September Song
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"September Song" is an American standard popular song composed by Kurt Weill with lyrics by Maxwell Anderson. It was introduced by Walter Huston in the 1938 Broadway musical production Knickerbocker Holiday.[1] The song has been recorded by numerous singers and instrumentalists.
Origins
The song originated from Walter Huston's request that he should have one solo song in Knickerbocker Holiday if he were to play the role of the aged governor of New Netherland, Peter Stuyvesant. Anderson and Weill wrote the song in a couple of hours for Huston's gruff voice and limited vocal range.[2]
Knickerbocker Holiday was roughly based on Washington Irving's Knickerbocker's History of New York set in New Amsterdam in 1647. It is a political allegory criticizing the policies of the New Deal through the portrayal of a semi–fascist government of New Amsterdam, with a corrupt governor and councilmen. It also involves a love triangle with a young woman forced to marry the governor Peter Stuyvesant while loving another.[3] The musical closed in April 1939 after a six-month run.[1]
Lyric content
In "September Song", a man now recognizes the "plentiful waste of time" of earlier days, and in the "long, long while from May to December", having reached September, he is looking forward to spending the precious days of autumn with his loved one.[4]
Notable covers
- Frank Sinatra's 1946 version reached No. 8 on the Billboard charts that year,[5] and on the 1965 album September of My Years.[6]
- Ian McCulloch of Echo & the Bunnymen released a version as his debut solo single (backed with a rendition of "Molly Malone") which reached number 51 on the UK Singles Chart in 1984.[7]
Use in other media
"September Song" was used as diegetic music in the 1950 film September Affair.[8] The song is used in the 1987 Woody Allen film Radio Days; Allen has stated that the song may be the best American popular song ever written.[9]
Milton Berle sang "September Song" when he hosted an infamously bad 1979 episode of Saturday Night Live; producer Lorne Michaels claimed that Berle loaded the audience with friends and family, who gave him a standing ovation.[10]
In "Previews", the Season 1/Episode 14 of the TV series Smash, the character of producer Eileen Rand sings a version of "September Song". Anjelica Huston, who played Eileen Rand, is the granddaughter of Walter Huston, who introduced the song in the original production of Knickerbocker Holiday.[11]
See also
References
External links
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- ↑ Ewen, David. Complete Book of the American Musical Theater, Revised. Holt, Rinehart and Winston, New York, Chicago, San Francisco pp. 224–225
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- ↑ Stig Björkman (ed.), Woody Allen on Woody Allen. London: Faber and Faber, 1995, revised edition 2004, p. 160.
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