Saturday, September 12, 2015

The Song of September

Walter Huston and Jeanne Madden as Peter Stuyvesant and Tina Tienhoven in Knickerbocker Holiday.


Well it is getting on in September.  Here in the Midwest and in much of the country the hot, sultry days are broken up now and then by cool rainy ones.  Sumer has by no means surrendered but the fall flowers are coming in and the leaves are showing, just here and there, the hint of glorious metamorphosis to come.  For those few of us who are still vitally engages in the rhythms of the seasons—the farmers around here on their million Dollar equipment, the gardeners with dirt under their fingernails—it is the beginning of the time of gathering and reaping.  For those of us who set the rhythms of our own lives by school—our own or our children’s—it seems more of a new year and beginning than anything bleak and frigid January has to offer.  Yet these cool nights and fresh breezes remind us that change and, yes, even death lie just out of sight but inevitably ahead.  It is an emotional time.  A time when joy and melancholy lay side by side.
Poets, musicians, artists of every sort have long recognized these moments and reflected on them.  Take popular songs.  A simple Google search turns up dozens across genres from Neil Diamond’s bombastic September Morn; to the teen romance of bygone days, See You in September; to bittersweet nostalgia Try to Remember.  But, at least for those of us with far more past than future, nothing has resonated like September Song.
Woody Allen called it the best American popular song ever written in the film Radio Days.  That may be a slight exaggeration.  There is plenty of stiff competition for that crown including in my book As Times Go By, Gershwin’s Summertime, Over the Rainbow, and the vaudeville standard I’m Always Chasing Rainbows, but it is definitely a contender.
But it wasn’t always that way.  The song was slow getting out of the starting gate.
You can’t blame the slow start on its impressive pedigree.  Pulitzer Prize winning playwright and poet Maxwell Anderson, known for his gritty World War I play What Price Glory; blank verse historical dramas Elizabeth the Queen and Mary of Scotland; and for his roman a clef of the Sacco and Vanzetti case, Winterset.  In 1937 he undertook an ambitious new project—turning Washington Irving’s Father Knickerbocker’s Stories about life in early Dutch colonial Nieuw Amsterdam into a musical.  The play was to be part romantic comedy and part political commentary on what Anderson perceived as creeping corruption in the Roosevelt administration and a tendency in the New Deal toward corporatism and the concentration of power like that which had given rise to fascism, Nazism, and Soviet style communism.  The symbol of that corruption and power mania was to be the tyrannical governor, the one-legged old man, Peter Stuyvesant.

Kurt Weill ad Maxwell Anderson during their second collaboration, Lost in the Stars, in 1949.,


Anderson wrote the libretto and lyrics.  It was his Anderson’s first foray into musical theater.  For a composer he turned to Kurt Weill, the German Jewish refugee from the Nazis who had gained fame as Bertolt Brecht’s collaborator on Mahogany and The Three Penny Opera. Weill was a fervent anti-fascist and shared with Brecht the belief that theater should be instructive and socially useful.  His sophisticated European sensibilities insured that the music would have a very different feel from that of the most successful American theater composers, Jerome Kern, Irving Berlin, George Gershwin, and Richard Rogers.
In a fanciful twist the play was narrated on stage by Irving, who also acted as a kind of chorus and occasionally interacted with the other characters.  Set in the Dutch colonial capital on Manhattan Island.  The designated hero was Brom Broeck, a young, brave, and headstrong young man with an allergy to authority, a character trait which Irving often pointed out was uniquely American--a term and idea that did not exist in 1647.  Young Brom loved the fair Tina Tienhoven, daughter of the Burgermeester—master of the corrupt Town Council.  The Council included a venal Roosevelt, an ancestor of the Presidents.  Brom discovered an illegal scheme to sell rum and firearms to the Indian tribes who menaced the Dutch settlements along the Hudson.  Brom was framed by Tina’s father for the crime he tried to expose and sentenced to hang.  He escaped that fate by a clever ruse and was pardoned by the newly arrived Governor, Peter Stuyvesant who admired the Brom’s pluck.
But Stuyvesant turned out to be anything but a hero.  He was high handed and dictatorial, imagining himself as The One Indispensable Man. He immediately set his hand at two goals—to marry the comely Tina himself and to rush the colony to war for his own glory.  That set Brom once again on a path of rebellion.
As envisioned, the play was clearly about Brom and Stuyvesant was a main, but secondary character.  Mounted at the Ethel Barrymore Theater by Playwrights’ Company and directed by Joshua Logan, Burges Meredith, Anderson’s favorite actor and his neighbor in Rockland County on the Hudson was tapped to play Brom.  For Stuyvesant, Anderson and Logan recruited Walter Houston, a stage veteran who had become a Hollywood star in films like Dodsworth, Abraham Lincoln, and Rain.  He is best remembered today as the father of director John Huston and as James Cagney’s father in Yankee Doodle Dandy and the grizzled prospector in The Treasure of Sierra Madre. 
As a condition for taking the part Huston requested a solo of his own—he only slated to appear in ensemble numbers.  Since he was a key marquee name, Anderson and Weill quickly agreed and dashed off September Song—the melancholy plea of an old man for a young love—almost as a throw away.  But it was crafted to Huston’s limited range and gruff voice.  In a departure from tradition, the actor would half speak, half sing the song. 
But it disrupted the balance of the play.  It immediately made Stuyvesant, seen originally as a villain into a more complex and sympatric character.  Anderson made adjustments to the script accordingly.  That upset Meredith who felt his role was undermined and who withdrew from the play during tryouts.  He was replaced by Richard Kollmar who became best known as a radio actor and personality who was married to columnist and What’s My Line panelist Dorothy Kilgallen.
Knickerbocker Holiday opened on Broadway on October 19, 1938 to generally favorable review—although some reviewers were harshly critical of the anti-Roosevelt sub text just as Europe was gearing up for war and real fascism was on the march.  It was moderately successful at the box office running for 168 performances and closing on March 11, 1939.  When it closed, none of the show’s song, including September Song had broken out as a recording or radio hit.  Everyone expected the show and song to quickly slip from memory.
Huston did record the song in 1938, but it did not sell.  In 1943 Bing Crosby, who seemingly recorded everything released the song.  His adaptation, used as the basis for most subsequent versions altered the lyrics somewhat removing or changing lines that reflected specific plot points in the play.  Three years later Frank Sinatra recorded it for the first of three times.  But neither of these versions was a hit.

Sheet music from the use of the song in the film September Affair which reignited interest in it and established it as a true American standard.


Then in 1950 Huston’s recording was resurrected for the sound track of the film September Affair, a tear-jerking romance starring Joan Fontaine and Joseph Cotton.  The film is little remembered today, but Huston’s twelve year old recording was re-released and became a surprise #1 hit on the Billboard charts.
The song struck a deep and resonant note and almost immediately became a standard after its new lease on life.  A veritable avalanche of performers across genres recorded it over the next decades.  Both Sinatra and Crosby revisited it as they aged—Crosby for the last time just a month before his death.   Enzio Pinza and Mario Lanza gave it an operatic treatment.  Billy Eckstine and Nat King Cole adapted it to jazz.  Soul man James Brown did it and Lou Reed gave it an up-tempo punk edge.  It was harmonized by The Four Freshmen, Dion and the Belmonts, The Platters, and The Impressions. 
The song written in a male voice enjoyed some of its best interpretations by women including Sarah Vaughn, Ella Fitzgerald, Earth Kitt, Lotte Lenya (Weill’s wife), Jo Stafford, Patti Page, Eydie Gormé, Lena Horne, Elaine Page, and Rosemary Clooney.
Male pop artists taking a crack at it included, Maurice Chevalier, Pat Boone, Matt Monro, Mel Tormé, Will Holt, Theodore Bikel, Liberace, and Andy Williams.  More recently Lindsey Buckingham, Jeff Lynne, Bryan Ferry, Rod McKuen, and Ronnie Drew, formerly of The Dubliners have included the song on their albums.
But two versions stand out among all of the others.  In 1963 Jimmy Durante included the song on an album of pop standards.  When Durante’s songs resurfaced in the ‘90’s in movie sound tracks like Sleepless in Seattle interest in his versions of standards peaked and September Song in particular became a new cult classic.  

Willie Nelson may have recorded the definitive version of September Song. 


Perhaps the best of all, however, was Willie Nelson’s flawless and nuanced performance on his 1978 Stardust Memories album.  The single version became a country music hit, but is also a reminder of why Nelson is a great jazz singer.
As noted, the Walter Huston version used the original lyrics from the play intact.  Subsequent recording have been based on this setting, although sometimes one or both of the verses are eliminated and the chorus repeated. 
September Song
When I was a young man courting the girls
I played me a waiting game
If a maid refused me with tossing curls
I'd let the old Earth make a couple of whirls
While I plied her with tears in lieu of pearls
And as time came around she came my way
As time came around, she came

Oh, it's a long long while from May to December
But the days grow short when you reach September
When the autumn weather turns the leaves to flame
And you ain't got time for waiting game

When days dwindle down to a precious few
September November,
And these few golden days I'd share with you
Those golden days I share with you

When you meet with the young girls early in the Spring
You court them in song and rhyme
They answer with words and a clover ring
But if you could examine the goods they bring
They have little to offer but the songs they sing
And the plentiful waste of time of day
A plentiful waste of time

Oh, it's a long, long while from May to December
But the days grow short when you reach September
When the autumn weather turns the leaves to flame
One hasn't got time for the waiting game

Oh, the days dwindle down to a precious few
September, November
And these few precious days I'll spend with you
These precious days I'll spend with you

Maxwell Anderson and Kurt Weill

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