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I'm Beginning to See the Light (1944)

Origin and Chart Information
Harry James and His Orchestra with vocalist Kitty Kallen took the song to the top of the charts in 1945, beating out Ellington’s version which rested at number six.

- Sandra Burlingame

Rank 229
Music Duke Ellington
Johnny Hodges
Harry James
Lyrics Don George

In 1944 bandleaders Duke Ellington and Harry James collaborated with alto saxophonist Johnny Hodges to develop his melody into the hit song “I’m Beginning to See the Light” with a lyric by Don George, who also wrote the lyric for Ellington’s “I Ain’t Got Nothin’ But the Blues” that same year.

 

More on Duke Ellington at JazzBiographies.com
 

 

More on Johnny Hodges at JazzBiographies.com
 

The song spent several weeks on Your Hit Parade and charted three times in 1945 with James’ version leading the pack. Vocalist Joya Sherrill, who was only seventeen, had just joined the Ellington band when they recorded this tune which featured Hodges and trombonist Lawrence Brown:

  • Harry James and His Orchestra (1945, Kitty Kallen, vocal, 19 weeks, 2 weeks in first place)
  • Ella Fitzgerald and the Ink Spots (1945, 6 weeks, rising to #5)
  • Duke Ellington and His Orchestra (1945, Joya Sherrill, vocal, 12 weeks, rising to #6)

 

More on Harry James at JazzBiographies.com
 

 

Chart information used by permission from
Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories 1890-1954
 

As biographer James Lincoln Collier points out in his book Duke Ellington, “I’m Beginning to See the Light” is in the form of the classic American popular song. “But more than most composers of popular songs, [Ellington] tended to write more consecutive melodies, made up of quite different, even contrasting, phrases, producing more the effect of speech or dialogue. When well done, this system of writing inevitably produces a more interesting and melodically richer tune, although one perhaps correspondingly less acceptable to the ordinary ear.”

Don George’s lyric for “I’m Beginning to See the Light” deals with romantic images such as “lantern-shine” and “rainbows in my wine” to which the singer was impervious until falling in love. In The Poets of Tin Pan Alley Philip Furia praises George’s witty use of a list of “light” images and his ability to deal with a difficult song. “Ellington’s tune was particularly hard to set, since each A section consists of the same, driving vamp-like phrase repeated three times over before the melody finally changes. In one way, George heightened this musical insistence, using the same rhyme for the first three lines of each section:

I never cared much for moonlit skies,
I never winked back at fireflies,
but now that the stars are in your eyes,
I’m beginning to see the light.

“George ends by rekindling one of the oldest songwriting cliches, mixing his metaphors of light and heat: ‘but now that your lips are burning mine, I’m beginning to see the light.’”

“I’m Beginning to See the Light” was featured in the award-winning 1981 Broadway show Sophisticated Ladies, and Harry James’ version appears in the 2000 film My Dog Skip. Jonathan and Darlene Edwards (alias Paul Weston and Jo Stafford) parodied it out-of-key in their ‘60s Darlene Remembers Duke.

Jazz instrumentalists who have recorded the tune include bassist Oscar Pettiford, pianist Art Tatum, drummer Chico Hamilton, and vibist Red Norvo. Vocalists such as Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee, and Frank Sinatra have featured the song, and Ann Hampton Callaway included it in her 1996 tribute to Fitzgerald. Guitarist Martin Taylor and the David Grisman Quartet recorded it in 1999, and Al Jarreau sang it on his 2004 release.

More information on this tune...

Philip Furia
The Poets of Tin Pan Alley: A History of America's Great Lyricists
Oxford University Press; Reprint edition
Paperback: 336 pages
Author/educator Furia devotes a page to his analyses of the music and lyric.

- Sandra Burlingame

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Reading & Research

Jazz History Notes

Don Byas, an excellent swing era tenor saxophonist who also worked in early bebop groups, emigrated to France in the late 1940s and stayed in Europe for the remainder of his life. His 1946 recording of Duke Ellington’s composition is a fine example of his work and of the talented French musicians he assembled as his accompanists.

The Gerry Mulligan Quartet with trumpeter Chet Baker recorded an interesting version of the song in 1953. The piano-less ensemble’s use of accents in playing the melody is fascinating and something rarely heard in jazz. As expected, there are fine solos by Mulligan and Baker (sounding a lot like Miles Davis). Bassist Carson Smith plays the introduction to another Ellington composition, “Just Squeeze Me,” for the intro on this track.

Chris Tyle - Jazz Musician and Historian


Don Byas
Complete 1946-51 European Small Group Master Takes
Definitive Classics 11214

Gerry Mulligan
The Original Quartet With Chet Baker [2-CD SET]
Blue Note Records
Original recording 1953
Written by the Same Composer or Team...
This section shows the jazz standards written by the same writing team.

Duke Ellington, Don George, Johnny Hodges and Harry James

Year Rank Title
1944 229 I'm Beginning to See the Light

Reading and Research
Additional information for "I'm Beginning to See the Light" may be found in:

Philip Furia
The Poets of Tin Pan Alley: A History of America's Great Lyricists
Oxford University Press; Reprint edition
Paperback: 336 pages
1 page including the following types of information: lyric analysis and music analysis.

Thomas S. Hischak
The Tin Pan Alley Song Encyclopedia
Greenwood Press
Hardcover: 552 pages
1 paragraph including the following types of information: Broadway productions, history, performers and style discussion.

Robert Gottlieb, Robert Kimball
Reading Lyrics
Pantheon
Hardcover: 736 pages
Includes the following types of information: song lyrics.

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