[78-L] Phil Harris/Andy Razaf

David Lennick dlennick at sympatico.ca
Mon Nov 9 08:44:47 PST 2009


Excellent book, by the way..I'd have checked it but it's upstairs and I'm 
downstairs and it is what it is.

And Tex Williams recorded "That's What I Like About the West" in 1947. Red 
Ingle did a lovely takeoff on TWILATS as part of his "Nowhere" on Capitol.

Man, you name it..and if we ain't got, we won't get it.

dl

david.diehl at hensteeth.com wrote:
>  Barry Singer's "Black and blue: the life and lyrics of Andy Razaf" says it was written by Razaf for the Cotton Club Parade of 1933, copyright renewed in 1944.
> Don't forget That's what I Like about the North written in 1957 with music by Johnny Finke.
> DJD
> 
> Visit the Blue Pages: the Encyclopedic Guide to 78 RPM Party Records
> http://www.hensteeth.com
> -----Original Message-----
> From: David Lennick [mailto:dlennick at sympatico.ca]
> Sent: Monday, November 9, 2009 09:24 AM
> To: '78-L Mail List'
> Subject: Re: [78-L] Phil Harris/Andy Razaf
> 
> Cut-ins were a normal part of music publishing in those days..and who would have heard about the song without Harris having recorded it? Nat Shapiro lists Razaf as sole author, Southern Music as publisher in 1944 and Phil Harris as having popularized it.dl
> Ken "Silver Showcase" wrote:> Taylor Bowie wrote:>> How did Harris get composer label credit on at least two recorded versions? >> Seems odd.>>>> Taylor>>>> > > Perhaps he did contribute something to the lyrics or music. Or maybe > his celebrity status was seen as a way to boost sales. I've read that > some question the legitimacy of Al Jolson's composer credit on some > songs suggesting that he forced his way in because of his celebrity status.> > -- Ken> ________________________________________________________________78-L mailing list78-L at klickitat.78online.comhttp://klickitat.78online.com/mailman/listinfo/78-l
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