Song of India
Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra Lyrics


Instrumental


Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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Comments from YouTube:

@giovannirivoira5496

Ziggy Elman and Buddy Rich soloing are something marvellous,and the tune is a gem!!thank you so much!

@susanw7924

My dad loved this music. He was in his teens and 20’s in its heyday, and we were blessed that he introduced it to us. I would love to go back in a Time Machine to one of those clubs. But I would outlaw cigarettes ;)!

@wilrobles5392

A touch of the 40’s. Almost feels as if I’m there.

@phillipshearman5597

I am sorry I missed that cultural age.

@keelerhastings7109

Young Gene Krupa on drums

@brucekuehn4031

You hardly ever see this odd looking mute used. It was called a solotone and is available today as a cleartone mute. You can still buy one but a trombone player will rarely ever use it. That mute and Tommy playing extremely high gives it that haunting quality. When heard on record or over the radio I'm sure many listeners back then wondered - what kind of instrument is that?
Imagine when you could walk into a club, everyone dressed to the nines and hear music like this? It really happened. There was such a time. Not just a Hollywood movie. Big bands were crisscrossing the US and playing nightly. And people dressed up to go to baseball games - look at the photographs.

@brucekuehn4031

I was just thinking - do I need to mention "extremely high" - I was referring to pitch - like the upper stratospheric limits of the tenor trombone. TD loved that range as if to offer a challenge to anyone who wanted to imitate his sound. That challenge is still out there - try it while making it sound smooth and easy. There are always different trends in vibrato and that sweet style is currently out of fashion but Tommy is admired today and always will be by players. It doesn't matter if you play in a band, a studio, or a symphonic orchestra.

@FMCH6444

Interestingly enough, my great uncle Robert Bob Cusumano is one of the trumpet players on the original recording. He also played on Rose Marie and was one of the trumpters on Buglers Holiday by Leroy Anderson. He also was the lead trumpet for the theme for Death Valley Days TV shows. I think he might be next to Bunny but not 100% sure.

@tannhauser7584

What kind of instrument is that? I would have guessed English Horn or some kind of oboe. A well played trombone can also sound like a French Horn.

@brucekuehn4031

@Kristy Skirt The piece is called Song of India and was actually written by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov from his opera called Sadko which premiered in Moscow in 1898. That is where the haunting melody comes from but of course Nik the Russian didn’t swing it!

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