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Irving Berlin
Born: May 11, 1888; Tyumen, Russia   Died: September 22, 1989; New York, NY  
The most commercially successful of all American songwriters during the first half of the twentieth century, Irving Berlin was neither American-born nor able to read or write music. Berlin could play only the black keys of the piano, using a special lever to transpose out of F sharp and having an assistant transcribe the music. Born Israel Baline in Russia to a cantor and his wife, the child never received any real musical education; when the ...
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Featured Irving Berlin CDs & DVDs:
Kiri Sings Berlin / Te Kanawa, Tunick, Abbey Road Ensemble
Release Date: 01/20/1998   Label: Emi Classics   Catalog: 56415   Number of Discs: 1
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Works
Alexander's Ragtime Band: Alexander's Ragtime Band (16)
All Alone (2)
Always (10)
Annie Get Your Gun (3)
Annie Get Your Gun: Act 1 Finale (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: Act 2 Finale (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: An old-fashioned wedding (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: Anything You Can Do (6)
Annie Get Your Gun: Ballroom scene (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: Ceremonial chant (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: Circus Dance "Ballyhoo" (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: Colonel Buffalo Bill (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: Doin' what comes natur'lly (2)
Annie Get Your Gun: Drum Dance (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: Excerpt(s) (2)
Annie Get Your Gun: I got lost in his arms (2)
Annie Get Your Gun: I got the sun in the morning (5)
Annie Get Your Gun: I'll share it all with you (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: I'm a bad, bad man (2)
Annie Get Your Gun: I'm an Indian Too (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: Let's go West again (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: Moonshine Lullaby (2)
Annie Get Your Gun: My Defenses Are Down (2)
Annie Get Your Gun: Overture (2)
Annie Get Your Gun: The girl that I marry (3)
Annie Get Your Gun: There's no business like show business (16)
Annie Get Your Gun: They say it's wonderful (11)
Annie Get Your Gun: Who do you love, I hope? (1)
Annie Get Your Gun: You can't get a Man with a gun (2)
Any Bonds Today? (2)
As Thousands Cheer: Easter Parade (5)
As Thousands Cheer: Harlem On My Mind (1)
As Thousands Cheer: Heat Wave (6)
As Thousands Cheer: Suppertime (2)
Because I Love You, song (1)
Blue Skies (14)
Call Me Madam: Excerpt(s) (1)
Call Me Madam: It's a lovely day today (3)
Call Me Madam: Overture (1)
Call Me Madam: The Hostess with the Mostes' on the Ball (1)
Carefree: I used to be color blind (1)
Change Partners (5)
Cohen Owes Me Ninety-Seven Dollars (1)
Count Your Blessings Instead of Sheep (1)
Easter Parade: It Only Happens When I Dance with You (2)
Easter Parade: Steppin' Out with My Baby (2)
Everybody Step (1)
Everybody's Doin' it Now (1)
Face The Music: Soft Lights and Sweet Music (1)
Follow the Fleet: I'm putting all my eggs in one basket (1)
Follow the Fleet: Let yourself go (2)
Follow the Fleet: Let's face the music and dance (7)
For your country and my country (2)
Get thee behind me, Satan (1)
Give me your tired, your poor (6)
God Bless America (37)
Hallelujah: Waiting at the end of the road (1)
Holiday Inn: White Christmas (116)
How About Me? (1)
How Deep is the Ocean? (5)
How Do You Do It, Mabel? (1)
I Love a Piano (3)
If You Don't Want My Peaches (1)
Kalamazoo (1)
Lazy (1)
Louisiana Purchase: It's a Lovely Day Tomorrow (1)
Marie (3)
Mr. Monotony (1)
Mr. President, musical (1)
Music Box Revue: Lady of the Evening (1)
Music Box Revue: Listening (1)
Music Box Revue: Say It with Music (1)
My Walking Stick (1)
On The Avenue: I've got my love to keep me warm (6)
On The Avenue: Slumming on Park Avenue (1)
Patriotic Medley (1)
Puttin' on the Ritz: Puttin' on the Ritz (8)
Remember (2)
Russian Lullaby (3)
Say It Isn't So (4)
Shaking the Blues Away (2)
Society Bear (1)
That International Rag (1)
That Mysterious Rag - Characteristic Intermezzo (1)
The song is ended (6)
This is the Army (1)
This is the Army: This is the Army, Mr Jones (5)
This is the Army: What the Well Dressed Man in Harlem Will Wear (1)
This Year's Kisses (1)
Top Hat: Cheek to Cheek (11)
Top Hat: Isn't This a Lovely Day (5)
Top Hat: No Strings (3)
Top Hat: Piccolino (1)
Top Hat: The Piccolino (1)
Top Hat: Top Hat, White Tie and Tails (7)
Watch Your Step: Play a Simple Melody (1)
What'll I Do? (6)
When I Lost You (1)
When Johnson's Quartette Harmonize (1)
When the Midnight Choo Choo Leaves for Alabam'' (1)
White Christmas: Snow (1)
With My Head in the Clouds (1)
Work(s) (1)
YIddisha Nightingale (1)
Yip, Yip, Yaphank: Oh! how I hate to get up in the morning (2)
You Keep Coming Back Like a Song, song (1)
Ziegfeld Follies of 1919: A Pretty Girl is Like a Melody (2)
Ziegfeld Midnight Frolic: I'll see you in C-U-B-A (2)
Biography by James Reel
The most commercially successful of all American songwriters during the first half of the twentieth century, Irving Berlin was neither American-born nor able to read or write music. Berlin could play only the black keys of the piano, using a special lever to transpose out of F sharp and having an assistant transcribe the music. Born Israel Baline in Russia to a cantor and his wife, the child never received any real musical education; when the family came to the United States, his father abandoned music. Israel sang for pennies on the street and eventually got a job as a singing waiter, attracting attention with his risqué parodies of popular songs. His first published effort, "Marie From Sunny Italy," was a 1907 collaboration with the café's pianist; it was on this song's title page that he first used the name Irving Berlin. In 1908 came "Dorando," the first of some 1,500 songs for which Berlin would write both the words and music. His early songs were very much period pieces, ethnic and novelty songs, and the key to Berlin's success would be his ability to adapt to whatever style was popular at the time. His career ended only when he was unable to come to terms with rock & roll. Berlin's first major hit was "Alexander's Ragtime Band" in 1911. Soon, he was contributing to Broadway revues. Berlin was instrumental in establishing ASCAP, the composers' society, in 1914, and in 1919, he formed his own music publishing firm. In the 1920s, Berlin wrote such tremendously popular songs as "All by Myself," "Always," and "What'll I Do?" Hollywood beckoned as soon as talkies developed; Berlin's "Blue Skies" was incorporated into The Jazz Singer. Most notable among Berlin's film efforts was his work for Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers vehicles, starting with Top Hat. During World War II, his wistful "White Christmas" became a top seller, and Berlin's career peaked in 1945 with the musical Annie Get Your Gun, which spawned "There's No Business Like Show Business." After the 1950 Broadway hit Call Me Madam, Berlin's career went into a slow decline and he essentially withdrew after the failure of his 1962 show Mr. President. Nevertheless, he could look back with satisfaction on a career that included the best-selling single in American history ("White Christmas"), the theme of the entertainment industry ("There's No Business Like Show Business"), and the "shadow" national anthem ("God Bless America").
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