I Cover the Waterfront (song)

"I Cover the Waterfront"
Single by Sarah Vaughan
Genre Jazz blues
Writer(s) Edward Heyman
Producer(s) Johnny Green
Sarah Vaughan chronology
If You Could See Me Now
(1946)
"I Cover the Waterfont"
(1947)
Tenderly
(1947)
Billie Holiday chronology
God Bless the Child
(1942)
"I Cover the Waterfront"
(1946)
"Lady Sings the Blues"
(1956)

"I Cover the Waterfront" is a 1933 popular song and jazz standard composed by Johnny Green with lyrics by Edward Heyman.

The song was inspired by Max Miller's 1932 best-selling novel I Cover the Waterfront. The song became instantly popular, and many artists have covered it since 1933: Billie Holiday, Sarah Vaughan, Annette Hanshaw, Abe Lyman's California Ambassador Hotel Orchestra, Connee Boswell, Harry James, The Lester Young Trio (with Nat King Cole and Buddy Rich), and Louis Armstrong, among others.[1] A 1933 motion picture, also inspired by Miller's book and also titled I Cover the Waterfront, was re-scored at the last minute to include the tune. Sheet music publishers later used the film's success by claiming that the song was "[i]nspired by the United Artist Picture of the same name".[1] Years later, Ella Fitzgerald recorded this song in her 1979 live album Digital III at Montreux on Pablo Records.

John Lee Hooker recorded several covers of the song. One appears on the 1991 compilation The Ultimate Collection and another with Van Morrison on Hooker's 1991 album Mr. Lucky. Hooker's versions make such great changes from the original melody and lyrics that his own label credits him as the songwriter.

R&B/soul singer/actress Miki Howard portraying Billie Holiday performs the song in the 1992 bio film Malcolm X.

Annie Lennox covered the song on her 2014 studio album Nostalgia.

Radio program theme

I Cover the Waterfront was the theme for the Johnny Modero, Pier 23 radio program, which starred Jack Webb and was broadcast on the Mutual Broadcasting System in 1947.[2]

Notes

  1. 1 2 "I Cover the Waterfront" at jazzstandards.com - retrieved 24 May 2009.
  2. Terrace, Vincent (2003). Radio Program Openings and Closings, 1931-1972. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc. p. 123. ISBN 978-0-7864-4925-5.

See also

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