Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans
Billie Holiday Lyrics


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Do you know what is means to miss New Orleans
I miss it, each night and day
The longer I stay away
Miss the moist covered vines

The tall sugar pines
Where mocking birds use to sing
And I like to see the lazy Mississippi
Are hurrying to spring

The Mardi Gras memories
Of creole tunes that fill the air
I dream of oleanders in June
And soon I'm wishing that I was there

Do you know what is means to miss New Orleans
And there is something more




I miss the one I care for
More than I miss New Orleans

Overall Meaning

In the song "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans," Billie Holiday expresses her deep yearning for New Orleans, a city she had once called home. The song expresses a deep emotional attachment to the city and certain things that remind her of it. The lyrics reflect on how absence makes the heart grow fonder, as the longer she stays away, the more she misses the city, particularly the moist covered vines, tall sugar pines, Mississippi, and the Mardi Gras festival. However, what she misses even more than the city itself is someone she cares deeply for, who is still there.


This melancholic song could be interpreted as a love song to the city but also a love song for someone special. New Orleans is known for its musical culture and the song features a jazz melody that plays softly in the background. Jazz, according to Billie Holiday, is the language of the soul, and it is expressed in the lyrics of this song. It is a love letter to a city that has an almost mystical relationship with jazz music.


Line by Line Meaning

Do you know what is means to miss New Orleans
Do you understand the feeling of longing to be back in the city of New Orleans?


I miss it, each night and day
My desire to return to New Orleans is constant, whether it's morning or night.


The longer I stay away
The more time I spend being away from the city, the closer I feel to returning.


Miss the moist covered vines
I long to see and feel the humid, greenery-covered architecture of New Orleans.


The tall sugar pines
I miss the feel and smell of the tall pine trees that line the city's streets.


Where mocking birds use to sing
I reminisce on the sound of mockingbirds singing within the trees.


And I like to see the lazy Mississippi
I miss the feeling of peace that comes with a view of the Mississippi River moving slowly and calmly.


Are hurrying to spring
I remember how lively and energetic the city is with the onset of spring.


The Mardi Gras memories
I have fond memories of the lively, music-filled Mardi Gras celebrations in New Orleans.


Of creole tunes that fill the air
The air was always full of music influenced by the city's Creole heritage that I miss.


I dream of oleanders in June
I have dreams about watching the beautiful oleander flowers bloom in June.


And soon I'm wishing that I was there
The longer I think about New Orleans, the more I wish I were there.


And there is something more
On top of everything else I miss about New Orleans,


I miss the one I care for
I miss the person I care about most who is in New Orleans.


More than I miss New Orleans
My longing for the person I care for is even stronger than my general longing to be back in New Orleans.




Lyrics © MUSIC SALES CORPORATION, Kanjian Music, BMG Rights Management, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: Eddie De Lange, Louis Alter

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Comments from YouTube:

@throckmortensnivel2850

"God bless the child that's got his own, that's got his own..." Thank you, Billie, and Louis, for the beauty you brought to the world.

@gratefulyankee377

Two of the most immortal icons of jazz whose legacies will live on forever

@krisdemars1355

Right on brother 🌹

@carolegriggs3107

So true, and Billy's voice always gives me goose bumps. Heaven on Earth💜

@loilt5091

Louis & Billie...it doesn't get any better!!

@samuelmuiruri4704

u would not think amstrong could play for another artist. well, what a giant, great singer but will play sax for billie holliday

@loilt5091

@@samuelmuiruri4704
Sax?...time for some homework.
Louis Armstrong is widely acknowledged as the greatest trumpet player in the history of jazz.

@samuelmuiruri4704

@@loilt5091 my bad, i stand corrected.

@rexstil99

@@loilt5091 he’s my favorite but definitive best is a stretch when you consider people like miles Davis and John Coltrane

@loilt5091

@@rexstil99
Best❓
Best what...technical chops, groundbreaking virtuosity, a game changing, genre defining genius, a charming, heart warming icon. Or the FATHER of it all, even before Duke...the man who laid it all out there, setting the standard & example for everybody. Even the great Miles Davis admitted that Louis said it ALL, before any of us! Scholarly, former young lions like Wynton know the score...he'll tell you who The Man is.
Sure, Trane's got a few of those covered and then there's Diz's blinding, Be-Bop mastery, bringing the Latin connection & so many other greats, but when the dust finally settles, there's only one. The general public mostly know him as the gravelly voiced charmer, but his horn is the beacon on the battlefront, that blazed through the frontier and eras...from it's Storyville birthplace and Buddy Bolden, past King Oliver, to New York & the World! 🌐

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