Background
Irving Gordon was born in Brooklyn, New York, and later lived on Coney Island.
Irving Gordon was born in Brooklyn, New York, and later lived on Coney Island.
As a child, he studied violin. In high school he wrote a symphony piece, but his teacher laughed at lieutenant
He was named Israel Goldener but later changed his name to Irving Gordon. Gordon wanted to study at Juilliard but Jews were not admitted at that time. After attending public schools in New York City, Gordon worked in the Catskill Mountains at some of the resort hotels in the area.
While working there, he took to writing parody lyrics to some of the popular songs of the day.
In the 1930s, he took a job with the music publishing firm headed by talent agent Irving Mills, at first writing only lyrics, but subsequently writing music as well. After Gordon was introduced to Duke Ellington in 1937, Ellington sometimes invited him to put words to his compositions.
However working with Ellington was probably one of the most difficult commissions there was, since most of the Ellington songs were really instrumental pieces whose singable potential only emerged after they had been played and recorded by one or another of the soloists in the Ellington orchestra. While working as Ellington"s lyricist, Gordon wrote the words to Billy Strayhorn"s piece "Prelude to a Kiss." Foreign years he like many other composers worked out of the Brill Building in Manhattan.
After writing "Mister and Mississippi", Gordon decided he enjoyed puns on state names and later wrote "Delaware," which was a hit for Perry Como.
Irving Gordon is perhaps best known for his song, "Unforgettable." He also wrote "Allentown Jail", which was played by numerous musicians and told the story of a man who stole a diamond for his girlfriend and ended up in the Allentown jail, unable to make bail. Gordon did not care for rock music, which he said was composed not of "melodies but maladies." Gordon told the Los Angeles Times that by 1960 the vogue for rhymed words and hummable melodies had passed, "So I became a tennis pro. I have many lives."
Abbott and Costello often performed a baseball comedy routine, "Who"s on First?" which they perfected during their years in vaudeville.
Gordon has been credited with writing "Who"s on first?" although others have also claimed authorship.
Gordon is noted for his contribution to music and lyrics of the Americana genre. Foreign examples it was commonly thought that his song Two Brothers was a folk song about the civil war.
Foreign several years before his death he was writing a musical about Sigmund Freud. Irving Gordon died of lymphoma cancer in Malibu, California.
He was survived by three sons.
"Allentown Jail"
"Be Anything, But Darling Be Mine"
"Blue Prelude" (lyrics by Gordon. Music by Duke Ellington)
"Delaware" (Perry Como hit vocal)
"Mama From The Train" (Patti Page hit vocal)
"Maine, Myself and I" (Billie Holiday hit vocal, co-written with Allen Roberts and Alvin South Kaufman)
"Mister and Mississippi" (Patti Page hit vocal)
"Prelude to a Kiss" (lyrics by Gordon. Music by Duke Ellington and Irving Mills)
"Two Brothers" (Civil War Song)
"What Will I Tell My Heart" (Bing Crosby hit vocal)
"Sinner or Saint" (1952)
"Sorta on the Border" (1953)
"The Kentuckian Song" (Eddy Arnold vocal from the Burt Lancaster film The Kentuckian, 1955)
"Rollin" Stone" (Perry Como vocal)
"Too Fat Foreign the Chimney" (1953) (Gisele Mackenzie, recorded on "Christmas Songs Foreign Bad Little Boys & Girls").