About: How High the Moon (song)   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/acCm3SYptDyoxnsR32zOUQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

"How High the Moon" is a jazz standard with lyrics by Nancy Hamilton and music by Morgan Lewis. It was first featured in the 1940 Broadway revue Two for the Show, where it was sung by Alfred Drake and Frances Comstock. In "Two for the Show", this was a rare serious moment in an otherwise humorous revue. The song was sung, in a slow fox trot tempo, by a group of evening-dressed people walking along a London street. At the end, they all looked at the sky, and cowered, obviously terrified: quick curtain. It was 1940, and the time of the London blitz: a clear night meant "bomber's moon".

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • How High the Moon (song)
rdfs:comment
  • "How High the Moon" is a jazz standard with lyrics by Nancy Hamilton and music by Morgan Lewis. It was first featured in the 1940 Broadway revue Two for the Show, where it was sung by Alfred Drake and Frances Comstock. In "Two for the Show", this was a rare serious moment in an otherwise humorous revue. The song was sung, in a slow fox trot tempo, by a group of evening-dressed people walking along a London street. At the end, they all looked at the sky, and cowered, obviously terrified: quick curtain. It was 1940, and the time of the London blitz: a clear night meant "bomber's moon".
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:jaz/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Comment
  • First featured in the 1940 Broadway revue Two for the Show
Lyricist
original artist
  • Alfred Drake and Frances Comstock
Language
Title
  • How High the Moon
Published
  • 1940(xsd:integer)
Composer
Recorded by
  • Stan Kenton
  • many other artists
  • Benny Goodman & His Orchestra,
  • Les Paul and Mary Ford,
abstract
  • "How High the Moon" is a jazz standard with lyrics by Nancy Hamilton and music by Morgan Lewis. It was first featured in the 1940 Broadway revue Two for the Show, where it was sung by Alfred Drake and Frances Comstock. In "Two for the Show", this was a rare serious moment in an otherwise humorous revue. The song was sung, in a slow fox trot tempo, by a group of evening-dressed people walking along a London street. At the end, they all looked at the sky, and cowered, obviously terrified: quick curtain. It was 1940, and the time of the London blitz: a clear night meant "bomber's moon".
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