Andy Williams: a Gift of Great Timeless
Songs
Many
folks are remembering Andy William’s TV show today (Andy passed away September
25th), how his Christmas specials brought their families close
together on the holidays. Andy’s masterful singing popularized many great
American songs. For me, being carried away downstream by the song, “Moon River,”
which became the theme song of Andy’s show, is one of the good memories. What is
the story behind this wonderful song?
The composer Henry Mancini selected the
great lyricist, Johnny Mercer (1909-1976) to write the words for his melody. I
was already a big Henry Mancini fan in 1961, in love with the Peter Gunn big band soundtracks that he
composed for the detective TV series, and also where I learned my first jazz
chords on piano.
The Academy Award winning song “Moon
River” was first sung by Audrey Hepburn in the film Breakfast at Tiffany’s. Johnny’s career
as a songwriter, dormant since the 50s, was reinvigorated by the success of this
song.
Last
year, our daughter’s boyfriend made a long truck delivery from the San Francisco
Bay Area to a museum in Savannah, Georgia.
“I drove right across Moon River,” he told me.
“Really! I didn’t know it was a real river,” I said.
But of course, I immediately
thought—Johnny Mercer was born and raised in Savannah, Georgia! Those who’ve seen the 1997 movie (or
read the book), In the Garden of Good and
Evil, might recall it was filmed in the historic Mercer House in Savannah.
Built for Johnny’s great grandfather General Hugh Mercer, the house had not
actually been in the Mercer family for years although the family still lived in
town. Doing more research, I read
that Johnny grew up in a different house overlooking Moon River.
After creating several hit songs with composers like Harold Arlen like
“Ac-cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive,” (recently recorded by Paul McCartney) Johnny
went on to Hollywood where he helped to found Capitol Records. Capitol built the
famous round tower housing recording studios that became a hit factory for Nat
Cole, Frank Sinatra, Diana Krall and many others (see previous blog item, The Legendary Capitol Studios and
Engineering Legend, Al Schmitt).
Johnny Mercer was not just a lyric
writer. He also wrote and recorded his own songs, great ones like “Blues in the
Night,” “I’m An Old Cowhand,” and “Something’s Gotta Give.”
One
of the “facts” I learned as I read up on Mercer’s career is that Moon River was
formerly called Back River, and was renamed in honor of Savannah’s successful
native son. I guess I had romanticized the origin of the song, visualizing
Johnny dreaming wistfully out the window at the southern vista of his
“Huckleberry friend” rolling by, romantic as Johnny must have felt in writing
it. “We’re after the same rainbow’s end …” http://georgiamusicmag.com/moon-river-the-geography-of-a-timeless-song/
Johnny Mercer and Henry Mancini teamed up again two years later (1963) to
write two more hits for Andy Williams, songs from the movies, “The Days of Wine
and Roses,” (another Best Music, Original Song Academy Award winner), and
“Charade (an Academy Award nominee).”