Tea For Two: Jazz Guitar Chord Melody
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The 1924 Jazz Standard composed by Vincent Youmans & Irving Caesar and arranged by Chris Whiteman for solo guitar.
from Wikipedia:
Youmans had written the basic melody idea of "Tea for Two" while he was in the navy during World War I, and he used it later on as an introductory passage for a song called "Who's Who With You?" While in Chicago, Youmans developed the idea into "a song that the hero could sing to the heroine" for the musical No, No, Nanette. He soon after played his composition for Irving Caesar and insisted he write the lyrics then and there. Caesar quickly jotted down a mock-up lyric, fully intending to revise it later on. Youmans, though, loved the mock-up and convinced Caesar it was just right for the melody.[4][1]
The phrase 'Tea for Two' was originally shouted by hawkers on the streets of 18th century England who wanted to attract business by lowering the price of a pot of tea from thruppence to tuppence.[5][6]
Musical characteristics
"Tea for Two" has an A1-A2-A3-B form, a range of just over an octave, and a major tonality throughout.[7][8] The song's original key was A♭ major with a false key change to C major during the second "A" section.[7] It is melodically repetitive (as the entire song consists of eighth and quarter notes, except for a pattern of eighth, quarter, and eighth notes which briefly emerge in the second section) and has a relatively simple harmonic progression.[7][8]
Notable recordings
January 1925: The Benson Orchestra of Chicago's instrumental rendition reaches number five on the US Billboard chart and stays there for five weeks[9][5]
January 1925: Marion Harris's rendition reaches number one on the US Billboard chart and stays there for 11 weeks[9][5]
1939: Art Tatum's rendition hits number eighteen on the US Billboard chart and stays there for a week[9][5]
September 1958: Tommy Dorsey's rendition reaches number seven on the US Billboard chart and stays there for twenty weeks and number five on the weekly top 50 chart from the Toronto radio station 'CHUM' and stays there for thirteen weeks[9][5]
October 1958: Tommy Dorsey's rendition reaches number three on the UK Singles chart and stays there nineteen weeks[9][5]
1986: Art Tatum posthumously receives a Grammy Hall of Fame Award for his 1939 piano solo rendition[9][5]
The Offspring included the song on their 1997 album Ixnay on the Hombre. It includes spoken word dialogue by John Mayer, and the track was titled "Intermission."
Nick DeCaro solo album recorded in 1974 and produced by Tommy Lipuma with engineer Al Schmitt. Featured at Rock Roll Hall of Fame Library & Archives Nick DeCaro tribute event September 2018.
Tea For Two: Jazz Guitar Chord Melody
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