Monday, June 10, 2024

The Poetry of the American Songbook

The music of my childhood was the American Songbook, the ballads of Broadway and Hollywood musicals. While sipping extra dry martinis and smoking her unfiltered Pall Malls, my mother played vinyl albums of Ella Fitzgerald and Frank Sinatra. Those singers crooned the lyrics of Lorenz Hart, Cole Porter, Ira Gershwin, Dorothy Fields, Irving Berlin, Johnny Mercer, Frank Loesser, Irving Mills, and so many more.

Those songs were our psalms, the daily orisons we heard every day:

Once you warned me that if you scorned me

I’d say a lonely prayer again

And wish that you were there again

To get into my hair again

It never entered my mind

 

Lorenz Hart, “It Never Entered My Mind,” 1940

 

Interestingly, those rhymes follow the pattern of Hebrew prayers such as the Schehecheyanu, with the rhyming sound appearing before a repeated end word.


The romantic ballads of the American songbook also had a sophistication and wit that sparked my love of words and poetry:

 

Imagine all the lonely years I’ve wasted

Fishing for salmon

Losing at backgammon

 

What joys untasted!

My nights were sour

Spent with Schopenhauer

 

Ira Gershwin, “Isn’t It a Pity?” 1930

 

The lyrics often featured naked emotion and double entendres, at a time when that was very risqué. The verses crossed boundaries of gender and sexuality before those issues were openly discussed:


I’ve got you under my skin

I’ve got you deep in the heart of me

So deep in my heart, you're really a part of me


Cole Porter, “I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” 1936


Interestingly, this song was written by a man, and often covered by male singers such as Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, and Frankie Valli.


Often the lyrics of the American Songbook have a bittersweet flavor that tasted like the world of my upbringing. Our family had Jewish immigrant roots, like so many of the lyricists and composers of the American Songbook. We had found prosperity and acceptance in North America, but with the ghosts of persecution and trauma lingering from the past.

 

When I started studying at Yale University in 1970 and began majoring in English, that poetry I had known from the lyrics of Lorenz Hart and Cole Porter had no place in our literature classrooms. That was ironic, because Cole Porter was not only a Yale alum, he had written several of Yale’s football fight songs, still sung then:

 

Bulldog!  Bulldog!

Bow, wow, wow—

Eli Yale.

Bulldog!  Bulldog!

Bow, wow, wow—

Our team can never fail.

 

But my elbow-patched professors preferred the stark poetry of the Lost Generation, the era of early modernism, when writers like T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound took a skeptical view of popular culture and the milieu of the masses and urban life.

 

Another aspect of the American Songbook that modernism scorned was rhyme. Even “sonnets” now are not rhymed. It’s true, rhyme gave poetry a jingle-jangle quality that only detracted from the seriousness and elegance of the diction, when used in a facile way. But rhyme in the best of the American Songbook lyrics is a source of delight and an intellectual exercise. The rhyme often required an incredibly ingenious bending of words:

 

Just declaim a few lines from Othella

And they'll think you're a hell of a fella

If your blonde won't respond when you flatter ’er

Tell her what Tony told Cleopatterer

 

Cole Porter, “Brush Up Your Shakespeare,” 1948

The verses of the American Songbook were great, but I don’t think anyone would argue that current literary journals should be publishing rhymed lyrics of that sort. What I do think is that the best characteristics of the American Songbook can still help create great poems—wit, frank emotion, sensuality, great stories, and yes, maybe even rhymed verse—you could intersperse it!

Zack’s new memoir, Hugging My Father’s Ghost




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