- Leoš Janáček - Katya Kabanova
- Hans Jelmoli - Die Badener Fahrt
- Emmerich Kalman - Die Bajadere
- Pietro Mascagni - Il Piccolo Marat
- Sergei Prokofiev - The Love for Three Oranges
[edit] Musical theater
- Bombo, Broadway production opened at Jolson's 59th Street Theatre on October 6 and ran for 213 performances
- The Broadway Whirl, Broadway revue opened at the Times Square Theatre on June 8 and ran for 85 performances
- Good Morning, Dearie, Broadway production opened at the Globe Theatre on November 1 and ran for 347 performances
- The Rebel Maid London production opened at the Empire Theatre on March 12 and ran for 114 performances.
- Sally, London production opened at the Winter Garden Theatre on September 10 and ran for 387 performances
- Shuffle Along, Broadway production opened at the 63rd Street Music Hall on May 23 and ran for 504 performances
- Sybil, London production opened at Daly's Theatre on February 19 and ran for 346 performances
[edit] Births
- January 22 - Arno Babadjanian, composer
- January 26 - Eddie Barclay, music producer
- January 31
- Mario Lanza, tenor
- Carol Channing, musical comedy star
- February 5 - Sir John Pritchard, British conductor
- February 16 - Vera-Ellen, dancer and actress
- February 26 - Betty Hutton, actress and singer
- March 2 - Robert Simpson, musicologist and composer
- March 6 - Julius Rudel, conductor
- March 8 - Cyd Charisse, dancer
- March 11 - Ástor Piazzolla, tango composer
- March 12 - Gordon MacRae, singer and actor
- March 21 - Arthur Grumiaux, violinist
- March 22 - Nino Manfredi, actor and film score composer
- April 1 - Arthur "Guitar Boogie" Smith, musician, composer
- April 8 - Franco Corelli, operatic tenor
- May 17 - Bob Merrill, US songwriter
- May 23 - Humphrey Lyttelton, jazz musician
- May 25 - Hal David - US lyricist
- June 1 - Nelson Riddle, US conductor, composer and arranger
- June 15 - Errol Garner, jazz pianist
- June 19 - Louis Jordan
- June 21 - Judy Holliday, US actress and singer
- June 24 - Peggy DeCastro, US singer born in the Dominican Republic, eldest of the DeCastro Sisters
- June 25 - Celia Franca, dancer and choreographer
- July 24 - Giuseppe Di Stefano, opera singer
- August 3 - Richard Adler, US composer and lyricist
- August 9 - Lola Bobesco, violinist
- September 8 - Sir Harry Secombe, singer and comedian
- September 19 - Billy Ward, The Dominoes
- September 21 - Chico Hamilton, drummer
- October 21 - Sir Malcolm Arnold, composer
- October 25 - Little Hatch, blues musician
- November 5 - Georges Cziffra, pianist
- November 9 - Pierrette Alarie, soprano
- November 23 - Fred Buscaglione, Italian singer, musician and songwriter
- December 3 - Phyllis Curtin, soprano
- December 4 - Deanna Durbin, singer and actress
- December 8 - Johnny Otis
- December 15 - Alan Freed, disc jockey
- December 26 - Steve Allen
- date unknown - Jimmy Giuffre, jazz musician
- date unknown - Herb Ellis, guitarist
[edit] Deaths
- April 3 - Annie Louise Cary, singer
- April 5 - Alphons Diepenbrock, composer and writer
- April 7 - Víctor Mirecki Larramat, cellist
- April 20 - Tony Jackson
- August 2 - Enrico Caruso, tenor
- September 27 - Engelbert Humperdinck, composer
- September 28 - Pauline de Metternich, patron of composers including Wagner and Smetana
- November 20 - Christina Nilsson, soprano
- November 29 - Ivan Caryll, composer of operettas
- December 10 - Victor Jacobi, composer of operettas
- December 16 - Camille Saint-Saëns
- December 25 - Hans Huber, composer
- date unknown - Natalie Bauer-Lechner, viola player
- date unknown - Marianne Brandt, operatic contralto
- date unknown - George Formby (Senior), singer
- date unknown - Arthur Pougin, music critic
- date unknown - Déodat de Séverac, composer