Showing posts with label harlem Ed Sullivan St. James Infirmary Twist and Shout Minnie the Moocher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label harlem Ed Sullivan St. James Infirmary Twist and Shout Minnie the Moocher. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Cab Calloway, The Beatles, St. James Infirmary

A young Cab Calloway
A friend sent a link to Cab Calloway and multiple video versions of his song "Minnie the Moocher." Check it out, it's a lot of fun: Minnie the Moocher.

Calloway's theme song was once "St. James Infirmary," but when he became the feature performer at Harlem's prestigious The Cotton Club, he wanted a song that was more, uhm, original. As detailed in my book, I Went Down to St. James Infirmary, he and manager Irving Mills cobbled together something that borrowed the orchestration and melody of "St. James Infirmary" and the lyrics of a traditional American song about drug dreams called "Willie the Weeper."

It was the biggest chart success of the year. 1931.

Three decades later, February 23 1964, Calloway appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show to perform, not "Minnie the Moocher," but "St. James Infirmary."



The Beatles were on that same Ed Sullivan TV show - performing three songs, including this:


It was an exciting Sunday night. Like most people I (and my family, parents included) were tuned in for the Beatles. Calloway was a diversion, a fill-in, as were the other acts that evening. When Sullivan introduced Calloway, though, he reminisced about the fantastic days when Cab captured everyone's imagination.
Inquiries into the early years of SJI