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I Can't Give You Anything but Love : ウィキペディア英語版
I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby

"I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby" is an American popular song and jazz standard by Jimmy McHugh (music) and Dorothy Fields (lyrics). The song was introduced by Adelaide Hall at Les Ambassadeurs Club in New York in January 1928 in Lew Leslie's ''Blackbird Revue'', which opened on Broadway later that year as the highly successful ''Blackbirds of 1928'' (518 performances), wherein it was performed by Adelaide Hall, Aida Ward, and Willard McLean.
In the 100-most recorded songs from 1890 -1954, ''I Can't Give You Anything But Love, Baby'' (1928) is No. 24.〔This list was compiled by data from the book titled, Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories 1890-1954 - (1986) Published by Billboard Publications, Inc: http://hitsofalldecades.com/chart_hits/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1056&Itemid=9〕
==Background==
Jimmy McHugh and Dorothy Fields had written the score for a revue at Les Ambassadeurs Club on 57th Street, New York, which featured the vocalist Adelaide Hall. However, the producer Lew Leslie believed that they still missed a 'smash' tune. The team pondered for a while before finally playing Leslie "I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby". This was the song Leslie had been looking for and he immediately included it in the revue.〔''Underneath A Harlem Moon ... The Harlem to Paris Years of Adelaide Hall'' by Iain Cameron Williams: ISBN 0826458939, Continuum International Publishing c/o Bloomsbury Publishing: chapter 9, pages 129 - 139:http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/underneath-a-harlem-moon-9780826458933/〕 ''Blackbird Revue'' opened on 4 January 1928 with Adelaide Hall singing "I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby" solo. Later on, Fields and McHugh wrote a second-half for the revue and Leslie expanded the production. With extra songs and extra performers added (including the vocalist Aida Ward), Leslie renamed the revue Blackbirds of 1928 and took the full production for a tryout in Atlantic City, New Jersey, where it appeared at Nixon's Apollo Theatre. On 9 May 1928, Blackbirds of 1928 opened at the Liberty Theatre, Broadway.
Legend has it that the idea behind the song came during a stroll Fields and McHugh were taking one evening down Fifth Avenue; they saw a young couple window-shopping at Tiffany's. McHugh and Fields understood that the couple did not have the resources to buy jewelry from Tiffany's, but nevertheless they drew closer to them. It was then they heard the man say, "Gee, honey I'd like to get you a sparkler like that, but right now, i can't give you nothin' but love!" Hearing this, McHugh and Fields rushed to a nearby Steinway Tunnel, and within an hour they came up with "I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby".
Some controversy surrounds the song's authorship. Andy Razaf's biographer Harry Singer offers circumstantial evidence that suggests Fats Waller might have sold the melody to McHugh in 1926 and that the lyrics were by Andy Razaf.〔("I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby" at Jazz Standards )〕 Alternatively, Philip Furia has pointed out that Fields' verse is almost identical to the end of the second verse of Lorenz Hart's and Richard Rodgers' song "Where's That Rainbow?" from ''Peggy-Ann'', the 1926 musical comedy with book by Fields' brother Herbert and produced by their father Lew:
The term 'Baby' was for a long time, a racist expression meant to denigrate African-Americans. That all changed with the advent of the hit song, ''I Can't Give You Anything but Love, Baby'', From then on the expression, 'Baby' joined many other words used to express a term of endearment. 〔 http://www.moreart.us/?id=151〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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