Of those songs which became standards and entered into the Great American Songbook from the folk opera Porgy and Bess, few have inspired such vital renderings as āI Loves You, Porgyā. While the ubiquitous āSummertimeā and the upbeat irreverence of āIt Aināt Necessarily Soā scored early chart success before making the transition from jazz and easy listening to such diverse genres as ska punk and new wave, āI Loves You, Porgyā as the tragic heart of Porgy and Bess has remained indelibly true to the aspirations and character of the opera.
A song borne of despair and swallowing romance, it was embraced by jazz singers like Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald before spurring the career of Nina Simone when it served as the climax of her 1959 debut album Little Girl Blue. A favourite of Bill Evans, an interpretation of the song from the live album Bill Evans at the Montreux Jazz Festival helped the pianist and his trio to the 1969 Grammy for Best Jazz Instrumental Album, Individual or Group, while an earlier performance at the Village Vanguard in 1961 would eventually land on the expanded CD version of Waltz for Debby.
Keith Jarrett gave a stirring piano recital for the album Solo Tribute: The 100th Performance in Japan, which was recorded live at Suntory Hall in Tokyo in the spring of 1987. And at the height of her career at the beginning of 1994, Whitney Houston sang āI Loves You, Porgyā as the first song in a medley, followed by āAnd I Am Telling Youā and āI Have Nothingā as the star held the stage and came away with eight awards from the American Music Awards at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.
The opera Porgy and Bess was composed by George Gershwin, and written with a libretto by the author DuBose Heyward in collaboration with the lyricist Ira Gerswhin. Although Ira has sometimes been credited as the lyricist for Porgy and Bess, most of the lyrics were written by Heyward with the notable exception of āIt Aināt Necessarily Soā.
In 1925 Heyward had published his debut novel Porgy, about a disabled black beggar, living in the slum of Catfish Row in Charleston, South Carolina. The titular character takes in andĀ falls in loveĀ withĀ a woman named Bess, who is already involved in a relationship with the violent stevedore Crown. Passages in the novel depict its characters speaking in Gullah, a creole which combines English with aspects of West and Central African languages. Gullah is spoken by communities living on the Sea Islands,Ā and across coastal South Carolina and Georgia.
By the following year, George Gershwin had read Heywardās novel and had already broached the idea of turning it into on opera. In 1927 Heyward and his wife, Dorothy, herself a playwright, adapted the novel for the theatre. Porgy: A Play in Four Acts proved a resounding success. StarringĀ a black cast, it opened at the Guild Theatre on Broadway on 10 October 1927, and over the course of the next few years completed fifty-five weeks in New York, two tours of the northern United States and Canada, and eleven weeks in London.
With its modified ending and increased focus on the character of Sportinā Life, the play would serve as a close model for the eventual opera.Ā George Gershwin and DuBose Heyward returned to the project in 1934, and Porgy and Bess premiered ā after a private concert performance in New York ā on 30 September 1935, at the Colonial Theatre in Boston. This initial run featured a full cast of classically trained black singers. George Gershwin would call Porgy and Bess a āfolk operaā:
āPorgy and Bess is a folk tale. Its people naturally would sing folk music. When I first began work in the music I decided against the use of original folk material because I wanted the music to be all of one piece. Therefore I wrote my own spirituals and folksongs. But they are still folk music ā and therefore, being in operatic form, Porgy and Bess becomes a folk opera.ā
Written as a duet, Anne Brown and Todd Duncan ā as Bess and Porgy ā performed āI Loves You, Porgyā in 1935 and again for the operaās revival in 1942. But jazz vocalists including Billie Holiday soon began singing solo renditions; and Nina Simoneās recording from Little Girl Blue, her debut album released in June 1958, proved her biggest hit and provided a foundation for her career. In the autumn of 1959, her version of the song reached number 18 on the Hot 100, and number 2 on the R&B chart.
Another take on the song appears at the opening of the 1964 live album, Nina Simone in Concert. The performance displayed above was given in 1962. As the video lists in its opening credits, alongside Simone it showcases Paul Palmieri on guitar, Lisle Atkinson on bass, Warren Smith on percussion, and Montego Joe on conga drum.
āI Loves You, Porgyā features in Act 2, Scene 3 of Gershwinās opera. In fact, at the beginning of her performance, Nina sings lines from the āVendorsā Trioā which appears earlier in the scene. This is a medley, with lyrics written primarily by Heyward, consisting of the parts āHere Comes the Honeymanā, āCrab Manā, and āOh, Deyās So Fresh and Fineā:
āCrab Manā
CRAB MAN
Iām talkinā about devil crabs
Iām talkinā about devil crabs
Iām talkinā about de food I sells
[ā¦]
āOh, Deyās So Fresh and Fineā
STRAWBERRY WOMAN
Oh deyās so fresh anā fine
Anā deyās jusā off de vine
Strawberries, strawberries, strawberries,
Oh, deyās so fresh anā fine
Anā deyās jus off de vine,
Strawberries, strawberries, strawberries
Nina rearranges the order, singing the āCrab Manā lines after those from āOh, Deyās So Fresh and Fineā. Either way, she thus begins the piece as a sales girl, calling out her wares. Her voice is disengaged and distant, plaintive but pure, and tremulous on the word āvineā. She brings out an aspect of the songwriting, ājust off de vineā homophonous with ājust off divineā, establishing from the outset a discrepancy between hopes and ideals and a bitter reality.
The music slows and shifts as she repeats the phrase ādevil crabsā. These crabs are a distraction from more pressing thoughts, but they evoke a memory, and now she swirls and segues from a recollection of her daddy to think of Porgy. āI Loves You, Porgyā begins ā āPorgy, donāt you know I love you / Donāt let him take me / Donāt let him handle me / And drive me oh so madā ā and Ninaās voice at once deepens into a profound melancholy.
Nina had always considered herself a pianist. She began playing by ear at the age of three, and studied classical piano before applying to the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. Retaining the belief that her rejection had been made on the grounds of race, she only began singing when, playing the clubs of New York, she found that gigs and money were easier to come by if she committed to use her voice.
Her piano playing here is perfectly paced, steadily unfurling with the words of the song before an interlude.Ā When she resumes singing, her voice is accompanied deliberately by the bass and percussion. Navigating blindly but resolutely ā āBut when he comes I know / Iām gonna have to goā ā her perseverance is rewarded by moments of calm.
Extending the first note, Nina returns to āOh, Deyās So Fresh and Fineā. She elaborates now a vision of a happier future with Porgy, replete with āStrawberries for breakfast / And devil crabs tooā. And buffeted and sustained by the cymbal, the performance drives to a crashing affirmation.
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