The musicality of Youmans
Various Performers
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Release Date: 01/11/2015
In the 1920s, Vincent Youmans led a vanguard of fresh innovative songwriters whose melodies and shows were revolutionizing Broadway. Youmans, along with his peers Rodgers, Gershwin and Berlin, established a new sound of American popular music, and revitalized Broadway in the process, ushering in its first Golden Age. Widely regarded as a master melodist, Youmans’ modern and streamlined melodies were tailor made for the jazz age, perfectly underscoring its racing pulse and optimistic American attitude.
Vincent Millie Youmans was born in 1898 into a wealthy New York City family. He found music at an early age, and, declining to take over the family’s hat business, pursued music instead. Like George Gershwin before him (they were born one day apart), his first entré to the music business was as a song-plugger for a sheet music publisher, and then as a rehearsal accompanist for shows, in his case Victor Herbert operettas. His gifts were obvious, and success came quickly. At the age of 23, he landed his first Broadway composing credit with Two Little Girls in Blue (1921), which enjoyed a modest run, and generated two song hits. Youmans wrote music for half the score, teaming up with an equally young Ira Gershwin who penned the lyrics under the non de plume Arthur Francis. Two years later, Youmans enjoyed his first hit show with Wildflower (again sharing composing duties) with lyrics this time by Oscar Hammerstein II. Both shows yielded hit songs for the young composer, and producers took notice. Later that same year, Broadway saw his Mary Jane McKane (co-composing again, with lyrics by Hammerstein) and Lollipop, (lyrics by Zelda Sears), which was his first solo composing credit. In 1924, his career exploded with the worldwide success of No, No Nanette, and the entire world was soon dancing to Youmans’ music. Fifty years later, Broadway again embraced the show in an effervescent revival directed by Busby Berkeley. Utilizing the sparkli