Today in Song Lyric Sunday, Jim has challenged us
to write about a song by an artist or songwriter
who passed away in 2023. This is my response.

There arenβt too many people who havenβt heard of Tony Bennett and if you havenβt, thereβs plenty of info you can find on Wiki. But perhaps you didn’t know he was born Anthony Dominick Benedetto in the Astoria district of Queens, New York. He was the son of immigrants …. John, a grocer from southern Italy, and Anna, a seamstress. Tony was the baby of the family, with older siblings, Mary and John Jr. With a father who was ailing and unable to work, the children grew up in poverty.
John Sr. instilled in his son a love of art and literature and compassion for human suffering. His father died when Tony was 10 and Anna worked all hours to support her three children. Watching her struggle, Tony made up his mind to be successful enough for his motherβs trials to end. His Uncle Dick, a tap dancer, provided an early glimpse of show business, and Tony was passionate about both singing and painting by the time he attended the School of Industrial Art (now the High School of Art and Design) in Manhattan.
Tony took bellboy jobs before becoming a singing waiter in a restaurant. He sang with army bands during World War II, but he was demoted and assigned to grave digging for fraternizing on Thanksgiving night with a black soldier who had been a schoolfriend. Twenty years after that episode, Tony was marching in Alabama with Martin Luther King. He was moved to become a pacifist following combat in Europe in 1945, an experience he described as βa front-row seat in hellβ.
After demobilization, Tony took vocal classes at the American Theatre Wing School; a teacher there suggested he try imitating the phrasing of jazz instrumentalists and he began singing in nightclubs from 1946 under the stage name of Joe Bari. Comedian Bob Hope hired him in 1949 but, disliking the stage name, told him: βWeβll call you Tony Bennett.β
And so it began, the slow climb from βrags to richesβ.
However, thereβs something you wonβt read about Tony Bennett anywhere but here. Read on.
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βWhy donβt you invite Tony Bennett to the wedding?β
Thatβs something you might expect to hear Nancy Sinatra or Billy Joel say β certainly not me! But I did make that suggestion and hereβs how it all came about.
It was probably around 2004 when my son, Bill, first met Tony Bennett. I say βfirstβ because Bill had the pleasure of working with Tony numerous times .β¦ at the tree lighting ceremony at Rockefeller Center, the Grammy Awards, the Macyβs Thanksgiving Day Parade and other gigs.
You see, Billβs been a camera man/teleprompter for a lot of years; heβs had the great opportunity of working with celebrities ranging from Paul McCartney to Big Bird to Bill Clinton. His jobs are as varied as crayons in a jumbo Crayola box and just as colorful. Iβm not going to bore you with names but the list is impressive. Thatβs how Bill met Tony.
These gigs β many of which are live β donβt happen in just one take. The crew and the performers (or βtalentβ, as theyβre known in the business) can wind up spending a great deal of time on the set β certainly hours, sometimes days. Some performers prefer to remain aloof; others, like Tony Bennett, are the type who pull up a chair in the break room and eat lunch with the crew.
Now I hope it doesnβt sound like I’m bragging but I raised a good son. Bill is a hard worker, agreeable, unassuming, pleasant, good-looking and funny. Tony and Bill enjoyed working with each other very much β so much so that when Tony was asked to perform at the Rockefeller Center tree lighting again in 2005, he requested my son by name.
During down time at a rehearsal two years later (2007), Bill mentioned his upcoming wedding and Tony happened to be within earshot. He came over to congratulate Bill and they talked about βthingsβ for a while. Tony wished Bill βa happy wedding dayβ, shook his hand and that was that β until I found out about it and I said what any mom would say:
βWhy donβt you invite Tony Bennett to the wedding? He just might say βyesβ.β
I gave Bill an invitation for him to give Tony the next day. He took it and placed it in his backpack …. where it stayed. Letβs just say my son is a bit more circumspect than me; he opted not to impose on Tony and did not extend the invitation. I was a bit bummed out but it was Billβs decision to make, not mine, and in hindsight it was probably the right decision.
Still β¦. can you just imagine what a gas it would have been if Tony Bennett had shown up at my sonβs wedding?
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Frank Sinatra was a good friend of Tony Bennett and he had a couple of great things to say about him, things like he was βthe best singer in the businessβ and β my personal favorite β βthat kidβs got four sets of ballsβ!
I saw Tony Bennett perform several times. I’ll never forget a concert we went to at Carnegie Hall about 25 years ago. A highlight of the show was when Tony sang βRags To Richesβ, one of his very early hits, without accompaniment or a mic, and we could hear him clear as a bell all the way up in the βnosebleedβ seats! What an amazing set of pipes! I was blown away by that performance.
To celebrate Tony Bennettβs life, his incredible talents and gifts to the world, I have chosen that memorable 70-year-old song. βRags To Richesβ is based on a famous Russian tune called βVolga Melodyβ (aka βSamara My Lovelyβ) by Yuri Shchetkov. Tony Bennett did the best-known version in 1953 with Percy Faith and his orchestra. It was #1 for eight weeks on the Billboard chart and became a gold record. It was also featured in the opening sequence of the 1990 film βGoodfellasβ.
From 1953, this is βRags To Richesβ by the incomparable Tony Bennett.
Lyrics
I know I’d go from rages to riches
If you would only say you care
And though, my pocket may be empty
I’d be a millionaire
My clothes may still be torn and tattered
But in my heart I’d be a king
Your love is all that ever mattered
It’s everything
So, open your arms and you’ll open the door
To every treasure that I’m hoping for
Hold me and kiss me, and tell me you’re mine evermore
Must I forever be a beggar
Whose golden dreams will not come true?
Or will I go from rags to riches?
My fate is up to you
Must I forever be a beggar
Whose golden dreams will not come true?
Or will I go from rags to riches?
My fate is up to you
Source:Β Musixmatch
Songwriters: Marc Shaiman / Mike Caren / Randolph S. Parker / Brian Scott / Vito Tisdale / William Hughes / Melvin Adams / L. Elroy
Rags to Riches lyrics Β© Warner/Chappell Music International Ltd.
| “Rags To Riches” | |
|---|---|
| Single by Tony Bennett | |
| B-side | “Here Comes That Heartache Again” |
| Released | August 3, 1953 |
| Recorded | March 17, 1953 |
| Studio | Columbia 30th Street Studio, New York City |
| Genre | Pop |
| Length | 2:50 |
| Label | Columbia |
| Producer(s) | Percy Faith |
| Tony Bennett singles chronology | |
| (1953)”Someone Turned The Moon Upside Down” (1953)”Rags To Riches“ (1953)”Stranger In Paradise” | |
Tony Bennett died at his home in New York City on July 21, 2023, β just two weeks shy of his 97th birthday β following a seven-year battle with Alzheimer’s disease. His family said he kept singing right up to the end. Tony will never be forgotten and has been hailed as the “champion” and “legendary interpreter” of the Great American Songbook.
Thank you for sharing in my tribute to Tony Bennett and “Rags To Riches”. Rest easy, Tony. As Bob Hope used to say, βThanks for the memoriesβ.
NAR Β© 2023
Today at The Rhythm Section
I have posted my final edition
of Name That Tune.
Why not stop by for
one last spin of the disc?
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