Vincent Youmans

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Tea For Two 00:00 Tools
Tahiti Trot 03:32 Tools
Flying Down to Rio 02:46 Tools
Flying Down to Rio: Music Makes Me 02:46 Tools
Shostakovich: Tahiti Trot, Op. 16 (Orchestration of "Tea for Two") 02:46 Tools
Vincent Youmans: Tahiti Trot 03:33 Tools
Tea for Two (12/27/1937 - Paris) 03:33 Tools
Tea for Two: No, No, Nanette: Tea for Two 03:19 Tools
Through the Years 02:01 Tools
Without a Song 04:30 Tools
Orchids In The Moonlight 03:11 Tools
Tahiti Trot (Arr. Dmitri Shostakovich) 04:01 Tools
My Heart Alone 01:36 Tools
It's Every Girl's Ambition 04:28 Tools
Carioca 03:05 Tools
You're In Love 03:02 Tools
Hit the Deck!: Hallelujah 03:02 Tools
Tea For Two - Redbook Stereo 03:02 Tools
Shostakovich: Tahiti Trot, Op. 16 (after "Tea for Two" from the Vincent Youmans' musical "No, No, Nanette") 02:45 Tools
Tea for Two - 1988 Remastered Version 02:45 Tools
Should I Be Sweet? from Take A Chance, 1933 - Vocal 02:45 Tools
More Than You Know 05:50 Tools
Tahiti Trot (Tea for Two), Op.16 04:30 Tools
Hallelujah 03:19 Tools
Tea For Two - Trio Version 03:19 Tools
No, No, Nanette: Tea for Two 05:28 Tools
I Want to Be Happy 03:19 Tools
Tea For Two - Binaural Stereo 03:19 Tools
Time on My Hands 02:45 Tools
FLYING DOWN TO RIO - Flying Down To Rio (1933) 05:28 Tools
Sometimes I'm Happy 08:50 Tools
No, No, Nanette: Tea for Two (arr. H. Frommermann) 05:50 Tools
I Know That You Know - Redbook Stereo 05:50 Tools
The Carioca 03:26 Tools
Tahiti Trot (after Tea for Two) 03:33 Tools
Tea for Two (No, No, Nanette, 1925) 02:45 Tools
More Than You Know (arr. G. Svensson) 02:45 Tools
Great Day: Without a Song 02:45 Tools
I Know That You Know 02:45 Tools
I Know That You Know - Binaural Stereo 02:45 Tools
Tea for Two (from No, No Nanette) 03:33 Tools
Tahiti Trot (Tea for Two), Op. 16 02:45 Tools
Hit the Deck!: I know that you know 03:33 Tools
Smiles: Time on My Hands 03:26 Tools
Tea For Two/Honeysuckle Rose 03:26 Tools
Without a Song (From "Great Day") 03:32 Tools
Song of the West: The One Girl 03:33 Tools
Bambalina 03:33 Tools
Youmans: Tahiti Trot 03:33 Tools
No, No, Nanette - Original Broadway Cast: I Want to Be Happy 03:33 Tools
Tahiti Trot (Tea for Two) 03:32 Tools
More Than You Know (from the musical 'Great Day') 03:32 Tools
No, No, Nanette - Original Broadway Cast: Overture 03:32 Tools
No, No, Nanette - Original Broadway Cast: Tea for Two 03:32 Tools
Great Day 03:32 Tools
Flying Down to Rio: Carioca 02:26 Tools
Song of the West: West Wind 02:26 Tools
Carioca (from the film 'Flying Down To Rio') 03:33 Tools
No, No, Nanette - Original Broadway Cast: Tea for Two (Dance) 03:33 Tools
Tea for Two (arr. S. Asmussen and U. Neumann) 02:26 Tools
Youmans / Arr Harris: Tea for Two 02:26 Tools
I Want to Be Happy (Ruby Braff & Roger Kellaway) (feat. Irving Caesar) 02:26 Tools
No, No, Nanette - Original Broadway Cast: Take a Little One-Step 02:26 Tools
Youmans: No, No, Nanette, Act 2: "Tea For Two" (Nanette, Tom) 02:26 Tools
I Want to Be Happy (Fox-Trot) 02:26 Tools
Music Makes Me 02:26 Tools
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Vincent Youmans (September 27, 1898 - April 5, 1946) was an American popular composer and Broadway producer. Vincent Millie Youmans was born in New York City on September 27, 1898 and grew-up on Central Park West on the site where the Mayflower Hotel once stood. His father, a prosperous hat manufacturer, moved the family to upper-class Larchmont, New York. Youmans attended the Trinity School in Mamaroneck, NY and Heathcote Hall in Rye, New York. Originally, his ambition was to become an engineer and attended Yale for a short time. He dropped out to become a runner for a Wall Street brokerage firm before he was drafted to fight in World War I. He took an interest in the theatre when he produced troop shows for the Navy. After the war, he was a Tin Pan Alley song plugger for the TB Harms Company and then as a rehearsal pianist for famed composer Victor Herbert’s operettas. No, No, Nanette was the biggest musical-comedy success of the 1920s in both Europe and the USA and his two songs "Tea for Two" and "I Want to Be Happy" are considered standards. From 1927, Youmans also produced his own shows. He had another major success with Hit the Deck! (1927; including ‘Hallelujah’), but his subsequent productions were failures, though many of their songs remain popular. His last contributions to Broadway were some songs for Take a Chance (1932). Youmans collaborated with the greatest songwriters on Broadway: Herbert Stothart, Otto Harbach, Oscar Hammerstein II, Irving Caesar, Anne Caldwell, Leo Robin, Clifford Grey, Billy Rose, Edward Eliscu, Edward Heyman, Harold Adamson, Mack Gordon, Buddy De Sylva and Gus Kahn. He collaborated with lyricist Ira Gershwin on the score for Two Little Girls in Blue, which won wide acclaim. His next show, with lyrics by Otto Harbach and Oscar Hammerstein II, was Wildflower. His most enduring success, however, was No, No, Nanette, with lyrics by Irving Caesar. Youmans’s early songs are remarkable for their economy of melodic material: two-, three- or four-note phrases are constantly repeated and varied by subtle harmonic or rhythmic changes. In later years, however, apparently influenced by Jerome Kern, he turned to longer musical sentences and more free-flowing melodic lines. Youmans was forced to retire in 1934, after a professional career of only 13 years, only returning to Broadway to mount the ill-fated extravaganza The Vincent Youmans Ballet Revue (1943), an ambitious mix of Latin-American and classical music, including Ravel's Daphnis and Chloe. Choreographed by Leonide Massine, it lost some $4 million. More than any of his contemporaries, he made constant re-use of a limited number of melodies; he published fewer than 100 songs, but 18 of these were considered standards by ASCAP. He died of tuberculosis in Denver, Colorado. At his death, Youmans left behind a large quantity of unpublished material. In 1970, Youmans was inducted into the Songwriter's Hall of Fame. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.