Lush Life Giving Me A Rush Meaning



  1. Lush Life Song
  2. You're A Lush Meaning

Lee was born on July 29, 1953 in Willowdale, Toronto, Ontario, to Morris Weinrib (1920-1965) and Mary Rubenstein. His parents were Jewish Holocaust survivors from Poland who had survived the ghetto in their hometown Starachowice, followed by their imprisonments at Auschwitz and later Dachau and Bergen-Belsen concentration camps, during the Holocaust and World War II. For Canadian orders visit lush.ca. Multiple Shipping Addresses. We’re unable to ship a single order to multiple addresses. You’ll need to create a new order if you’d like to ship to more than one address. Gift Cards Gift cards are sent separately from other items.

'Lush Life'
Song
Written1933–1936
Published1949 by Tempo Music
Released1948
GenreJazz
Songwriter(s)Billy Strayhorn

'Lush Life' is a jazz standard that was written by Billy Strayhorn from 1933 to 1936. It was performed publicly for the first time by Strayhorn and vocalist Kay Davis with the Duke Ellington Orchestra at Carnegie Hall on November 13, 1948.[1]

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Background[edit]

The lyric describes the author's weariness of the night life after a failed romance, wasting time with 'jazz and cocktails' at 'come-what-may places' and in the company of girls with 'sad and sullen gray faces/with distingué traces'. Strayhorn was a teenager when he wrote most of the song, which was to become his signature composition (along with 'Take the 'A' Train').

Lush Life Song

Lush life song

The song was written in the key of D-flat major.[1] The melody is over relatively complex chord changes, compared with many jazz standards, with chromatic movement and modulations that evoke a dreamlike state and the dissolute spirit characteristic of the so-called lush life.

Nat King Cole performed 'Lush Life' in 1949, while trumpeter Harry James recorded it four times. In the 1950s it was performed by jazz vocalists Ella Fitzgerald, Carmen McRae, and Sarah Vaughan. John Coltrane recorded it twice. One was a 14-minute version in 1958 as the title track of an album for Prestige. The other was in 1963 with vocalist Johnny Hartman. Kurt Elling recorded a version for his album Dedicated to You: Kurt Elling Sings the Music of Coltrane and Hartman.[1]

Linda Ronstadt's version won the Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocal(s) (1986).

Other musicians who have recorded the song include Joey Alexander, Chet Baker, Andy Bey, Anthony Braxton, Sylvia Brooks, Kate Ceberano & Mark Isham, Sammy Davis Jr., Blossom Dearie, Bebi Dol, Lisa Ekdahl, Ella Fitzgerald & Oscar Peterson, Bill Frisell, Lady Gaga, Stan Getz, Joe Henderson, Stevie Holland, José James, Molly Johnson, Rickie Lee Jones, Sheila Jordan, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, Queen Latifah, Julie London, Patti Lupone, Johnny Mathis, Tito Puente, Joshua Redman, Buddy Rich, Linda Ronstadt, Tony Scott, Rare Silk, Terell Stafford, McCoy Tyner, Ernie Watts, Bob Welch, and Nancy Wilson.

Other versions[edit]

Giving

You're A Lush Meaning

  • Billy Eckstine – No Cover, No Minimum (1960)
  • John Coltrane - John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman (1963)
  • Johnny Hartman - John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman (1963), Thank You for Everything (1998), rec. 1976
  • Jack Jones – Where Love Has Gone (1964)
  • Nancy Wilson - Lush Life (1967)
  • Bud Powell - 'Strictly' Powell Vol. 1 (1975)
  • Donna Hightower – El Jazz y Donna Hightower (1975)
  • Donna Summer – Donna Summer produced by Quincy Jones (1982)
  • Rickie Lee Jones – Girl at Her Volcano (1983)
  • Rare Silk - 'New Weave' (1983)
  • Joe Pass - Virtuoso No. 4 (1983, recorded in 1973)[2]
  • Tony Scott – Lush Life and Lush Life Volume 2 (1989) – a tour de force, with 13 interpretations of the song. From the liner notes: 'An homage to Billy Strayhorn's 'Lush Life', an obsession, fullfilled (sic) by Tony Scott'
  • Natalie Cole – Unforgettable... with Love (1991)
  • Eileen Farrell – It's Over (1991)
  • Queen Latifah – The Dana Owens Album (2004)
  • Lady Gaga – Cheek to Cheek (2014)

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcGioia, Ted (2012). The Jazz Standards: A Guide to the Repertoire. New York City: Oxford University Press. p. 158. ISBN978-0-19-993739-4.
  2. ^'allmusic.com'. allmusic.com. Retrieved June 1, 2020.

External links[edit]

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