Choucoune (song)

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"Choucoune"
("Yellow Bird")
Music by Michel Mauleart Monton
Lyrics by Oswald Durand
Written 1893
Language Haitian Creole

Choucoune (Haitian Creole: Choukoun) is a 19th-century Haitian song composed by Michel Mauleart Monton with lyrics from a poem by Oswald Durand. It was rewritten with English lyrics in the 20th century as Yellow Bird.

Choucoune

One of Oswald Durand's most famous works, the 1883 Choucoune is a lyrical poem that praises the beauty of a Haitian woman of that nickname. Michel Mauleart Monton, an American-born pianist with a Haitian father and American mother composed music for the poem in 1893, appropriating some French and Caribbean fragments to create his tune. The song Choucoune was first performed in Port-au-Prince on 14 May 14, 1893. It became a popular slow méringue (mereng) in Haiti, and was played prominently during the bicentennial celebrations in Port-au-Prince in 1949.

The song also appeared in the 1957 Calypso-exploitation film Calypso Heat Wave, performed by The Tarriers, sung by the group's lead singer, Alan Arkin.

Versions

Yellow Bird

"Yellow Bird"
Single by Arthur Lyman
Released 1961
Length 2:41
Label Rykodisc
Writer(s) Alan Bergman, Marilyn Keith, Norman Luboff

The English rendering of Choucoune: Yellow Bird, first appeared on the album Calypso Holiday, a 1957 release by the Norman Luboff Choir, Norman Luboff having arranged the song in the calypso style that become popular in the English-speaking world in the mid-1950s. The lyrics for Yellow Bird, by Alan and Marilyn Bergman, have no connection with the narrative of the Durand poem—other than the poem features the words "ti zwazo" (little birds) in its refrain, and so the original Haitian song is sometimes called Ti Zwazo or Ti Zwezo. The song became a minor hit at #70 on the Billboard Hot 100 for the Mills Brothers in 1959. Its most successful incarnation came in the summer of 1961 when the Arthur Lyman Group reached #4 on the Hot 100 and #2 on the newly formed Easy Listening chart with their Hawaiian flavored instrumental version,[1] which bested a rival instrumental single release by Lawrence Welk (#61).

Yellow Bird has also been recorded by Keely Smith, Roger Whitaker, Davy Graham, Roger Williams, Johnny Tillotson, The Brothers Four, Gary Crosby, and Paul Clayton. The song continues to be popularly associated with calypso and the Caribbean, and is often performed by steelpan bands—but some versions, such as Chris Isaak's from Baja Sessions, show a Hawaiian flavor.

Vivian Vance sung Yellow Bird on a two-part Here's Lucy episode, Lucy Goes Hawaiian, which aired February 15 and Feb. 22, 1971. Vance sang it in a high falsetto, with a calypso beat—dressed in yellow with feathers like a canary (including a long tail feather—and perched on a swing decorated as a nest. A long spoken-word midsection features Vance riffing on the types of male birds she'd like to hook up with. A clip of this version is on YouTube.

The 23 October 1989 broadcast of the CBS TV series Murphy Brown entitled Miles' Big Adventure ends with guest star Yeardley Smith serenading her unwilling object of desire Miles Silverberg with a snippet of Yellow Bird.

An African percussion band played the song in a Full House episode, The House Meets the House - Part 2 at Walt Disney World.

The Wiggles sing this song on their "Let's Eat" album and DV.D

To Bowl or Not To Bowl, an episode of The Looney Tunes Show that first aired on July 27, 2011, featured an uptempo, ska-like version of Yellow Bird during the Merrie Melodies song segment of the same name performed by Holland Greco.

The song appears in the 2012 Australian movie "The Sapphires" and on the soundtrack album.

Don't Ever Love Me

"Don't Ever Love Me"
Single by Harry Belafonte
from the album Harry Belafonte - Mama Look At Bubu / Don't Ever Love Me
A-side Mama Look At Bubu
B-side Don't Ever Love Me
Released 1957
Format Vinyl, 7"
Genre Calypso
Length 2:45
Label RCA Victor
Writer(s) Lord Burgess

Harry Belafonte had a 1957 single release entitled Don't Ever Love Me that set different English lyrics (written by Lord Burgess to Michel Mauleart Monton's setting for Choucune, initially the B-side of Mama Look At Bubu (#11), Don't Ever Love Me itself entered the Billboard Hot 100 at #90. [2] The song can also be found on the CD album "Harry Belafonte - All Time Greatest Hits Vol. I" (track #2).

References

  1. Whitburn, Joel (2002). Top Adult Contemporary: 1961-2001. Record Research. p. 151. 
  2. Discogs.com. "Harry Belafonte - Mama Look At Bubu / Don't Ever Love Me". Retrieved 2009-10-11. 

External links

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