Jane Morgan

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Jane Morgan
Background information
Birth name Florence Catherine Currier
Born December 25, 1920
Genre(s) Traditional Pop
Years active 1950s-1960s
Label(s) Kapp
Website Biography on Oldies.Com site

Jane Morgan (born December 25, 1920, Newton, Massachusetts) is an American popular singer, specializing in traditional pop music.

She was born Florence Catherine Currier, in Newton, Massachusetts (in the Boston area), a relative of Nathaniel Currier, the 19th century lithographer. Her father was the first cellist for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and led an orchestra and string quartet in the months when the Symphony was out of season. At age five, she began training as an opera singer under her mother's guidance. However, her first professional role was not in opera, but in a melodrama in her brother's playhouse in Kennebunkport, Maine at the age of seven.

Her father died while she was still quite young, and her mother and she moved some years later to Daytona Beach, Florida. There Morgan entered musical competitions, winning a number of them. After finishing high school, she attended the famous Juilliard School of Music in New York City, studying opera in the day and performing at night in night clubs and at parties. The bandleader Art Mooney heard one of these performances and called her to invite her to sing with his orchestra, and decided that "Florence Currier" was too long to say on radio broadcasts. He gave her the stage name "Janie Morgan," but she preferred "Jane" to "Janie."

A short time later, a French singer, violinist, and orchestra leader named Bernard Hilda, planning to open a nightclub in Paris, contacted her. He told her that he could make her a star if she came to Paris, and though this meant she had to leave Juilliard, she was enticed by this promise. Morgan worked for 4 1/2 years without a night off at Hilda's "Club des Champs Elysées" and other clubs in Europe. In Paris she made her first recordings with Hilda's orchestra, and some of these became big hits in France. In the summer, she performed in other European countries, and quickly became fluent in Spanish and Italian, as well as French.

At this point Morgan was offered a chance to sing at the St. Regis Hotel in New York. Though she was happy with her life in Paris, she wanted to be a success in her own native country and reluctantly left Europe to do singing engagements in many hotels and clubs. But Morgan still lacked one thing, a recording contract.

Many years earlier, Jack Kapp had started Decca Records, which became a major company in the U.S. (later being renamed MCA Records). In 1954 Jack Kapp's brother Dave decided to start his own record label, Kapp Records. His first two contracts went to the pianist Roger Williams and Morgan. Although Williams had a hit very soon with "Autumn Leaves," Morgan took longer. A jointly done recording with Williams, "Two Different Worlds," was a minor hit in 1956, but not the major-charting hit Morgan needed to ignite her recording career.

In the summer of 1957, the movie Love in the Afternoon, featuring Gary Cooper and Audrey Hepburn came out, and an old French song, "Fascination," was included in the film. Kapp wanted to record an instrumental version of the song done by a group named "The Troubadours." Morgan was invited to attend the recording session, and, not knowing what they were going to play, was surprised to hear "Fascination," which she knew from her days in Europe, where the song was considered a standard. She found out from Kapp that there were some new English lyrics, which Kapp suggested she record with the Troubadours. The record was released with Morgan's vocal on one side and a purely instrumental version on the other, and though many other recording companies released their own versions of the song, Morgan's became the big hit version. With that hit behind her, her career took off and she was invited to play the biggest clubs and on television.

Later, Kapp released a version of "The Day the Rains Came" (originally a French song called "Le jour où la pluie viendra") with Morgan singing it in English on one side of the record and in French on the other. While it was never the big hit that "Fascination" was in the United States, she loved the song so much that she sang it in performances in the U.S. and Europe. The track did reach number one in the UK Singles Chart in January 1959.

Morgan is now married, and has been for some time, to Hollywood movie producer Jerry Weintraub. She now goes by the name Jane Weintraub.

[edit] Selected Singles

  • November 1956: "Two Different Worlds" (Roger Williams& Jane Morgan) - U.S. Pop #41
  • August 1957: "Fascination" (Jane Morgan & The Troubadours) - U.S. Pop #7 <Gold>
  • September 1958: "The Day The Rains Came" - U.S. Pop #21, UK #1
  • May 1959: "If Only I Could Live My Life Again" - UK #27
  • July 1959: "With Open Arms" - U.S. Pop #39 (b/w "I Can't Begin To Tell You", U.S. Pop #113)
  • November 1959: "Happy Anniversary" - U.S. Pop #57
  • July 1960: "Romantica" - UK #39
  • November 1960: "The Angry Sea" - Hawaii Top 10 (KPOI)
  • February 1961: "In Jerusalem" - U.S. Pop #115
  • May 1961: "Love Makes The World Go 'Round" - New York City Top 40 (WABC)
  • February 1962: "Moon River" - Hong Kong Top 10
  • April 1962: "What Now My Love" - New York City Top 30 (WABC)
  • December 1963: "Bless 'Em All" - U.S. Pop #131
  • October 1965: "Side By Side" - U.S. AC #25
  • June 1966: "1-2-3" - U.S. Pop #135/AC #16
  • September 1966: "Elusive Butterfly" - U.S. AC #9
  • December 1966: "Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (Capri C'est Fini)" - U.S. Pop #121/AC #30
  • October 1967: "Somebody Someplace" - U.S. AC #24
  • December 1967: "I Promise You" - U.S. AC #27
  • March 1968: "A Child" - U.S. AC #39
  • May 1970: "A Girl Named Johnny Cash" - U.S. Country #61
  • November 1970: "First Day" - U.S. Country #70

[edit] References

  • Joel Whitburn Record Research books
  • WABC Website
  • UK Top 40 Website
  • KPOI Radio Survey, 1 December 1960.
  • Billboard Music Week, 1962.
  • Jane Morgan

[edit] External links

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