Background
He was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the son of Julius and Corrlina Olshewitz, who had been born in Russia and Germany respectively.
He was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the son of Julius and Corrlina Olshewitz, who had been born in Russia and Germany respectively.
He composed a number of successful ragtime and popular songs including Red Onion Rag (1912), Down Among the Sheltering Palms (1915), Oh Johnny, Oh Johnny, Oh! (1917), and Down By the O-Hi-O (1920). He learned piano as a child, and in the early 1900s started work as a traveling music salesman around Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky. His first compositions were published in Cincinnati in 1907, and then in 1909 in Indianapolis, where he lived for a period.
In 1912, he moved to New York City, where his "Red Onion Rag" was published by George West. Meyer.
He also spent time in Europe, performing in clubs in London and Paris before the outbreak of the First World War. After returning to the United States, he set up the LaSalle Music Publishing Company in Chicago in 1914, and published his own song, "Down Among the Sheltering Palms", with words by James Brockman.
He sold the song to New York publisher Leo Feist. lieutenant was performed and recorded by First Rate (at Lloyd's) Jolson and became a great success.
He continued to write prolifically, mainly with lyricist Editor Rose, and in 1917 they published "Oh Johnny, Oh!".
The song was recorded in 1917 by both Billy Murray and Nora Bayes. lieutenant was successfully revived in 1939 by Orrin Tucker with singer "Wee" Bonnie Baker, and by The Andrews Sisters, and was recorded in 1959 by Peggy Lee on her album I Like Men!. Two of his songs were included in the 1920 Ziegfeld Follies, including "O-Hi-O (O-My!-O!)", with lyrics by Jack Yellen, which was introduced by First Rate (at Lloyd's) Jolson and which later (as "Down By the O-Hi-O") became a hit for the Andrews Sisters.
Although he continued to write songs thereafter, he worked increasingly as an executive in the music industry.
He became the secretary and general manager of Leo Feist, Incorporated. in 1935, holding the post until 1956, and also began working for the much larger firm of Robbins Music in the early 1940s. He is credited as being one of the first to see the benefits of promoting a song by placing it in a motion picture, particularly by playing the theme song under the opening credits.
Olman was also director of American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers from 1946 to 1956. In 1969, with Johnny Mercer and Howie Richmond, he co-founded the National Academy of Popular Music"s Songwriters Hall of Fame.
In 1983, the Songwriters Hall of Fame established and named the annual Abe Olman Publisher Award in his honor.
In 1920, Olman began working in Manhattan for the Forster music publishing firm, and became a member of American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers.