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Shine (originally titled That's Why They Call Me Shine) is a popular song with lyrics by Cecil Mack and Tin Pan Alley songwriter Lew Brown and music by Ford Dabney.It was published in 1910 by the Gotham-Attucks Music Publishing Company and used by Aida Overton Walker in His Honor the Barber, an African-American road show.
"That's Why They Call Me Shine" (©1910), R.C. McPherson (aka Cecil Mack) and Ford Dabney, publisher [iv] words Cecil Mack, music by Dabney. [ III ] [ IV ] The song debuted in S.H. Dudley 's 1909 production of His Honor the Barber, with a notable production in 1911 at the Majestic Theater , currently the site of the Time Warner Center .
"Shine" (1910 song), a popular song with lyrics by Cecil Mack and Lew Brown and music by Ford Dabney "Shine" (Vanessa Amorosi song), 2000
Music portal; Songs written or first produced in the year 1910. ... Shine (1910 song) Silver Star (1910 song) ... 1910 songs. 20 languages ...
"I'm Miss Hanna from Savannah" (between 1908 and 1910) "That's Why They Call Me Shine"(1910) "Way Down East" (1911) words by Cecil Mack, music by Joe Young and Harold Norman "Someone's Waiting Down in Tennessee" (1912, co-wrote music and lyrics with James Reese Europe) "Charleston" (1923, co-wrote music and lyrics with James P. Johnson)
The Gotham-Attucks firm, according to Wayne D. Shirley in 1987, then a Music Specialist in the Music Division of the Library of Congress, [Note 1] was a small music publisher with relatively low output, but notable for the music it published. Despite never publishing more than twenty pieces a year over its eight-year existence, Gotham-Attucks ...
Music festivals established in the 1910s (3 C) 0–9. 1910 in music (10 C, 5 P) 1911 in music (6 C, ... 1910s songs (11 C, 6 P)
Cover of sheet music "Spaghetti Rag" by Lyons and Yosco "Spaghetti Rag" m. George Lyons & Bob Yosco "Steamboat Bill" w. Ren Shields m. Bert Leighton & Frank Leighton "Stein Song (Maine)" w. Lincoln Colcord m. E. A. Fenstad [1] "Stop, Stop, Stop (Come Over And Love Me Some More)" w.m. Irving Berlin "Sweet Italian Love" Irving Berlin, Ted Snyder