1950 Music – Pop Standards and Artists

1950 Pop Standards and Artists

Bing and Gary Crosby
Play A Simple Melody
Irving Berlin wrote this song and used it in the Movie There’s No Business Like Show Business. The song is actually two songs: one is a simple old-fashioned melody, and the second is a more complex jazz song. At first, the songs are sung separately and then over top of one another. Gary Crosby is Bing’s son.

Doris Day
Bewitched Bothered and Bewildered
This song originates in the 1940 musical Pal Joey, with music by Richard Rodgers and lyrics by Lorenz Hart. The musical launched the career of legendary dancer Gene Kelly. Ten years later, in 1950, it hit the charts. Many artists, including Frank Sinatra, Celine Dion, and Cher, would go on to record the song.

The Mills Brothers
Daddy’s Little Girl
If there was a song that was used at almost every wedding in the 1950s, 60s, 70s, and 80s, this would be it. Not during the ceremony, however. The song would be used for the father-daughter dance at the reception, to the tears of all the women married or single. Boby Burke and Horace Gerlach wrote the song’s lyrics and music.

Nat King Cole
Mona Lisa
The Mona Lisa is probably the most famous of Da Vinci’s work. The painting resides at The Louvre Museum in Paris and many prints, postcards, and posters have been made of this classic work of art. There is much speculation as to who the model for the painting was, but no one knows for sure, and the enigmatic smile she wears has perplexed people since the painting was completed. The song compares a woman to the famous portrait. The song was composed by Ray Evans and Jay Livingston for the motion picture Captain Carey U.S.A. It took the Academy Award for best song in 1950.

Perry Como
A Bushel And A Peck
Guys and Dolls is a musical based on a story by Damon Runyon. It tells the tale of a young missionary girl who falls in love with a gambler in New York City. The musical premiered on Broadway in 1950 and ran for 1,200 performances. It also won the Tony Award that year. A Bushel And A Peck is sung by Miss Adelaide, a singer at a local club; the song was part of her act.

Gene Autry
Here Comes Peter Cottontail
Having topped the charts in 1949 with the song Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer, it is unsurprising that Gene Autry would come back the following year with a song about a popular rabbit for Easter. Steve Nelson and Jack Rollins wrote the song and would peak at #5 on the Billboard Charts. The song would later become the title for a 1971 Easter special which told the story of how a young Peter got the job as Easter Bunny.

Eileen Barton
If I Knew You Were Coming I’d Have Baked A Cake
Written by Al Hoffman, Bob Merrill and Clem Watts the song was published in 1950 and recorded in January of that year by Eileen Barton. The song became such a big hit that its record producer, National Records, could not handle the demand and turned to the larger record company, Mercury Records, to help with distribution. Many other artists, a few times as a duet would record the song. Bing Crosby and Bob Hope would record the song in this way as well as Ethel Merman and Ray Bulger.

Teresa Brewer
Music Music Music
This million-selling record was first recorded by London Records in 1949 by Teresa Brewer. Stephen Weiss and Bernie Baum wrote the song. Petula Clark recorded the song that same year, and that version was popular in Australia.
The song would be recorded again in the 1970s by Melanie, but she would rename it The Nickel Song.

Anton Karas
Third Man Theme
Anton Karas wrote this instrumental piece in 1949 for the film The Third Man. It topped the Billboard Charts for eleven weeks. Its popularity is partially attributed to the use of the zither, an instrument rarely used in music then.

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Top Artists and Songs of 1950

 Andrews Sisters
I Can Dream, Can’t I?
I Wanna Be Loved
 Anton Karas
Third Man Theme
 Art Lund
Mona Lisa
 Bill Snyder
Bewitched (Bothered and Bewildered)
 Billy Eckstine
My Foolish Heart
 Bing and Gary Crosby
Play A Simple Melody
Sam’s Song (The Happy Tune)
 Bing Crosby
Chattanoogie Shoe-Shine Boy
Four Winds and the Seven Seas
Harbor Lights
 Dinah Shore
My Heart Cries For You
 Doris Day
Bewitched (Bothered and Bewildered)
Hoop-Dee-Doo
 Eileen Barton
If I Knew You Were Comin’ I’d Have Baked A Cake
 Eve Young
One Silver Dollar
 Fats Domino
The Fat Man
 Frank Allison
Peter Cottontail
 Frank Sinatra
Goodnight Irene
 Frankie Laine
Cry of the Wild Goose
Music Maestro Please
 Freddy Martin
Music! Music! Music! (Put Another Nickle In)
 Gene Autry
Peter Cottontail
 Gene Krupa
Bonaparte’s Retreat
 Gordon Jenkins and the Weavers
Goodnight, Irene
 Gordon Jenkins
Bewitched (Bothered and Bewildered)
My Foolish Heart
Tzena Tzena
 Guy Lombardo
Enjoy Yourself (It’s Later Than You Think)
Harbor Lights
Tennessee Waltz
Third Man Theme
 Guy Mitchell
My Heart Cries For You
The Roving Kind
 Hank Snow
I’m Movin On
 Hoagy Carmichael
The Old Piano Roll Blues
 Ivory Joe Hunter
I Need You So
 Jerry Murad’s Harminicats
Bewitched (Bothered and Bewildered)
 Jimmy Wakely
Peter Cottontail
 Joe ‘Fingers’ Carr
Sam’s Song
 Joe Liggins and his Honeydrippers
Pink Champagne
 Jo Stafford
Goodnight, Irene
Tennessee Waltz
 Johnnie Lee Wills
Rag Mop
 Johnny Otis
Double Crossing Blues
 Larry Green and his Orchestra
Bewitched (Bothered and Bewildered)
 Lefty Frizzell
If You’ve Got The Money (I’ve Got The Time)
 Les Paul and Mary Ford
Tennessee Waltz
 Lionel Hampton
Rag Mop
 Little Esther
Double Crossing Blues
 Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five
Blue Light Boogie
 Louis Prima and Keely Smith
Oh Babe
 Mel Torme
Bewitched (Bothered and Bewildered)
 Mervin Shiner
Peter Cottontail
 Mills Brothers
Daddy’s Little Girl
Nevertheless (I’m In Love With You)
 Mindy Carson
My Foolish Heart
 Mitch Miller
Tzena Tzena
 Muddy Waters
Rollin’ Stone
 Nat ‘King’ Cole
Mona Lisa
 Patti Page
All My Love
The Tennesse Waltz
 Percy Faith
All My Love
 Percy Mayfield
Please Send Me Someone To Love
 Perez Prado
Mambo Number 5
 Perry Como and The Fontane Sisters
Hoop-Dee-Doo
You’re Just In Love
 Perry Como
A Bushel and A Peck
Patricia
You’re Just In Love
 Phil Harris
The Thing
 Professor Longhair
Crazy Baldhead
 Ralph Flanagan
Rag Mop
 Ray Anthony
Count Every Star
Harbor Lights
Sentimental Me
 Ray Bolger
Dearie
 Red Foley
Chattanoogie Shoe Shine Boy
 Roy Brown and his Mighty-Mighty Men
Hard Luck Blues
 Russ Morgan
Sentimental Me
 Ruth Brown
Teardrops From My Eyes
 Sammy Kaye
Harbor Lights
Hollywood Square Dance
I’ve Got A Lovely Bunch of Coconuts
It Isn’t Fair
 Teresa Brewer
Music! Music! Music!
 The Ames Brothers
Can Anyone Explain (No No No!)
Rag Mop
Undecided
Sentimental Me
 The Robins
Double Crossing Blues
 The Starlighters
Rag Mop
 Tony Martin and Fred Warren
I Said My Pajamas (And Put On My Pray’rs)
 Tony Martin
There’s No Tomorrow
 Vic Damone
My Heart Cries For You
 Victor Young
Mona Lisa
 Yves Montand
Les Feuilles Mortes