Shirley Luster was born in Springfield, Illinois, and moved with her family to Decatur, Illinois, when she was three years old. She began to sing with the Decatur-based Bill Oetzel Orchestra at thirteen. While attending Decatur High School she appeared with Oetzel and his society band, the Ben Bradley Band, and Bill Madden's Band. After high school she moved to Chicago, changed her name to Sharon Leslie, and sang with a group led by Boyd Raeburn. Later she joined Benny Strong's band. In 1944, Strong's band moved to New York at the same time Christy was quarantined in Chicago with scarlet fever.
In 1945, after hearing that Anita O'Day had left Stan Kenton's Orchestra, she auditioned and was chosen for the role as a vocalist. During this time, she changed her name once again, becoming June Christy.
Her voice produced successful hits such as "Shoo Fly Pie and Apple Pan Dowdy," the million-selling "Tampico" in 1945, and "How High the Moon". "Tampico" was Kenton's biggest-selling record. When the Kenton Band temporarily disbanded in 1948, she sang in nightclubs for a short time, and reunited with the band two years later in 1950.
Beginning Sept. 28, 1959, Christy began a five-week road tour of 38 performances called "Road Show". The all-star billing: Stan Kenton and his orchestra, June Christy, The Four Freshmen. Capitol recorded highlights on October 10 at Purdue University in Lafayette, Indiana, for a two-disc LP, reissued in 1991 on CD.
From 1947, she started to work on her own records, primarily with arranger and bandleader Pete Rugolo. In 1954, she released a 10" LP entitled Something Cool, recorded with Rugolo and his orchestra, a gathering of notable Los Angeles jazz musicians that included her husband, multi-instrumentalist Bob Cooper and alto saxophonist Bud Shank. Something Cool was re-released as a 12" LP in 1955 with additional selections, and then entirely rerecorded in stereo in 1960 with a somewhat different personnel. Christy would later say that the album was "the only thing I've recorded that I'm not unhappy with." Something Cool was also important in launching the vocal cool movement of the 1950s, and it hit the Top 20 Charts, as did her third album, The Misty Miss Christy.
In the 1950s and 1960s, Christy appeared on a number of television programs, including the short-lived CBS show Adventures in Jazz (1949), Eddie Condon's Floor Show (1949), The Jackie Gleason Show (1953), The Tonight Show (1955), The Nat King Cole Show (1957), Stars of Jazz (1958), The Steve Allen Show (1959), The Lively Ones (1963). and The Joey Bishop Show (1967). She also appeared on the first sponsored jazz concert on television, The Timex All-Star Jazz Show I (December 30, 1957), which also featured Louis Armstrong, Carmen McRae, Duke Ellington and Gene Krupa.
Christy embarked on dozens of concert tours, playing in Europe, South Africa, Australia and Japan. She toured to such an extent that eventually it began taking a toll on her marriage. She began to pull back from touring in the early 1960s.
R.M. Cook and Brian Morton, writers of The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings, appreciated the singer's body of work: "Christy's wholesome but particularly sensuous voice is less an improviser's vehicle than an instrument for long, controlled lines and the shading of a fine vibrato. Her greatest moments—the heartbreaking 'Something Cool' itself, 'Midnight Sun,' 'I Should Care'—are as close to creating definitive interpretations as any singer can come."
Christy semi-retired from the music business in 1969, in part due to her battle with alcoholism.
In 1972, she sang at the Newport Jazz Festival in New York City, where she was reunited with the Kenton Orchestra. She also performed at a handful of jazz festivals during the late 1970s and 1980s, playing with a band of all-star West Coast jazz musicians led by Shorty Rogers, as well as taking part in a number of world tours.
Christy returned to the recording studio in 1977 to record her final solo LP, Impromptu. She recorded an interview for a Paul Cacia produced an album in 1987 called "The Alumni Tribute to Stan Kenton" on the Happy Hour label. A number of other Kenton the alumni-Shorty Rogers, Lee Konitz, Jack Sheldon, among them, plus Mort Sahl - interspersed their tunes with reminiscences of the man and the years on the road.
Christy toured one final time in 1988, again with Shorty Rogers. Her final performance was sharing the stage with Chet Baker.
Christy died at her home in Sherman Oaks, California of kidney failure on June 21, 1990, at the age of 64. Her remains were cremated and scattered off the coast of Marina Del Rey.
I'm In Love
June Christy Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
I'll never fall again.
Said I do to love,
Don't ever call again.
For I must have you
Or no one.
That's why I'm thru with love.
I keep my feelings there.
I have stopped my heart
Like an icy frigidaire.
For I need to care for no one.
That's why I'm thru with love.
Why did you leave me
To think that you cared.
You didn't need me.
You have your share
of slaves around you
To hound you and swear
Their deep devotion.
Emotion.
Did you good by the spring
And all it meant to me
a good neighbor
The things that used to be.
For I must have you or no one.
That's why I'm thru with love.
That's why I'm thru with love.
The first two stanzas of June Christy's song "I'm In Love" reflects the feelings of someone who's love life went sour. The singer is angry and determined to give up on love after being hurt by someone they trusted. They feel that they have been betrayed by the person they loved and gave their all to, hence the declaration "I'm through with love, I'll never fall again." They refuse to answer the call of love from that person and have decided that they can only love one person, and that person is no longer available. The singer closes their heart to love so that they will not be emotionally hurt again.
The third stanza shifts the focus back to the person responsible for the singer's pain. The singer wonders why their former lover would make them feel special, then leave them standing when they were supposed to have a future going. The lover left the singer in a state of confusion, not understanding why they were no longer wanted. The lover moved on to their next conquest, leaving the singer feeling low and jealous of the new lover. The singer ends the song by reiterating that they are through with love.
Line by Line Meaning
I'm thru with love,
I have given up on love,
I'll never fall again.
I will not allow myself to fall in love again.
Said I do to love,
I committed myself to love once,
Don't ever call again.
But love has hurt me and I won't allow it back.
For I must have you
I desire you
Or no one.
But I won't accept anyone else.
That's why I'm thru with love.
Because I can't have you.
I've locked my heart.
I've closed myself off emotionally.
I keep my feelings there.
I don't allow myself to feel deeply.
I have stopped my heart
I've put my heart on ice
Like an icy frigidaire.
As cold as a refrigerator.
For I need to care for no one.
Because I mustn't let myself get close to anyone.
Why did you leave me
I don't understand why you left me
To think that you cared.
I thought you cared for me.
You didn't need me.
But you didn't need me at all.
You have your share
You have plenty
of slaves around you
Of people who adore you
To hound you and swear
To flatter you and make promises they can't keep.
Their deep devotion.
Their deep, empty words of devotion.
Emotion.
But it's all a show, not real emotion.
Did you good by the spring
We used to be good together in the spring
And all it meant to me
When the world felt full of hope and promise.
a good neighbor
Being a good friend to each other
The things that used to be.
Those times are gone now and I can't go back.
That's why I'm thru with love.
That's why I've given up on love forever.
Lyrics © O/B/O APRA AMCOS
Written by: CHARLES TOBIAS, CLIFF FRIEND
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind