I Want to Go Back to Michigan explained

I Want to Go Back to Michigan is a song by Irving Berlin composed in 1914. It was a moderate commercial success when it was first released with popular versions by Elida Morris and by Morton Harvey.[1] Afterwards it became a staple in vaudeville. Its most famous performance was by Judy Garland in the film Easter Parade.[2]

Lyrics

The ballad's lyrics employ imagery of an idyllic rural childhood juxtaposed against less appealing city life, which was a theme among some popular songs during this period of rapid urban growth in the United States.[3]

You can keep your cabarets

Where they turn nights into days.

I'd rather be where they go to bed at nine.

I've been gone for seven weeks

And I've lost my rosy cheeks.[4] [5]

Composition

According to Charles Hamm in a biography of Irving Berlin, the songwriter composed "I Want to Go Back to Michigan" at a time when his ambitions were aiming past vaudeville toward musical theater and he was exercising new styles. The nostalgic reminiscence here, along with "Happy Little Country Girl" composed during the same period, was previously unknown in his work.[6] Billy Murray, a popular singer during the period when the song was first composed, recorded it for Edison Records in 1914.

Other recordings

Movies

The Avalon Boys performed an a cappella version of the song in the 1931 Laurel & Hardy film Pardon Us.[9]

Judy Garland performed the song in the 1948 film Easter Parade, which was written around a mixture of ten older and eight newly composed Irving Berlin songs.[10] Berlin's deal with MGM for the package of songs that included "I Want to Go Back to Michigan" was $500,000 plus a percentage of box office receipts, which was an unusually advantageous contract for a songwriter and amounted to twenty percent of the film's total budget of $2.5 million.[11] The film won the 1948 Academy Award for Best Musical Score.[12]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Whitburn . Joel . Joel Whitburn's Pop Memories 1890-1954 . 1986 . Record Research Inc. . Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin . 0-89820-083-0 . 519.
  2. Web site: The American Variety Stage, 1870 - 1920. Library of Congress. 2008-09-17.
  3. Book: 2008-09-17 . American Popular Music: Readings from the Popular Press. Timothy E. Scheurer. Popular Press. 1989. 107–110. 9780879724665.
  4. Web site: "I Want to Go Back to Michigan" (sheet music) page 2. Watson Berlin & Snyder Co.. 2008-09-17.
  5. Web site: "I Want to Go Back to Michigan" (sheet music) page 3. Watson Berlin & Snyder Co.. 2008-09-17.
  6. Book: 2008-09-17 . Irving Berlin. registration . I Want to go back to Michigan Irving Berlin. . S. Charles Hamm. Oxford University Press US. 1997. 170–172.
  7. Book: Sforza . John . Swing It! . 1999 . University Press of Kentucky . Lexington, Kentucky . 0-8131-2136-1 . 233.
  8. Web site: Discogs.com . Discogs.com . March 29, 2020.
  9. Book: Tyler . Don . Music of the First World War . 2016 . ABC-CLIO . Santa Barbara, California . 978-1-4408-3996-2 . 102.
  10. Book: 2008-09-17 . Hollywood Musicals Year by Year. Stanley Green, Elaine Schmidt. Hal Leonard Corporation. 1999. 149. 9780634007651.
  11. Book: 2008-09-17 . As Thousands Cheer: The Life of Irving Berlin. Laurence Bergreen. Da Capo Press. 1996. 474–479. 9780786752522.
  12. Web site: Results page (Easter Parade). Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. 2008-09-21.