Tilton and her family lived in Texas and Kansas, relocating to Los Angeles when she was seven years old. While attending Fairfax High School in Los Angeles, she was singing on a small radio station when she was heard by an agent who signed her and began booking her with larger stations. She then dropped out of school in the 11th grade to join Hal Grayson's band.
After singing with the quartet Three Hits and a Miss, she joined the Myer Alexander chorus on Benny Goodman's radio show, Camel Caravan. Goodman hired Tilton as a vocalist with his band in August 1937. She was with Goodman in January 1938, when the band performed the first jazz performance at Carnegie Hall. She continued to appear as Goodman's star vocalist through the end of 1939.
Tilton had a major success from 1942 to 1949 as one of the first artists to record for Capitol Records. Her first recording for Capitol was "Moon Dreams", Capitol 138, with Orchestra and The Mellowaires, composed by Johnny Mercer and Glenn Miller pianist Chummy MacGregor in 1942. "Moon Dreams" would be recorded by Glenn Miller in 1944 and by Miles Davis in 1950. Among her biggest hits as a solo artist were "I'll Walk Alone," a wartime ballad which rose to #4 on the charts in 1944; "I Should Care" and "A Stranger in Town," which both peaked at #10 in 1945; and three in 1947: "How Are Things in Glocca Morra" from Finian's Rainbow, which climbed to #8; "That's My Desire", which hit #10; and "I Wonder, I Wonder, I Wonder", which reached #9.
After she left Capitol, Tilton recorded for other labels, including Coral and Tops. Among her later albums was We Sing the Old Songs (1957, Tops), a mix of older songs and recent standards with baritone Curt Massey, who later became well known as the composer (with Paul Henning) and singer of the theme song for the CBS-TV series Petticoat Junction.
Reviewing the two-CD set, The Liltin' Miss Tilton, (Capitol, 2000), critic Don Heckman wrote:
There are those who would say that Martha Tilton wasn't a jazz singer at all. But swing-era fans won't have any doubts, remembering her for a rocking version of "Loch Lomond" at Benny Goodman's 1938 Carnegie Hall concert.
Massey and Tilton starred in Alka-Seltzer Time, a 15-minute radio series broadcast weekdays on both CBS and Mutual. Sponsored by Alka-Seltzer, this show began in 1949 as Curt Massey Time (sometimes advertised as Curt Massey Time with Martha Tilton) with a title change to highlight the sponsor's product by 1952.
By 1953, the series was heard simultaneously on Mutual (at noon) and later that same day on CBS (at 5:45pm). Ads described the show as "informal song sessions" by vocalists Massey and Tilton, who was often billed as "The liltin' Martha Tilton." The two Texas-born singers performed with Country Washburne and His Orchestra, featuring Charles LaVere on piano. The series ended November 6, 1953. However, Massey and Tilton continued to appear together during the late 1950s on such shows as Guest Star and Stars for Defense. They also teamed to record an album, We Sing the Old Songs (1957). Tilton and Massey also co-hosted a daily fifteen minute TV show in Los Angeles for approximately seven years.
Her movies include Sunny (1941), Strictly in the Groove (1942), Swing Hostess (1944), Crime, Inc.. (1945), and The Benny Goodman Story (1956). Her last film appearance was as the band vocalist in the TV movie Queen of the Stardust Ballroom (1975). Tilton's singing voice was used for other actresses including Barbara Stanwyck (Ball of Fire), Martha O'Driscoll, and Anne Gwynne. She also appeared in several Soundies musical films of the 1940s.
Her sister, Liz Tilton, also seen in Soundies, sang with Ken Baker (mid-1930s), Buddy Rogers, Bob Crosby (1941), and Jan Garber (1942).
You Took the Words Right Out of My Heart
Martha Tilton Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
And it was like a bolt from the blue
You took the words right out of my heart
When you said I love you.
When you said I love you
I stood in a daze for a while
For I felt that way too
The moment I saw you smile
There wasn't room for the two
You took the words right out of my heart
And left only room for you
The lyrics to Martha Tilton's song "You Took the Words Right Out of My Heart" are about falling in love at first sight. The singer expresses how she felt when the person she loves said "I love you". The metaphor of "taking the words right out of my heart" suggests that the singer was unable to express her emotions until the moment her crush reciprocated them. The line "it was like a bolt from the blue" refers to the sudden and unexpected confession of love that caught the singer off-guard.
The rest of the lyrics describe the singer's realization that she was in love with the person she had just met. She was "in a daze for a while" and "felt that way too" when her crush said "I love you". The line "there wasn't room for the two" shows that the singer's love was so all-encompassing that there was no space left for anything else but the person she loved. The song ends with the repetition of the first line, emphasizing the impact the other person had on the singer's emotions.
Line by Line Meaning
You took the words right out of my heart
You spoke the exact same thoughts that were in my heart
And it was like a bolt from the blue
Your words of love came as a complete surprise to me
You took the words right out of my heart
Once again, you expressed the same emotions that I was feeling inside
When you said I love you.
Your declaration of love made my heart skip a beat.
When you said I love you
You caught me off guard with your words of love
I stood in a daze for a while
I was momentarily stunned by your confession
For I felt that way too
I had the same feelings for you
The moment I saw you smile
When I first saw your smile, I knew I was in love with you
I had the words and you in my heart
I had been harboring these feelings for you for some time
There wasn't room for the two
My emotions were so strong that there was no room for anything else
You took the words right out of my heart
Once again, your words perfectly expressed what was in my heart
And left only room for you
Your words of love left no room for anyone else in my heart
Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, Peermusic Publishing
Written by: RAINGER, ROBIN
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind