MY FUNNY VALENTINE
"My Funny Valentine" is one of the most recorded jazz standards in history, appearing on over 1,300 albums by more than 600 artists. One of them was Chet Baker, for whom it became a signature song.
Origin & Context
Composers:Ā Written by the legendary duoĀ Richard Rodgers (music) and Lorenz Hart (lyrics)Ā in 1937.
Original Production:Ā It was introduced byĀ Mitzi GreenĀ in the Broadway musicalĀ Babes in Arms, where her character sings to a boy named Valentine "Val" LaMar.
Musical Characteristics
Structure:Ā Typically follows anĀ AABA or AABC form, often featuring aĀ 36-bar structureĀ with a 4-bar extension in the final section.
Harmony: It is known for its "minor cliché" (a descending chromatic line over a C minor chord) and its transition from a haunting minor key to a warm relative major (Eb).
Vibe:Ā A bittersweet ballad characterized byĀ fragility and longing, with lyrics that celebrate the subject's perceived physical "flaws" as endearing.
Essential Recordings
Chet Baker:Ā HisĀ 1954 vocal versionĀ became his signature song, defining his "cool jazz" persona with itsĀ fragile, breathy delivery.
Miles Davis:Ā He recordedĀ two canonical versionsāa lyrical 1956 take onĀ Cookin'Ā and a moreĀ abstract, modern 1964 live performance.
Frank Sinatra:Ā Featured on hisĀ Songs for Young LoversĀ album, helping cement its status in theĀ Great American Songbook.
Ella Fitzgerald:Ā A definitive interpretation found on herĀ Rodgers & Hart Songbook.
Sarah Vaughan: From The Rodgers and Hart Songbook , New York, February 10, 1954
Gerry Mulligan (with Chet Baker): From Gerry Mulligan Quartet , live at the Black Hawk, San Francisco, September 2, 1952
Photo by Al Aumuller via Wikimedia Commons, Public domain















