1001 Songs Challenge,  1950s,  Music

1001 Songs Challenge #82: Just a Gigolo/I Ain’t Got Nobody (1956)

On 11 February 2019 I set myself the challenging of reading 1001 Songs You Must Hear Before You Die by Robert Dimery (ed.) and following the book’s advice to the letter. I’ve previously read 1001 Films… and started 1001 Albums… but felt 1001 Songs… would be a sensible place to start for what I have in mind here.

My challenge is to read about one song per day and listen to it (YouTube and Spotify, I need you tonight!) before sharing my own thoughts. Some songs I will love, others I’ll hate, and I’m sure there will be those that leave me perplexed but listen to them I shall.

I’ll also try, and most likely fail, to pinpoint the best song from the 1001 on offer but I’m nothing if not foolhardy. Instead of one song, I’m predicting I’ll have about 100 favourites by the end and may have to resort to a Top 10 so far to maintain any semblance of sanity.

So long as I post everyday (including Christmas) then this challenge should come to an end on Wednesday 8 November 2021. Staying with the Barney Stinson theme I am hoping that the whole experience will prove to be…

 

Louis Prima – Just a Gigolo/I Ain’t Got Nobody (1956)

Just a Gigolo (song)

” Just a Gigolo” is a popular song, adapted by Irving Caesar into English in 1929 from the Austrian tango ” Schöner Gigolo, armer Gigolo”, composed in 1928 in Vienna by Leonello Casucci to lyrics written in 1924 by Julius Brammer.

 

Continuing in the US today we have an artist who liked to specialise in multiple genres such as jazz, swing music and jump blues. He had an up and down career, bouncing back when it seemed his time in the spotlight was over. It was during one such revival in the 1950s when Louis Prima had begun performing in Las Vegas that he recorded our selection for today Just a Gigolo/I Ain’t Got Nobody.

As you may have deduced from the title here, this is actually a medley made up of two songs. Prima was the first to put them together and his medley became so well known that when the songs were later covered by other artists, many listeners assumed they had always been that way. Just a Gigolo opens the medley and Prima sings about his situation as the gigolo of the title, the singer and dancer and that is all he is to the onlooking audience. He laments that when he casts his dying breath no one will remember him for anything other than being a gigolo. The song then moves smoothly into I Ain’t Got Nobody where Prima builds on his sad situation of being forgotten. He is all alone and just wants someone to take a chance with him but the offers do not seem to be forthcoming.

Louis Prima’s collaboration of two songs is effortless and they flow into one another so naturally you would assume it was one song. The 1950s would see Prima proving popular once more but then his star would once again fade. Worry not though for anyone familiar with Disney’s 1967 film, The Jungle Book, will have heard Louis Prima taking on the role of the orangutan King Louie (who else?) and giving us that memorable rendition of I Wan’na Be Like You.

 

Favourite songs so far:

Edith Piaf – La Vie en Rose (1946)

Elmore James – Dust My Broom (1952)

Little Richard – Tutti Frutti (1955)

Elvis Presley – Heartbreak Hotel (1956)

Fats Domino – Blueberry Hill (1956)

Johnny Cash – I Walk the Line (1956)

The Louvin Brothers – The Knoxville Girl (1956)

My name is Dave and I live in Yorkshire in the north of England and have been here all my life. I hope you enjoy your visit to All is Ephemeral.

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