I'm Looking Over a Four Leaf Clover

"I'm Looking Over a Four Leaf Clover" is a song from 1927, which was written by Mort Dixon with music by Harry M. Woods. Original hit recordings were made in 1927 by Nick Lucas (#2), Ben Bernie (#3), and Jean Goldkette (#10).

History

Penned in 1927 by Mort Dixon (lyrics) and Harry M. Woods (music), the song became a hit that same year with the release of recordings by Nick Lucas, Ben Bernie, and Jean Goldkette.

The song was then revived in 1948 by several artists, most notably Art Mooney, whose recording topped the charts for 18 weeks. Other charting 1948 versions were made by Russ Morgan (#6), Alvino Rey (#6), The Three Suns (#10), The Uptown String Band (#11), and Arthur Godfrey (#14).

In modern times the song is perhaps most associated with Merrie Melodies cartoons, as it appeared in several of them, and a common tune played by the string bands in Philadelphia's Mummers Parade. The Sons of Ben, the official supporters' group of Major League Soccer's Philadelphia Union, have adopted the song as one of their chants, singing at every home match at the 20 minute, ten second mark, symbolic as the founding year of the Union.

Arrangements

  • In 1948 Columbia records released a recording of the song by Tiny Hill and the Hilltoppers.
  • The UCLA Band has played an arrangement of this tune since 1954, and uses the chorus as the second part of Rover, the Bruin victory song. Similar lyrics have been used for two other songs.
    • "My Dead Dog Rover" by Hank Stu Dave and Hank (Hank Landsberg & Dave Whited) from 1977, which appears on the Dr. Demento 25th Anniversary Collection - The parody version "I'm Looking Over my dead dog rover" was played on Dr. Demento's show for a time.[1]
    • "I'm Lookin' Over My Dead Dog Rover" by Kevin Gershon from 1973 and played on KMET FM in Los Angeles
  • In the 1948 Warner Brothers cartoon Fast and Furry-ous, directed by Chuck Jones, Wile E. Coyote chases Road Runner through a cloverleaf interchange to an up-tempo orchestration of the tune.
  • Also in 1948, Al "Jazzbo" Collins, a popular Salt Lake City disk jockey, is credited with popularizing Art Mooney's version of the song after he pulled a stunt playing the song over and over for hours on end. Some sources state 3 1/2 hours, other say it was 24 hours. For 120 minutes Mooney’s record played on while phone calls poured in from pleased listeners who added insult to Collins’ injury by praising him "for playing something good for a change." [2][3][4][5]
  • In the 1950 cartoon Home Tweet Home, Tweety sings the song while in a birdbath at the opening of the short.
  • In the 1952 cartoon Operation Rabbit, Bugs Bunny sings "I'm looking over a three-leaf clover that I overlooked B3."
  • In the 1957 cartoon Ducking the Devil, directed by Robert McKimson, the Tasmanian Devil escapes from a zoo; Daffy Duck, on learning that there's a $5,000 reward for its return (and that the escapee is lulled by music) ends up singing to get him back to his cage. I'm Looking Over a Four Leaf Clover is one of the songs he sings.
  • In the 1959 cartoon Backwoods Bunny, written and directed by Robert McKimson, Bugs Bunny sings the first two lines of the song, stressing the sound four as that is the given signal for Elvis Buzzard to fire his rifle.
  • Bob and Ray used a whistled version of the tune as the theme to their 1959-60 CBS Radio program.
  • Joao Gilberto recorded a bossa nova version of the tune in 1960 (Trevo de Quatro Folhas)[6]
  • Jazz saxophonist Coleman Hawkins recorded a samba arrangement of the tune on his 1962 album Desafinado.
  • The 1974 film The Groove Tube featured a segment in which Chevy Chase (in his first film role) sings the song while Ken Shapiro plays drums on Chevy's head.
  • In 1976, the band Salsoul Orchestra performed a disco arrangement of the tune as part of their song titled New Year's Medley."

In other media

  • In 2013, part of the song plays in the 6th episode of season 2 of the Australian drama television series Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries entitled "Marked for Murder" around the 22 minute mark when Phryne and Jack drive up to the front gate of Sidney Fletcher's estate.
  • In 2016, the Mitch Miller version of the song appeared in the 19th episode of season 2 of the Batman prequel television series Gotham entitled "Wrath of the Villains: Azrael" during Ed Nygma's prison break.

Web sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.