Songs (selection)
Year | Song | Lyrics by |
---|---|---|
1924 | "Riverboat Shuffle" | Carmichael, Dick Voynow, Irving Mills, Mitchell Parish |
1925 | "Washboard Blues" | Carmichael, Fred B. Callahan, Irving Mills |
1928 | "Stardust" | Mitchell Parish |
1929 | "Rockin' Chair" | Carmichael |
1930 | "Georgia on My Mind" | Stuart Gorrell |
1931 | "Come Easy Go Easy Love" | Sunny Clapp |
1931 | "(Up a) Lazy River" | Carmichael and Sidney Arodin |
1932 | "New Orleans" | Carmichael |
1932 | "In the Still of the Night" | Jo Trent |
1933 | "Lazybones" | Carmichael and Johnny Mercer |
1933 | "One Morning in May" | Mitchell Parish |
1936 | "Little Old Lady" | Carmichael and Stanley Adams |
1936 | "Lyin' to Myself" | Stanley Adams |
1936 | "Moonburn" | Edward Heyman |
1937 | "The Nearness of You" | Ned Washington |
1938 | "Heart and Soul" | Frank Loesser |
1938 | "Small Fry" | Frank Loesser |
1938 | "Two Sleepy People" | Frank Loesser |
1938 | "I Get Along Without You Very Well (Except Sometimes)" | Jane Brown Thompson |
1939 | "Hong Kong Blues" | Carmichael |
1940 | "Can't get Indiana Off My Mind" | Robert DeLeon |
1940 | "I Walk With Music" | Johnny Mercer |
1940 | "Way Back in 1939 A.D." | Johnny Mercer |
1941 | "Skylark" | Johnny Mercer |
1942 | "Baltimore Oriole" | Paul Francis Webster |
1942 | "The Lamplighter's Serenade" | Paul Francis Webster |
1943 | "Old Music Master" | Johnny Mercer |
1945 | "Billy-a-Dick" | Paul Francis Webster |
1945 | "Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief" | Paul Francis Webster |
1945 | "Memphis in June" | Paul Francis Webster |
1946 | "Ole Buttermilk Sky" | Carmichael and Jack Brooks |
1951 | "In the Cool, Cool, Cool of the Evening" | Johnny Mercer |
1951 | "My Resistance Is Low" | Harold Adamson |
1952 | "Watermelon Weather" | Paul Francis Webster |
1953 | "Ain't There Anyone Here for Love?" | Harold Adamson |
1953 | "When Love Goes Wrong (Nothin' Goes Right)" | Harold Adamson |
Read more about this topic: Hoagy Carmichael
Famous quotes containing the word songs:
“Heaven has a Sea of Glass on which angels go sliding every afternoon. There are many golden streets, but the principal thoroughfares are Amen Street and Hallelujah Avenue, which intersect in front of the Throne. These streets play tunes when walked on, and all shoes have songs in them.”
—For the State of Florida, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)