Spring Will Be So Sad (When She Comes This Year)

_______________________________________

Spring Will Be So Sad (When She Comes This Year) – words and music by Margaret Bonds and Harold Dickinson; copyright, 10 March 1941 & 30 March 1941

Margaret Bonds links:

1941 recordings of the song include those by Glenn Miller and his Orchestra, vocals by Ray Eberle & The Modernaires; Harry James and his Orchestra, vocal by Dick Haymes; and Charlie Spivak and his Orchestra, vocal by Garry Stevens. I’ve also included a recent (2018?) live performance of the song by Alethea Kilgore, and a link to a live 9 May 2021 performance by a group called Chansonniers.

The Glenn Miller and Harry James versions have very different lyrics, which might explain the two different copyright dates, twenty days apart in March 1941. These two lyrics are provided below. The Charlie Spivak recording uses the Glenn Miller lyric version, but omits its introductory vocals.

__________________

Glenn Miller and his Orchestra, vocals: Ray Eberle & The Modernaires — recorded 20 February 1941; issued 28 March 1941 on the single Bluebird B-11095, as the B-side of “Perfidia” — lyric

.

audio file, VBR MP3 (5.7 MB), from the page SPRING WILL BE SO SAD (When She Comes This Year), at archive.org (***low sound quality***):

.

lyric of the Glenn Miller version, from AlltheLyrics.com or a page dedicated to the song at Brew Lite’s Jazz Tales:

Spring Will Be So Sad (When She Comes This Year) – w.m. Margaret Bonds, Harold Dickinson

intro:
Spring will be so sad when she comes this year
How could she be glad when she reaches here?
Oh, spring will be so sad when she comes this year

chorus:
Spring will be so sad when she comes this year
How could she be glad when she reaches here?
The winds have whispered while they race
There’s a frown on April’s face
For she can’t find any trace
Of contentment’s hiding place

Spring just can’t be gay when she comes this year
She won’t want to stay when she reaches here
This troubled world can’t tell you when
She’ll be happy once again
Oh, spring will be so sad when she comes this year

______________

Charlie Spivak and his Orchestra, vocal: Garry Stevens – recorded 17 March 1941 in NYC; issued on the 78 rpm single OKeh 6191, b/w “Slap – Slap”

audio file, VBR MP3 (5.5 MB), from the page Spring Will Be So Sad (When She Comes This Year) at archive.org:

.

Harry James and his Orchestra, vocal by Dick Haymes — Although evidently made during a 1941 session, this recording may not have been released until 1980, when it was included on the compilation album James and Haymes, Circle CLP-5. In the extensive notes on the back of the album is a single sentence that suggests a tentative recording date month and provides a clue as to the source of the music inside: “The World Transcription recording log for the James session is not dated but indications are that it took place in May, 1941.” The album was reissued in CD format in 1989 on Circle CCD-5.

.

lyric, Harry James version; transcribed by doc, March 2022:

Spring Will Be So Sad (When She Comes This Year) – w.m. Margaret Bonds, Harold Dickinson

Spring will be so sad when she comes this year
She won’t understand why you left me, dear
The wind will search our meeting place
For a sight of your sweet face
There beside the rippling streams
She will find our broken dreams

Spring will breathe a sigh when she comes this year
She will wonder why you’re not here, my dear
The robin’s song is out of tune
So my darling come back soon
Or spring will be so sad when she comes this year

_______________

Alethea Kilgore — published to YouTube on 7 December 2018

.

See a live performance by Chansonniers @Facebook, an excerpt from a 9 May 2021 concert. This version features an introductory verse section not heard in the other recordings included in this page, but found on page 3 of the 1941 sheet music (see above left). The first page of music and words in a traditional commercial sheet music booklet is page 3, because the cover and inside cover are pages 1 and 2. Warning: the volume is inconsistent in this video.

The composite image above right, evidently used to provide notice of or promote a 7 May 2022 Chansonniers concert, seems to employ an image from a video of the 9 May 2021 concert at the same location.

‘Tis Autumn…again

___________________________

Here are some additional recordings of the 1941 standard “Tis Autumn,” including a few early ones. I plan to incorporate these recordings into my page on the song, which was published in October 2011.

___________________________

‘Tis Autumn (words and music: Henry Nemo)

Jan Savitt and his Top Hatters, vocal: Allan DeWitt — recorded in New York, New York on 25 September 1941; issued 24 October 1941 on the 78 rpm single Victor 27643, as the B-side of “Who Calls?”

audio file, VBR MP3 (5.9 MB), from the page TIS AUTUMN (El Otoño), at archive.org (especially poor sound quality on this one):

.


Tony Martin — recorded, with Orchestra under the direction of Harry Sosnik, on 18 November 1941; issued in 1941 on the 78 rpm single Decca 4101, b/w “Cancel the Flowers”

audio file, VBR MP3 (4.5 MB), from the page Tony Martin By a Wishing Well, at archive.org:

.

Dick Todd — recorded on 26 November 1941; issued on the 78 rpm single Bluebird B-11387, b/w “Tropical Magic” (m. Harry Warren, w. Mack Gordon)

.

Freddy Martin and his Orchestra, vocal: Clyde Rogers – recorded on 3 December 1941; issued on the 78 rpm single Bluebird B-11393, as the B-side of “Until the Stars Fall Down” (Walter Donaldson)

audio file, VBR MP3 (5.6 MB), from a page titled ‘Tis Autumn, at archive.org:

.

Geraldo and his Orchestra, vocal: George Evans — issued in April 1942 on the 78 rpm single (UK) Parlophone F 1901, c/w “Soft Shoe Shuffle” (m. Maurice Burman, w. Spencer Williams)

___________________

Red Garland Trio – from the 1958 Red Garland album All Kinds of Weather, Prestige 7148 (aka PRLP 7148); all tracks recorded on 27 November 1958 at Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, NJ

personnel, from jazzdisco.org:

  • Red Garland – piano
  • Paul Chambers – bass
  • Arthur Taylor – drums

.

Eydie Gormé – from her 1959 album Love is a Season, ABC-Paramount ABC-273 (Mono), ABCS-273 (Stereo)

.

Patti Page – from her 1959 LP Indiscretion, Mercury Records MG 20405 (Mono), SR 60059 (Stereo)

.

More

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Why do my tag searches fail?