Wedding Season has officially begun, and I’m going to be playing 2 weddings this coming weekend. And, I’m looking forward to it. Playing wedding music is always fun, and the people at the wedding are some of the happiest people I get to play for.
So, today’s fiddle tune comes from a practice where I am getting ready to play a wedding gig with Jim Abraham and Tom Barbour. What a Wonderful World” is one of my all time favorite songs. It’s a beautiful melody with chords to match, and while it’s not really a “fiddle tune”, I’m playing it on my fiddle.
And, since I make up the rules for Fiddle Tune a Day, “What a Wonderful World” is a fiddle tune from here on forward.
What a Wonderful World according to Wikipedia
“What a Wonderful World” is a song written by Bob Thiele (as “George Douglas”) and George David Weiss. It was first recorded by Louis Armstrong and released as a single in 1968. Thiele and Weiss were both prominent in the music world (Thiele as a producer and Weiss as a composer/performer). Armstrong’s recording was inducted in the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999. The publishing for this song is controlled by Memory Lane Music Group, Carlin Music Corp., and Bug Music, Inc.
History
Intended as an antidote for the increasingly racially and politically charged climate of everyday life in the United States, the song also has a hopeful, optimistic tone with regard to the future, with reference to babies being born into the world and having much to look forward to. The song was initially offered to Tony Bennett, who turned it down.[1] Thereafter, it was offered to Louis Armstrong. The song was not initially a hit in the United States, where it sold fewer than 1,000 copies because the head of ABC Records did not like the song and so did not promote it, but was a major success in the United Kingdom, reaching number one on the UK Singles Chart. In the US, the song hit #116 on the Billboard Bubbling Under Chart. It was also the biggest-selling single of 1968 in the UK where it was among the last pop singles issued by HMV Records before becoming an exclusive classical music label.[2] The song made Louis Armstrong the oldest male to top the chart, at sixty-six years and ten months old. Armstrong’s record was broken in 2009 when a cover version of “Islands in the Stream” recorded for Comic Relief — which included 68-year-old Tom Jones — reached number one.
ABC Records’ European distributor EMI forced ABC to issue a What A Wonderful World album in 1968 (catalogue number ABCS-650) which did not chart in the US due to ABC’s non-promotion of it,[3] but did chart in the UK where it was issued by Stateside Records with catalogue number SSL 10247 and peaked on the British chart at #37.
The song gradually became something of a standard and reached a new level of popularity. In 1988, Louis Armstrong’s 1968 recording was featured in the film Good Morning, Vietnam and was re-released as a single, hitting #32 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart in February 1988. The single charted at number one for the fortnight ending June 27, 1988 on the Australian chart.
In 2001, rappers Ghostface Killah, Raekwon and The Alchemist released “The Forest,” a song which begins with three lines of lyric adapted from “What a Wonderful World”, altered to become “an invitation to get high” on marijuana.[4] The rappers and their record company, Sony Music Entertainment, were sued by the owners of “What a Wonderful World,” Abilene Music. The suit was thrown out of court after judge Gerard E. Lynch determined that the altered lyric was indisputably a parody, transforming the uplifting original message to a new one with a darker nature.[4][5]
What A Wonderful World lyrics
Songwriters: Thiele, Robert; Weiss, George David;
I see trees of green, red roses too
I see them bloom, for me and you
And I think to myself
What a wonderful world
I see skies of blue, and clouds of white
The bright blessed day, dark sacred night
And I think to myself
What a wonderful world
The colors of the rainbow, so pretty in the sky
Are also on the faces, of people going by
I see friends shaking hands, sayin’, “How do you do?”
They’re really sayin’, “I love you”
I hear babies cryin’, I watch them grow
They’ll learn much more, than I’ll ever know
And I think to myself
What a wonderful world
Yes, I think to myself
What a wonderful world
Oh yeah
Howard says
“Playing wedding music is always fun, and the people at the wedding are some of the happiest people I get to play for.”
I really like wedding gigs myself. I enjoy the pervasive atmosphere of unrealistic optimism. Of course, I never mention that aspect when I’m performing a wedding gig, since I’m paid to produce music, and not to be funny…
Michael Friedman says
Lovely musical performance !
Vi Wickam says
I think the chords to this song are some of the prettiest ever written.
Francis Meador says
I agree, pretty song, pretty lyrics, pretty chords. Nice playing!
Vi Wickam says
Thanks, Francis.