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Dream a Little Dream of Me
Song composed by Fabian Andre and Wilbur Schwandt with lyrics by Gus Kahn From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Dream a Little Dream of Me" is a 1930[1] song with music by Fabian Andre and Wilbur Schwandt and lyrics by Gus Kahn.[2] It was first recorded in February 1931 by Ozzie Nelson and His Orchestra, soon followed by Wayne King and His Orchestra with vocals by Ernie Birchill. A popular standard, it has seen well over 400 recorded versions.[3]
The song enjoyed its highest-charting success when it was covered in 1968 by Cass Elliot with the Mamas & the Papas, and followed the same year with a recording by Anita Harris. There are more than 40 other versions, including by the Mills Brothers, Sylvie Vartan, Henry Mancini, the Beautiful South, Blind Guardian, Anne Murray, Ella Fitzgerald, Erasure, Michael Bublé, Tony DeSare, Eddie Vedder, MonaLisa Twins and Italian vocal group Blue Penguin.
While published in 1931, the song's earliest copyright was registered on December 29, 1930, and will enter the public domain on January 1, 2026.[a]
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Background
The song's music was composed by Fabian Andre and Wilbur Schwandt while touring the Midwest together in 1930. The details of where the piece was composed is inconsistent: Schwandt initially stated that the melody was written while the two were in Paw Paw, Michigan, but he later recalled writing it in Milwaukee. The lyrics were written by songwriter Gus Kahn.[1][2]
Music producer Thom Donovan described the song as both a lullaby and a love song with a "comforting, childlike quality".[1] Kahn's lyrics depict two lovers reluctantly parting, with one telling the other to dream of them in their sleep.[4]
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Early recordings
"Dream a Little Dream of Me" was recorded by Ozzie Nelson and his Orchestra, with vocals by Nelson in New York City, on February 16, 1931,[3] for Brunswick Records.[1] Two days later, Wayne King and His Orchestra, with vocals by Ernie Birchill, recorded the song for Victor Records.[3] "Dream a Little Dream of Me" was also an early signature tune of Kate Smith.[5]
In the summer of 1950, seven recordings of "Dream a Little Dream of Me" were in release, with the versions by Frankie Laine and Jack Owens reaching the US top 20 at respectively numbers 18 and 14: the other versions were by Cathy Mastice, Ella Fitzgerald with trumpet backing by Louis Armstrong, Louis Jordan, Vaughn Monroe, Dinah Shore and a duet by Bob Crosby and Georgia Gibbs. Other traditional pop acts to record "Dream a Little Dream of Me" include Louis Armstrong, Barbara Carroll, Nat King Cole, Doris Day, Joni James, and Dean Martin.[2][3]
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The Mamas & the Papas version
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"Dream a Little Dream of Me" was recorded for the Mamas & the Papas April 1968 album release The Papas & the Mamas with lead vocals by Cass Elliot. The group had often sung the song for fun, having been familiarized with it by member Michelle Phillips, whose father had been friends with the song's co-writer, Fabian Andre,[1] in Mexico City where Michelle Phillips' family had resided when she was a young girl.[2] The song was recorded after the group heard about Andre's death; Philips recalled: "It was very shocking...we had never thought about [the song] again until we were all sitting around that day discussing his death, when we started to pick out the song...to see if we could remember the lyrics to it.[2]
"Mama" Cass Elliot suggested to group leader John Phillips that the group record "Dream a Little Dream of Me". According to him, she was unhappy while recording the song, objecting to its 'campiness'.[citation needed] However, Elliot herself would later tell Melody Maker: "I tried to sing it like it was 1943 and somebody had just come in and said, 'Here's a new song.' I tried to sing it as if it were the first time."[7] On the recording, Cass is heard in the intro speaking in the background behind the acoustic guitar, mentioning a drink, and then Phillips gives an introduction ("And now, to sing this lovely ballad, here is Mama Cass."), as Cass clears her throat. Cass did her own whistling, which is heard before the song's fade.
By the time of the album's release, there were strong indications that the Mamas & the Papas were set to disband, a perception strengthened by the failure of their recent single, "Safe in My Garden". Having an opportunity to promote the group's best-known member as a soloist, Dunhill Records gave a June 1968 single release to the "Dream a Little Dream of Me" track with the credit reading—to John Phillips' displeasure[8]—"Mama Cass with the Mamas & the Papas"; on the UK release, the artist credit simply read "Mama Cass". Promoted in the US press and on billboards with a photograph of a discreetly, but obviously, nude Elliot lying in a bed of daisies,[9] "Dream a Little Dream of Me" was their last major hit, peaking at #12 on the Billboard Hot 100 that August (its Cash Box peak was #10 and in Record World it reached #8). The Billboard Easy Listening chart ranked the single as high as #2.[10]
In the UK, "Dream a Little Dream of Me" reached #11 that September; the track also afforded Mama Cass a hit in Ireland (#13) and South Africa (#8). In Australia the Go-Set Top 40 chart ranked "Dream a Little Dream of Me" at #1 for the weeks of 4 & 11 September 1968,[11][12] and was the 16th biggest hit of 1968.[13]
A slightly different version of the song, with a different and longer intro and outro, was included on Elliot's debut solo album, Dream a Little Dream.[9]
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Smothers Brothers Appearance
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Cass Elliot appeared on the Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour September 29, 1968. She performed "Dream A Little Dream Of Me" while in a bed with Tommy Smothers who is fooling around, trying to fall asleep and jolting awake and mugging for the camera. The video of the song has gotten over 2.4 Million views on You Tube.
Following a fashion retailers' TV commercial, "Dream a Little Dream" was released as a single in Europe in 1992 – credited to the Mamas & the Papas and featuring that group's #1 hit "Monday, Monday" as the B-side – to reach #5 in Germany and #22 in Switzerland.
Chart performance
Certifications
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Anita Harris version
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Anita Harris' version of "Dream a Little Dream of Me", recorded at Olympic Studios in a session produced by Mike Margolis with Alan Tew as musical director, was released 26 July 1968, the week prior to the US Top 40 debut of the Cass Elliot version. Harris would deny deliberately covering Elliot's "Dream a Little Dream of Me": (Anita Harris quote:)"I [loved] the song on the Mamas & Papas album...so I decided to record it...There were [then] no plans to release the other version [in the UK]. It was rushed out [here] when it was known that my version was coming out." Cass Elliot herself would deny any awareness of the UK single release of Harris' version.[7]
Elliot's version had its UK release the week subsequent to Harris', with both versions debuting in the UK Top 50 dated 10 August 1968, Harris' version at #46 ahead of the Cass Elliot version at #49. However, the Elliot version would vault into the Top 30 and then Top 20 over the next two weeks while the Harris version would never reach the Top 30, although Harris's version of "Dream a Little Dream of Me" would maintain a lower chart presence throughout the ascendancy of the Elliot version, with Harris's single peaking at #33 the week after Cass's peak at #11.[26]
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Enzo Enzo version
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In 1990, "Dream a Little Dream of Me" was covered in French-language with new lyrics by singer Enzo Enzo under the title "Les Yeux ouverts" (transl. French for "With Eyes Open"). Adapted from the original version by Brice Homs and Kurin Ternovtzeff, it was released in the first quarter of 1991 as the first single from the debut album Enzo Enzo, on which it is the third track, and became the well-known adaptation of the original song in this language.[27]
Reception
A review in Pan-European magazine Music & Media praised the song stating: "Keep your eyes wide open, sings this French singer. Better keep your ears wide open, too, listening to cool jazz of this high calibre".[28] Retrospectively, in 2021, Nathalie Lacube of French magazine La Croix wrote that "the singer's caressing voice and intimate phrasing worked wonders" on this song.[29]
In France, the single debuted at number 49 on the SNEP chart edition of 23 March 1991, reached number 18 eleven weeks later and stayed in the top 50 for a total of 15 weeks.[30] It charted for five non-consecutive weeks on the pan-European Hot 100 Singles compiled by Music & Media, peaking at number 87 on 8 June 1991.[31] It was a moderate hit in Quebec, peaking at number 44 with a three-week chart run.[32]
Track listings
- "Les Yeux ouverts" – 3:23
- "Chanson confidentielle" – 3:42
- CD maxi[36]
- "Les Yeux ouverts" – 3:23
- "Chanson confidentielle" – 3:42
- "14e étage" – 3:16
Charts
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Robbie Williams version
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English singer-songwriter Robbie Williams recorded "Dream a Little Dream of Me" (retitled "Dream a Little Dream") for his tenth studio and second swing album, Swings Both Ways (2013). While the album version is a duet with Lily Allen, she was omitted from the single version, which was released on 13 December 2013 as the album's second single.
Music video
The video features Williams singing the song whilst presenting a Christmas show in the style of The Dean Martin Show.
Track listings
- Irish digital download[39]
- "Dream a Little Dream" – 3:10
- German, Swiss, and Austrian digital download[40]
- "Dream a Little Dream" (single version) – 3:11
- "You Got Old" – 3:43
- "Puttin' on the Ritz" (remix) – 2:18
Charts
Release history
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References
Notes
External links
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