Caption: NANCY HARMS , Credit: John Whiting
Image by: John Whiting 
NANCY HARMS  

I've Got The World On A String-Nancy Harms

From: KBEM
Series: Minnesota Voices- Certain Standards with Arne Fogel
Length: 03:32

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Minnesota Voices Certain Standards features Nancy Harms on a Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler song entitled "I've Got The World On A String". Arne Fogel also gives the background of the song. (Week 10-Day 2 when used in a series) Read the full description.

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In their book  “America’s Songs”, authors Phillip Furia and Michael Lasser call it, (quote), “one of the most aggressively cheerful songs to come out of America’s most dismal decade”. The “dismal decade” was the 1930s, the period of The Great Depression. Songs were the means by which Americans were encouraged to try and forget their troubles, if only for a short time, and tunesmiths Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler, who had previously written a song containing the line “forget your troubles and just get happy”, now tried to sell the public on the notion that, by simply being in love, one can literally feel as though he has the “world on a string”…. The song popularized on the radio and in best-selling recordings by Cab Calloway and Bing Crosby. Then, for 20 years, the song lay relatively dormant, until Frank Sinatra, newly signed to Capitol records, was looking for material to help re-launch his legendary 1950s comeback. What he found was “I’ve Got The World On A String”, and once again, this song helped to alleviate a great depression: this time, it was frank Siinatra’s! – Here to sing it is Minnesota’s Voice, Nancy Harms.

Also in the Minnesota Voices- Certain Standards with Arne Fogel series

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It Might As Well Be Spring- Debbie Duncan (03:29)
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Minnesota Voices Certain Standards features Debbie Duncan on a Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein song entitled "It Might As Well Be Spring". Arne Fogel also gives the ...
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For All We Know- Maud Hixson (03:32)
From: KBEM

Minnesota Voices Certain Standards features Maud Hixson on a J. Fred Coots- Sam Lewis song entitled "For All We Know". Arne Fogel also gives the background of the song. (Week ...
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Skylark-Arne Fogel (03:32)
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Minnesota Voices Certain Standards features Arne Fogel on a Hoagy Carmichael – Johnny Mercer song entitled "Skylark". Arne Fogel also gives the background of the song. (Week ...
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Softly As In A Morning Sunrise-Nancy Harms (03:32)
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Minnesota Voices Certain Standards features Nancy Harms on a Frederick Loewe and Alan Jay Lerner song entitled "Softly As In A Morning Sunrise". Arne Fogel also gives the ...
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You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To-Connie Evingson (03:32)
From: KBEM

Minnesota Voices Certain Standards features Connie Evingson on a Cole Porter's song entitled "You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To". Arne Fogel also gives the background of the ...

Piece Description

In their book  “America’s Songs”, authors Phillip Furia and Michael Lasser call it, (quote), “one of the most aggressively cheerful songs to come out of America’s most dismal decade”. The “dismal decade” was the 1930s, the period of The Great Depression. Songs were the means by which Americans were encouraged to try and forget their troubles, if only for a short time, and tunesmiths Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler, who had previously written a song containing the line “forget your troubles and just get happy”, now tried to sell the public on the notion that, by simply being in love, one can literally feel as though he has the “world on a string”…. The song popularized on the radio and in best-selling recordings by Cab Calloway and Bing Crosby. Then, for 20 years, the song lay relatively dormant, until Frank Sinatra, newly signed to Capitol records, was looking for material to help re-launch his legendary 1950s comeback. What he found was “I’ve Got The World On A String”, and once again, this song helped to alleviate a great depression: this time, it was frank Siinatra’s! – Here to sing it is Minnesota’s Voice, Nancy Harms.