A Fine Romance: Jewish Songwriters, American Songs David Lehman. Nextbook/Schocken, $22 (272p) ISBN 978-0-8052-4250-8 (From Publishers Weekly, August 10, 2009): "I'm so proud I'm bustin' my vest" (Bushkin/DeVries) -- sdh
As part of the publisher's ongoing Jewish Encounters series, Lehman, poet, anthologist (The Oxford Book of American Poetry) and critic (The Last Avant-Garde),
melds dreamy personal reflections with impressive archival excavation
for a thorough look at the popular early-20th-century songwriters and
what made their work quintessentially Jewish. Delving into the iconic
hits of Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, the Gershwins, Harold Arlen, Larry
Hart, Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein, among selective others,
Lehman ponders how these Ashkenazi Jews, mostly raised speaking Yiddish
in New York as cantors' sons, melded their particular wit, melancholy
and sophistication with the rhythmic richness of African-American
music—a blending of blues and jazz. In their many beloved seminal
hits—e.g., Berlin's “Alexander's Ragtime Band” (1911), George
Gershwin's “Rhapsody in Blue” (1923), Rodgers and Hammerstein's “Oh,
What a Beautiful Mornin' ” (1943)—these sons (Dorothy Fields being the
female lyricist exception) of refugees from anti-Semitic rumblings in
Europe “were conducting a passionate romance with America,” Lehman
maintains. The author himself grew up in the Inwood section of New York
City, under the warm spell of these songs; by the time he graduated
from Stuyvesant High School and attended Columbia, where many of these
songwriters had met, rock and roll was supplanting that old-time magic.
Digressive, nostalgic and deeply moving, Lehman achieves a fine,
lasting tribute to the American songbook. (Oct.)










