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Happy Days Are Here Again

Song composed by Milton Ager, words by Jack Yellen

Happy Days Are Here Again

Song composed by Milton Ager, words by Jack Yellen

FieldValue
nameHappy Days Are Here Again
typesingle
artistBarbra Streisand
albumThe Barbra Streisand Album
B-side"When the Sun Comes Out"
releasedNovember 1962
recordedOctober 1962
studioColumbia 7th Ave (New York)
genrePop
labelColumbia
composerMilton Ager
lyricistJack Yellen
prev_titleMiss Marmelstein
prev_year1962
next_titleMy Coloring Book
next_year1962
Sheet music, 1929

"Happy Days Are Here Again" is a 1929 song with music by Milton Ager and lyrics by Jack Yellen. It was originally published by Ager, Yellen, and Bornstein. The song is a standard that has been interpreted by various artists. It appeared in the 1930 film Chasing Rainbows and was the campaign song for Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1932 presidential campaign. It is the unofficial anthem of Roosevelt's Democratic Party. Its copyright was renewed in 1956, so it entered the American public domain on January 1, 2025. The song is number 47 on the Recording Industry Association of America's list of "Songs of the Century". In 1986 it received an ASCAP Award for 'Most Performed Feature Film Standards on TV'.

In ''Chasing Rainbows''

The song was recorded by Leo Reisman and His Orchestra, with vocals by Lou Levin in November 1929 and was featured in the 1930 film Chasing Rainbows. The song concluded the picture, in what film historian Edwin Bradley described as a "pull-out-all-the-stops Technicolor finale, against a Great War Armistice show-within-a-show backdrop".

Barbra Streisand recordings

| B-side = "When the Sun Comes Out"

Barbra Streisand first recorded the song over three decades after its initial release. While traditionally sung at a brisk pace, Streisand's rendition became notable for its slow and expressive performance.

On a May 1962 episode of The Garry Moore Show, Streisand sang the song during the That Wonderful Year skit representing 1929. She performed it ironically as a millionaire who has just lost all of her money and enters a bar, giving the bartender her expensive jewelry in exchange for drinks.

Streisand first recorded the song in October 1962 at Columbia's NYC studio, some months before her first album sessions. This version, arranged and conducted by George Williams, became Streisand's first commercial single in November 1962, with When the Sun Comes Out as a B-side. Only 500 copies of this single were pressed for the New York market, and no copies were sent to radio stations. This 1962 version was re-released as a single in March 1965 as part of the Hall of Fame series with the 1962 recording of My Coloring Book.

Streisand re-recorded the song in January 1963 for her debut solo The Barbra Streisand Album, including the introductory lyrics, which are rarely sung in most releases.

Streisand performed the song opposite Judy Garland in a medley with [[Get Happy (song)|Get Happy] for an October 1963 broadcast of The Judy Garland Show. (The live audio of the medley would later be included on Streisand's 1991 box set Just for the Record... and again on her 2002 Duets compilation album.)

In June 1967, Streisand performed the song for over 135,000 people at Central Park, captured on the live concert album A Happening in Central Park. (The live track later appeared on the compilations Barbra Streisand's Greatest Hits and The Essential Barbra Streisand.)

The song has become a signature part of Streisand's concert repertoire, performing it live on numerous occasions; unique renditions appear on Live Concert at the Forum (1972), One Voice (1987), The Concert (1994), Timeless: Live in Concert (2000), Live in Concert 2006 (2007), Back to Brooklyn (2013), and The Music...The Mem'ries...The Magic! (2017).

Streisand released a new studio recording of Happy Days on her 2018 album Walls.

References

References

  1. "Jack Yellen's song catalog at Songwriters Hall of Fame".
  2. (1956). "Catalog of Copyright Entires". Library of Congress.
  3. Hall, Mobdaunt. (February 22, 1930). "THE SCREEN; More Backstage Bickering.". The New York Times.
  4. Bradley, Edwin M.. (July 1996). "The First Hollywood Musicals: A Critical Filmography of 171 Features, 1927–1932". McFarland & Company.
  5. (September 18, 2008). "A Brief History of Campaign Songs".
  6. "happy days are beer again – Google Search".
  7. Greenwald, Matthew. "Happy Days Are Here Again". All Media Guide, LLC.
  8. "Song Search Results: "Happy Days Are Here Again"". All Media Guide, LLC.
  9. Lowe, Lindsay. (October 4, 2013). "Flashback Friday: Barbra Streisand's Iconic Duet with Judy Garland".
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