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Blue Moon (1934 song)

"Blue Moon"
Song
Published 1935
Composer(s) Richard Rodgers
Lyricist(s) Lorenz Hart
"Blue Moon"
Single by Billy Eckstine
B-side "Fools Rush In"
Released 1949
Format 10-inch 78 rpm record
Recorded 1949
Genre Jazz
Label MGM
Writer(s) Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart
"Blue Moon"
Single by Mel Tormé
B-side "Again"
Released 1949
Format 10-inch 78 rpm record
Recorded 1949
Genre Jazz
Label Capitol
Writer(s) Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart
"Blue Moon"
Single by Elvis Presley
from the album Elvis Presley
A-side "Just Because"
Released August 31, 1956
Format 7-inch single
Recorded August 19, 1954
Genre Country
Length 2:31
Label RCA Victor/ RCA Camden/ RCA
Writer(s) Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart
"Blue Moon"
Single by The Marcels
from the album Blue Moon
B-side "Goodbye to Love"
Released February 1961
Format 7-inch single
Recorded 1961
Genre Rock and roll, doo-wop, R&B
Length 2:15
Label Colpix
Writer(s) Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart
Producer(s) Stu Phillips, Danny Winchell
The Marcels singles chronology
"Blue Moon"
(1961)
"Summertime"
(1961)

"Blue Moon" is a classic popular song written by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart in 1934, and has become a standard ballad. It may be the first instance of the familiar "50s progression" in a popular song. The song was a hit twice in 1949 with successful recordings in the US by Billy Eckstine and Mel Tormé. In 1961, "Blue Moon" became an international number one hit for the doo-wop group The Marcels, on the Billboard 100 chart and in the UK Singles chart. Over the years, "Blue Moon" has been covered by various artists including versions by Frank Sinatra, Billie Holiday, Elvis Presley, the Mavericks, Dean Martin, the Supremes and Rod Stewart.

Versions of this song are used liberally in the soundtrack of the 1981 horror-comedy film An American Werewolf in London.

Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart were contracted to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in May 1933. They were soon commissioned to write the songs for Hollywood Party, a film that was to star many of the studio's top artists. Richard Rodgers later recalled, "One of our ideas was to include a scene in which Jean Harlow is shown as an innocent young girl saying—or rather singing—her prayers. How the sequence fitted into the movie I haven't the foggiest notion, but the purpose was to express Harlow's overwhelming ambition to become a movie star ('Oh Lord, if you're not busy up there,/I ask for help with a prayer/So please don't give me the air . . .')." The song was not even recorded (nor was the movie released) and MGM Song #225 "Prayer (Oh Lord, make me a movie star)" dated June 14, 1933, was registered for copyright as an unpublished work on July 10, 1933.


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