Love for Sale (Cole Porter song)
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"Love for Sale" is a jazz song by Cole Porter, from the 1930 musical The New Yorkers.
The song is written from the viewpoint of a prostitute advertising various kinds of "love for sale": "Old love, new love, every love but true love". "Love for Sale" was a hit in 1930, but later on the tune was deemed too sensual and banned from radio for decades.
Notably recorded by Billie Holiday in 1945, Ella Fitzgerald in 1956, Tony Bennett in 1957, Miles Davis and Cannonball Adderley in 1958, The Manhattan Transfer in 1976, Elvis Costello, live on the remastered Rhino Entertainment CD of his 1981 record, Trust, and Harry Connick Jr. in 1999 on his album Come by Me. This song has become a jazz standard, played by many jazz artists, often in solely instrumentalist versions.
Notably, the song has been used during a sequence in a gay night club in the Cole Porter biopic De-Lovely and during a similar sequence in Brian DePalma's The Black Dahlia.