Marie
Jack Leonard Lyrics


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Marie, Marie, Marie

Marie, the dawn is breaking
Marie, (ooh, Marie) you'll soon be waking
To find you heart is aching
And tears, (and tears) will fall, (will fall) as you recall
The moon in all its splendor
A kiss, (ooh, a kiss) so very tender
The words, "Will you surrender
To me, (Marie), Marie, (Marie)?"

Marie, you'll soon be waking
To find you heart is aching
And tears, (and tears) will fall, (will fall) as you recall
The moon in all its splendor
A kiss, (ooh, a kiss) so very tender




The words, "Will you surrender
To me, (Marie), Marie, (Marie) Marie (Marie)?"

Overall Meaning

The lyrics of Jack Leonard's song "Marie" expresses the heartbreak of a man who has lost his beloved. He tells Marie that the dawn is breaking and she will soon be waking up to find her heart breaking and tears falling as she recalls their memories together. He remembers the moon in all its splendor, a kiss so tender, and the words "Will you surrender to me, Marie?"


The repetition of Marie's name throughout the song emphasizes the importance of this woman in the singer's life. The lyrics suggest that their love was beautiful, but it has now come to an end. The song implies that something has happened which has caused them to grow apart, and the singer is regretful that he couldn't hold onto the love they had shared.


The melancholy tone of "Marie" is effective in conveying the sadness and longing of the singer. The lyrics express the impact of a failed relationship and the pain of losing someone whom he deeply loved. The song is a poignant reminder of how deep and intense love can be, as well as its ability to leave an indelible impact on one's life.


Line by Line Meaning

Marie, the dawn is breaking
Marie, the new day is beginning


Marie, (ooh, Marie) you'll soon be waking
Marie, you will soon wake up


To find you heart is aching
To find that your heart is in pain


And tears, (and tears) will fall, (will fall) as you recall
And tears will flow as you remember


The moon in all its splendor
The moon shining beautifully


A kiss, (ooh, a kiss) so very tender
A very gentle and sweet kiss


The words, "Will you surrender
The words, "Will you give yourself up


To me, (Marie), Marie, (Marie)?"
To me, Marie, Marie?


Marie, you'll soon be waking
Marie, you will soon wake up


To find you heart is aching
To find that your heart is in pain


And tears, (and tears) will fall, (will fall) as you recall
And tears will flow as you remember


The moon in all its splendor
The moon shining beautifully


A kiss, (ooh, a kiss) so very tender
A very gentle and sweet kiss


The words, "Will you surrender
The words, "Will you give yourself up


To me, (Marie), Marie, (Marie) Marie (Marie)?"
To me, Marie, Marie, Marie?




Lyrics © BMG Rights Management, Universal Music Publishing Group, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: Irving Berlin

Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Most interesting comments from YouTube:

@thomassmith5400

Marie, the dawn is breaking
Marie, you'll soon be waking
To find your heart is aching

And tears will fall as you recall
The moon in all it's splendor
A kiss so very tender
The words, will you
Surrender to me, Marie
Marie, Marie

Marie, you'll soon be waking
To find your heart is aching

And tears will fall as you recall
The moon in all it's splendor
A kiss so very tender
The words, will you
Surrender to me, Marie
Marie, Marie, Marie



@roybo1930

I LOVER These Tommy Dorsey Song`s Where Song Titles are Sung in the Background!
I can`t make out the first !Just Waiting For Me"
"Girl Of My Dreams"
"I Want You, I Need You" (From "I`m No Angel")
"Have A Little Faith In Me"
"Tra, La, la, la, la"
"Here I Go Crying Again"
"Take Me Darling, Take Me"
"On A Night Like This"
"Pettin` In The Park" (Gold Diggers of 1933)
"OH! That`s Way I Like It Darling"
"I`m Yours"
1:32 ???? Barely can make out the title!
"Nobody Knows"
"I`m Contented"
"Livin` In A Great Big Way"



@gyeongjeong9682

Marie, the dawn is breaking
Marie, you'll soon be waking
To find your heart is aching

And tears will fall as you recall
The moon in all it's splendor
A kiss so very tender
The words, will you
Surrender to me, Marie
Marie, Marie

Marie, you'll soon be waking
To find your heart is aching

And tears will fall as you recall
The moon in all it's splendor
A kiss so very tender
The words, will you
Surrender to me, Marie
Marie, Marie, Marie



All comments from YouTube:

@ddkoda

One of Mr. Tommy's milestones. The melody, Jack Leonard's vocal and the great Bunny Berigan's solo all helped to propel this on into the stratosphere.

@MikeJones-do1xv

Bunny was a drunk… but was one of those types that absolutely shined if he had a few in him. They couldn’t locate him and held up the recording session a few hours in Jan 1937… but eventually found him at a corner bar and nailed it on first take.

@diananutt1517

🎵🎶 A male singer (Jack Leonard?) sang "Ruby, It's you" on an episode of "The Honeymooners." His voice was unreal, it was so smooth and wonderful. Tommy & Jimmy performed with their orchestra.
Can someone say for sure that was Jack Leonard or tell us who he was?
Thank you.🎶🎵

@norbertwowy8004

Another state-of-the-art arrangement by one of my big favorites from this great music era of the 30/40ies.

@bolivaraguayo681

Este es un hermoso tema , me gustan todos los temas de Tommy dorsey, pero este Marie y Marcheta son mis favoritos de siempre y para siempre, me encantan los coros y la voz única de Jack Leonard , sin dejar a un lado la del joven Sinatra

@Trombonology

The arrangement that resulted in this historic record was a collective effort based on input from Tommy himself; band arrangers Paul Weston and Axel Stordahl, and saxophonist-occasional arranger Fred Stulce, but its basic framework was lifted from a chart by Doc Wheeler and his Sunset Royal Serenaders, a black band with whom the TD orch. shared the bill on a show. The Dorseyites were knocked out by the SRS' original and different treatment of the old Berlin waltz, "Marie," acquired the chart from the band and then adapted it for the TD crew. The chief feature of this adaptation was the full chorus given to Bunny Berigan, and it must be assumed that it was the idea of Tommy, who had often worked with Bunny both as a fellow sideman and on Dorsey Brothers recordings earlier in the decade, to make "Marie" a feature for his friend, whose playing he greatly admired. Interestingly, Bunny was not actually a member of the Dorsey band at the time but merely providing solos (no section work) for it as one means of acquiring the dough needed to get his own band, then in the developmental stages, off the ground. Of course, the exposure he got as the star of TD's "Marie" and "Song of India" provided him with a nice boost with which to commence leading his own outfit. It's too bad that his good fortune was not to remain.

@CPorter

Also through this the "Marie Sequence" was born, with the full chorus itself, as you'll hear across some other records here and there throughout the 30s & 40s. That's what I've heard it called over the years, but perhaps theres a more fitting name for it.

@Trombonology

@@CPorter I don't know what you're specifically referring to with "Marie Sequence." Do you mean the band chant? If so, yes, this was the arrangement that sparked that cycle for the Dorsey band.

@CPorter

@@Trombonology yes I mean the band chanting the lyrics in incidentals like that yeah. Plenty of folks aside from Dorsey ended up doing it at one point or another, after this.

Unrelated to this though, what did you think of the Isham Jones article?

@Trombonology

@@CPorter Yes, plenty did -- but no band did it as well as TD's. After "Marie," it was Paul Weston who was assigned with writing the charts that featured chanting, and he was really clever about it; all the song titles that the band chanted had relevance to what Jack Leonard was singing in the actual song. When he left, Sy Oliver wrote the chart and chant for "East of the Sun (And West of the Moon)", which The Sentimentalists, the TD band-within-a-band, recorded.

Didn't you get my text in response to the Isham article? I loved it! Isham had a pretty good idea, as both bandleader and composer, of what the public would like in pop music! ... Maybe I somehow got blocked?

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