元気アップ!人気 SONGS=Autumn

人恋しいロマンティックな季節に・・・カラフルな秋音

名曲専科!Autumn Leaves をしっとり・・・

浪漫アップ!ときめく頃愛な秋 人気:songs・Autumn Autumn leaves

 

人気Songs 秋は続く・・・

人気Songs 秋はまだまだ続く・・・

Autumn Leaves は、メローなJazz がお似合い?

人気Songs 秋は続く・・・こちらも足早な秋を彩るシーン!

 

秋色ロマンをたっぷりお愉しみください!

"Autumn Leaves" is a much-recorded popular song. 

Originally it was a 1945 French song "Les Feuilles mortes" (literally "The Dead Leaves") with music by Joseph Kosma and lyrics by poet Jacques Prévert. Yves Montand (with Irène Joachim) introduced "Les feuilles mortes" in 1946 in the film Les Portes de la Nuit.[1] The American songwriter Johnny Mercer wrote English lyrics in 1947 and Jo Stafford was among the first to perform this version. Autumn Leaves became a pop standard and a jazz standard in both languages and both as an instrumental and with a singer.

On December 24, 1950, French singer Edith Piaf rendered both French and English versions of this song on the radio programme The Big Show, hosted by Tallulah Bankhead.

The Melachrino Strings Conductor: George Melachrino recorded a version in London on August 18, 1950. It was released by EMI on the His Master's Voice label as catalogue number B 9952.

The film Autumn Leaves (1956) starring Joan Crawford featured the song, as sung by Nat King Cole over the title sequence. The French songwriter Serge Gainsbourg paid tribute to this song in his own song "La chanson de Prévert".

It is the corps song of the Bluecoats Drum and Bugle Corps.

"Autumn Leaves"

Sample of a recording of "Autumn Leaves" by Eva Cassidy from the album Live at Blues Alley (1996)
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The British Invasion band Manfred Mann released a rock version on their 1966 album, As Is.

In 1955 Roger Williams made the song a #1 hit in the United States, the only piano instrumental to reach number one and remaining in that position for four weeks.


 

大喜利はEdith Piaf - Autumn Leaves (Les Feuilles Mortes)