Thursday, November 26, 2009

David Allyn: A Swing for Joey

Last week I came across a rather haunting and brief David Allyn vocal ballad called A Swing for Joey. It runs all of 32 measures, without a repeating chorus or a break for solos. Curious, I did a little research and found that the song was recorded only twice—both times by David. The first recording of the song was for David's 1964 album This Is My Lucky Day (Everest), with big band arrangements by Bob Florence. The second was for a duet album David recorded in 1975 with Barry Harris called Don't Look Back (Xanadu). [Pictured: David Allyn with Tony Curtis in the studio in 1964 during the recording of This Is My Lucky Day]

After a little more digging, I found that the music for A Swing for Joey was written by David himself, with lyrics by Blanca Webb. More questions came to mind: Who was Joey? What's up with the swing? And who was Blanca Webb? So I gave David a call. Here's what the legendary vocalist told me:

"I wrote the melody to that song for Johnny Richards' son, Joey, who was 10 or 11 years old at the time. I first met his son several years earlier in 1949, when Johnny [pictured] and I were rehearsing for the recording session that resulted in Wait Till You See Her and It Never Entered My Mind. Johnny's son Joey was sitting there with a salad bowl of ice cream with syrup all over it. When Johnny saw it, he snapped at his wife, 'You're going to kill that kid.' Joey was a bit heavy at the time. His wife brushed Johnny off, saying, 'Oh leave him alone, Johnny.'

"Soon after Johnny and his wife invited me to stay at their house in Dobbs Ferry, N.Y., about 45 minutes north of New York City. They had a beautiful home on the water. Just past their back porch, the lawn ran down to a big oak tree. I thought to myself, 'What a great tree for a swing.' I was pretty handy, so after I returned home from their house, I went to a lumberyard and bought a 2-by-10-foot piece of wood. I trimmed it down and stained and vanished it. Then I bought 50 feet of rope and fixed it to the wood seat.

"The next time I went over to Johnny's home, I told his wife that I had something for her. She said, 'Yeah, what?' I said, 'A swing for Joey.' She said, 'Gosh, what a wonderful line, David. That should be a song.' Johnny's wife's name was Blanca. She was a lyricist whose maiden name was Webb. In the minutes that followed, I thought about what Blanca said and agreed with her. I told Blanca I'd take a shot at writing a melody. I told her I'd sing it without words on a reel-to-reel tape and send it to her so she could write the lyrics. She said, 'Great,' and we put up Joey's swing.

After I left, I recorded the melody onto a tape and sent the reel to Blanca. The result was A Swing for Joey. Then in 1964, when arranger Bob Florence and I were working on my album This Is My Lucky Day, I told him about the song, and he wrote a chart for it. "As you can hear in the song, Joey isn't there because he has outgrown the swing, and the swing is empty. When I asked her about the words, Blanca told me that Joey rode my swing only once and never sat on it again. It was a short song with a hard melody to sing, but I loved it."
http://www.jazzwax.com/2009/11/david-allyn-swing-for-joey.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Jazzwax+%28JazzWax%29

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