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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, wherein it was performed by Hall, Aida Ward, and Willard McLean.

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. One advertisement called it "the song success of the Nation." Blackbird Revue opened on January 4, 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 May 9, 1928, Blackbirds of 1928 opened at the Liberty Theatre, Broadway. 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 could not afford 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 Barry 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. Additionally, Philip Furia has pointed out that Fields' lines for bars 1 to 8 of the verse contain some phrases very similar to those in bars 9 to 16 of the second verse of Lorenz Hart's lyric for the song "Where's That Rainbow?" from the 1926 Rodgers and Hart musical Peggy-Ann (though there is no relationship between the music for the two song verses). Peggy Ann had a book by Fields' brother Herbert and was produced by their father Lew. ==Recorded versions==
Recorded versions
• Mildred Grizelle (released by Gennett Records in 1928 under the New Electrobeam (Black Label) catalog number 6646, with the flip side "Low Down" by Virginia Lee • Sam Lanin, with vocals provided by Irving Kaufman (May 1928) • Johnny Hamp's Kentucky Serenaders (vocal by H. White; recorded May 17, 1928, released by Victor as catalog number 21414A, with the flip side "Sweet Lorraine" and by Supertone as catalog number 1005P, both with the flip side "I Must Have That Man" • Hollywood Dance Orchestra (recorded August 7, 1928, released by Challenge as catalog number 536, also released by Banner as catalog number 7193; also released under the name Jewel Dance Orchestra by Jewel as catalog number, all with the flip side "Raggedy Maggie") • Lee Sims (recorded November 1928, released by Brunswick as catalog number 4152A, with the flip side "Sonny Boy") • Abe Lyman and his Californians (recorded November 26, 1928, released by Brunswick as catalog number 4136, with the flip side "Baby" • Ukulele Ike (Cliff Edwards) in New York, Dec. 7, 1928—Columbia 1471-D Columbia 5068 • Louis Armstrong (recorded March 5, 1929, released by Columbia with the flip side "Black and Blue" and with the flip side "Mood Indigo");) • Ethel Waters with Duke Ellington (recorded December 22, 1932, released by Brunswick as catalog number 6517, with the flip side "Doin' the New Lowdown", and by Vocalion as catalog number 03264, both with the flip side "Never No More Blues") • Benny Goodman and his Orchestra (recorded September 6, 1937, released by Victor as catalog number 25678, with the flip side "Sugar Foot Stomp") • Cootie Williams Rug Cutters (recorded October 26, 1937, released by Vocalion as catalog number 3890, with the flip side "Watching" and by Vocalion as catalog number 5496, both with the flip side "Oh, Lady Be Good") • King Cole Quintet (recorded in 1942, released by Disc as catalog number 2011, with the flip side "Pro-Sky") • Ted Straeter and his Orchestra (recorded March 24, 1942, released by Decca as catalog number 18308B, with the flip side "What Is This Thing Called Love?") • Glenn Miller and the Army Air Forces Training Command Orchestra recorded the song in 1944 with Peanuts Hucko on vocals, released as V-Disc No. 482A in August 1945 • Jonah Jones Septet (recorded September 4, 1946, released by Prestige as an extended-play disc, catalog number PR-7604 and by Swing Records in France as catalog number 228, with the flip side "That's the Lick") • Rose Murphy (recorded December 1947, released by Mercury as catalog number 8111, with the flip side "Cecelia"). Frankie Valli & the Four Seasons later did a version of the song, inspired by Rose's, for their debut album Sherry & 11 Others in 1962. • Ben Pollack's Pickarib Boys (recorded February 28, 1950, released by Discovery as catalog number 131) • Louis Jordan (recorded March 1, 1951, released by Decca as catalog number 27620 with the flip side "You Will Always Have a Friend") • Lester Young (recorded November 28, 1952, released by Norgran in 1954 on Lester Young with the Oscar Peterson Trio) • Doris Day (1953 – not released as a single but recorded for a radio program; eventually released in the album Doris Day Sings 22 Original Recordings by Hindsight in 1987) • Oscar Peterson (recorded May 21, 1953, released by Mercury as catalog number 89062, with the flip side "Spring Is Here", also released by Mercury subsidiary Clef under the same catalog number) • Bing Crosby included the song in his album Some Fine Old Chestnuts (1954) • Ella Fitzgerald (1957) recorded live on the Verve release ''Ella at Zardi's'' • Dean Martin (recorded January 28, 1957, released by Capitol as catalog number 3718 [78 rpm] and F-3718 [45 rpm], with the flip side "I Never Had a Chance" • Buddy Morrow (released by RCA Victor as catalog number 20–3947, with the flip side "Our Song of Love") • Peggy Lee and Dave Barbour (released by Capitol as catalog numbers 511 and 10118, both with the flip side "Why Don't You Do Right?") ==Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga version==
Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga version
}} Composition and reception The version of "I Can't Give You Anything but Love" on Cheek to Cheek has Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga alternating verses alongside piano, a brass section and drums. She also altered the lyrics to sing "Gee, I'd like to say you're looking swell, Tony", who later rejoins with the line "Diamond bracelets won't work, doesn't sell, Gaga". Jeff Benjamin from Fuse was positive in his review, saying that "[t]here's a walking bassline, gospel organs and brassy horn blasts to back the pair's soulful crooning. And while we love listening to Gaga and Tony, we really get into the throwback vibe when the trumpet solo kicks in. Trey Barrineau from USA Today complimented the duos vocals, saying that the song "really swings". Jesse David Fox from New York also gave a positive review, stating that "lot has been written about the creative and commercial shortcomings of Gaga's last record, [Artpop], but I, for one, am glad about its failure – because anything that frees her up to record more music with Tony Bennett is a win in my book. 'I Can't Give You Anything but Love' is a great example; Tony Bennett might be 88, but it's Gaga who hasn't sounded this alive in years." A writer for Next Magazine declared that Gaga sounded "absolutely stellar" in the song, and found it to be a "vocal vehicle" for the artist to "show off" her singing. Debra Kamin from The Times of Israel praised Gaga's vocals on "I Can't Give You Anything but Love", for her range and control. MTV News critic Gil Kaufman described the track as "funky". Alexa Camp from Slant Magazine gave a negative review, saying that "for a singer who isn't even 30, Gaga's voice is shockingly rough-hewn". Release and commercial performance "I Can't Give You Anything but Love" was released as the second single from Bennett's and Lady Gaga's first collaborative album Cheek to Cheek (2014) on August 19, 2014. Gaga announced the release on Twitter, accompanied by the single's cover art. On October 6, two remixes of the song were made available for digital download. Remix by Italian record producer Giorgio Moroder was released exclusively to Idolator website. The chords of the original version was changed, with Moroder adding synths and a bassline, complementing the vocals of Bennett and Gaga. Another remix was an Earmilk exclusive and was made by Austrian musician Parov Stelar. He changed the cover into a "bouncy jazz house mix that provides a perfect compliment to the stars' seasoned vocals". Additionally, Universal Music Group sent the single to Italian radios on January 16, 2015. Maurice Bobb from MTV News noticed the "bare essence" of the duo in the video and added that Gaga appeared "overwhelmingly subdued", but felt that "her playful energy still shines through as she preens and shimmies to [Bennett's] smooth crooning." Nolan Feeney from Time that Gaga appeared normal in the video and added that "she's still fun to watch even when she's just hanging out in the vocal both (and dressed like a relatively normal human, no less)." Katie Atkinson from Billboard declared that "If you love the adorable friendship between glam pop queen Lady Gaga and classic crooner Tony Bennett, you'll definitely want to see the breezy behind-the-scenes studio video of the pair for 'I Can't Give You Anything but Love'." Idolator's Mike Wass described the video in detail, calling it the "perfect antidote for Gaga's overwhelming, more-is-more Artpop visuals... The swingin' standard is a nice fit for Gaga and Tony. It allows them to riff off each other and ham it up (ever so slightly). Those shenanigans are captured in the studio-based video, which finds Mother Monster modeling a variety of wigs and smoking a cigar. Her suave companion looks a little bemused but he's clearly having a good time." Charts Release history ==Use in the media==
Use in the media
• In Disney animated sound cartoon The Birthday Party of January 1931, the song is performed as a duet between Mickey and Minnie Mouse. • In the Warner Brothers sound cartoon ''Bosko's Holiday'' of June 1931, the song is used as instrumental background music. • The song is featured in the screwball comedy Bringing Up Baby (1938) in several scenes, since apparently the song is the only thing that placates the surly leopard named Baby, which quirky heiress Susan Vance (Katharine Hepburn) and befuddled paleontologist Dr. David Huxley (Cary Grant) have to bring to her aunt. • In Seven Sinners (1940), the song is performed by the character Bijou Blanche, portrayed by Marlene Dietrich. • Lena Horne performed this song in the film Stormy Weather (1943). • Judy Holliday sings this while playing cards in the film Born Yesterday (1950). • The song is sung by the strip-club MC in John Cassavetes' film The Killing of a Chinese Bookie (1976). • The song is featured in the short animation Contract (1985). • A version of the song appears on Vincent LaGuardia Gambini Sings Just for You. It is performed by Joe Pesci and Marisa Tomei, portraying their characters from the film My Cousin Vinny. • The song is used in the film version of The Green Mile (1999). • The song is featured in the 2006 Tony Award-winning Broadway play Jersey Boys (along with the 2014 film adaptation of the same name). • The song is played during the episode "He's Our You" of Lost. • The song is played during The Aviator (2004). • A version of the song sung by Doris Day is played during the opening credits of Married Life (2007). • The song was featured prominently in the Peter Orullian novel, Scenes From A Memory, based on the Dream Theater album of the same name. ==References==
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