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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Java Jive"
Song by The Ink Spots
Written1940
GenreR&B
Composer(s)Ben Oakland
Lyricist(s)Milton Drake
The Ink Spots singles chronology
"My Greatest Mistake"
(1940)
"Java Jive"
(1940)
"Please Take a Letter, Miss Brown"
(1941)

Java Jive is a song written by Ben Oakland and Milton Drake in 1940 and most famously recorded that year by The Ink Spots, whose recording reached #17 on the US Pop charts and is considered by many to be the definitive version. The song is also heard in the 1942 movie In This Our Life.

The lyrics speak of the singer's love of coffee and also reflect the slang of the day, including a reference to "Mr. Moto", a Japanese film spy. The song originally featured the couplet "I'm not keen about a bean / Unless it is a 'cheery beery bean", as a pun on the song "Ciribiribin", but the Ink Spots' lead singer, Deek Watson, inadvertently sang it as "cheery cheery bean", and recordings by subsequent artists have generally either followed suit or changed it to "chili chili bean".

The Manhattan Transfer performed the song on various occasions, including during their appearances on Camera Three (1974), The Mike Douglas Show (1974), and The Two Ronnies (1978), and the band recorded it for inclusion on their 1975 self-titled album.[1]

The song has been recorded numerous times over the years, notably by Guy Lombardo, The King Sisters, and Bluegrass Student Union.[2]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Java Jive Tenor Part Recording

Transcription

References

  1. ^ Lokker, Brian (5 January 2013). "Java Jive by the Ink Spots". Coffee Crossroads. Retrieved July 21, 2015.
  2. ^ Whorf, Michael (2012). American Popular Song Lyricists: Oral Histories, 1920s–1960s. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. p. 79. ISBN 9780786490615.



This page was last edited on 27 July 2023, at 07:52
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