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"Hoagy Carmichael - Heart and Soul ประเภทบุคลิกภาพประเภทใด Hoagy Carmichael - Heart and Soul เป็นประเภทบุคลิกภาพ ใน mbti, - - ใน Enneagram, ใน Big 5, ใน Socionics"
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"Heart and Soul" is a popular song composed by Hoagy Carmichael with lyrics by Frank Loesser. It charted with different artists between 1938 and 1961. A simplified version is a popular piano duet. Larry Clinton and his Orchestra were the first to record and release the song in 1938 with Bea Wain on vocals. Musical format The song's A-section is often simplified as a repeating I-vi-IV-V progression and taught to beginning piano students as an easy two-hand duet, with one person playing the chords and another playing the melody.[1] Like the piece "Chopsticks", this version became widely known, even to those who never studied piano, and is sometimes mistakenly thought to be a folk tune.[1] The chord progression, often referred to as the "50s progression",[2] was employed in the doo-wop hits of the 1950s and 1960s. Early versions In 1938, it was first recorded on September 1 and released on September 21 by Larry Clinton and his Orchestra with vocals by Bea Wain on Victor Records. Their recording was the highest charting and most successful recording of the jazz and pop standard. Their performance was filmed for a Paramount Pictures film short and released in 1939. The Clinton arrangement featured a reggae-like beat although reggae had not been invented yet. That same year Al Bowlly recorded the song with Geraldo and his orchestra. In 1939, three versions reached the music charts: Larry Clinton (No. 1), Eddy Duchin (No. 12), and Al Donahue (No. 16). A version by The Four Aces with the Jack Pleis Orchestra reached No. 11 in 1952, and a version by Johnny Maddox reached No. 57 in 1956. In 1961, The Cleftones version reached No. 18 and the one by Jan and Dean reached No. 25.
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