All Of Me - Gerald Marks-Seymour Simons

loudsgood

New member
All of me 6th edition real book style


All Of Me


"All of Me" first came to public awareness when a performance by Belle Baker was broadcast over the radio in 1931. Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra recorded the song on December 1 that year, with vocalist Mildred Bailey; this went to the top of the US pop charts. Within weeks, another two versions were in the charts, with a Louis Armstrong rendition also reaching No. 1, and Ben Selvin and His Orchestra peaking at No. 19. The song was used in the 1932 film Careless Lady. In the view of critic Ted Gioia, the definitive version was sung by Billie Holiday in 1941: "she staked a claim of ownership that no one has managed to dislodge in subsequent years". Two years later, Lynne Sherman's recording with Count Basie and His Orchestra reached No. 14 in the charts.
Frank Sinatra recorded several versions of "All of Me". His 1948 release peaked at No. 21. He also sang it in the film Meet Danny Wilson, which may have helped Johnnie Ray's rendition up to No. 12 in the charts that year. Sinatra's use of "All of Me" brought a non-jazz audience to the song, and so too did Willie Nelson, whose version was included in his Stardust album and reached No. 3 on the Hot Country Songs chart in 1978. In 2000, "All of Me" was given the Towering Song Award by the Songwriters Hall of Fame.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
all of me. Marks

thank you

the Jazz 1350 song is missing minors....Am7. and Dm7

cheers, judith
 
Last edited by a moderator:
thank you

the Jazz 1350 song is missing minors....Am7. and Dm7

cheers, judith


Sure about that?
From Jazz 1350

All Of Me - Gerald Marks

In iReal pro, you can choose to use the "m" for minor or the hyphen "-". Once you get used to it, the hyphen takes less room. That's important as chord qualities get more complex. There's a setting for that in the app.

https://technimo.helpshift.com/a/ireal-pro/?s=chord-charts&f=minor-symbol&l=en

Instead of merely suggesting corrections, it's best to post your edited chart. That saves everyone a lot of duplicated effort.
We can then easily download your (edited) chart and compare both charts side by side and with the player.
Thanks,
:))BOB
 
Last edited:
Does anyone have the full version including the long scat riff that Ella does on All of Me? I think the chord progression for that is somewhat different than the first part of the song. Anyone know?
 
Does anyone have the full version including the long scat riff that Ella does on All of Me? I think the chord progression for that is somewhat different than the first part of the song. Anyone know?

Here's what I hear: she sings the standard progression (in G), then scats over it once.
Then she continues vocalizing over the standard changes transposed up a semi-tone (Ab).
Then scats to the IV and tags it. (She does that twice) to the “Count Basie” ending and scats over a held Ab6 ending chord.

I can see how the horn section arrangements could make you think there were more and different chords.

:))BOB
 
Here's what I hear: she sings the standard progression (in G), then scats over it once.
Then she continues vocalizing over the standard changes transposed up a semi-tone (Ab).
Then scats to the IV and tags it. (She does that twice) to the “Count Basie” ending and scats over a held Ab6 ending chord.

I can see how the horn section arrangements could make you think there were more and different chords.

:))BOB
Thanks for the info Bob! I’ll try to figure it out.
 
All Of Me (Ruth Etting 1931) w-VERSE - Gerald Marks-Seymour Simons

“All of Me” (1931) by Gerald Marks and Seymour Simons, was introduced on radio by vaudeville singer Belle Baker in 1931; shortly before that performance she had lost her husband and broke down weeping while singing the song.

This version from Ruth Etting includes the hard to find verse.

You took my kisses and you took my love
You taught me how to care
Am I to be just a remnant of
a one side love affair
All you took I gladly gave
There's nothing left for me to save

All of me…..

To emphasize the sad nature of her version she sings a blue-note in the 12th bar of the verse. She repeats this at the end of the tune substituting a iv (Bb-) for the V (C7).

All Of Me (Ruth Etting 1931)
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6Oja6CMoCts

All Of Me (Ruth Etting 1931) w-VERSE - Gerald Marks-Seymour Simons

:))BOB
 
Back
Top Bottom