Henry W. Armstrong  | |
|---|---|
| Born | July 22, 1879 Somerville, Massachusetts, US  | 
| Died | February 22, 1951 (aged 71) New York, New York, US  | 
| Occupation(s) | 
  | 
| Instrument(s) | Vocals, piano | 
Henry W. Armstrong (July 22, 1879 – February 28, 1951) was an American boxer, booking agent, producer, singer, pianist, and Tin Pan Alley composer.[1]
Background
His biggest hit was "Sweet Adeline", written in 1903 with Richard H. Gerard.[1][2] His 1905 sentimental ballad "Nellie Dean" became the signature song of the British music hall singer Gertie Gitana,[3] and subsequently a popular British pub song.[4]
Works
- Sweet Adeline (1903)
 - Arabella
 - Dew Drops (1904) instrumental
 - Goodbye Eyes of Blue
 - Follow the crowd on a Sunday (1904)
 - I love my wife, but oh you kids
 - Can't You See I'm Lonely (1905)
 - I'd like a girl like you
 - The Twilight (1905)
 - In the golden autumn days sweet Jennie Ray
 - You're my heart's desire, I love you Nellie Dean (1905)
 - Just a line from Jennie
 - When the Evening Twilight Bids the Day Good-Bye (1906)
 - Miss Dinah
 - Baby Doll (1908)
 - Only a Flower by the Wayside
 - I Could Learn To Love You (1908)
 - Rianza Waltzes- instrumental
 - The Frisco Rag (1909) instrumental
 - A Rose of Plymouth Town
 - Shaky Eyes (1909)
 - Tales the moon could tell
 - Slip your glad rags on and come with me (1910) *When you have time and money
 - The Chimes (1912)
 - When you've won the only girl you love
 
References
- 1 2 Songs About Kisses and Kissing. ParlorSongs, September 2003. The Parlor Songs Association.
 - ↑ Spaeth, Sigmund (December 1945). "Two Sweet Songs". The Rotarian.
 - ↑ Power, John C (26 May 2009). "BBC - Stoke & Staffordshire - People - Gertie Gitana". BBC. Retrieved 2009-07-30.
 - ↑ Harrowven, Jean (1977). The origins of rhymes, songs and sayings. Kaye & Ward. p. 306. ISBN 978-0-7182-1267-4.
 
External links
- Free scores by Henry W. Armstrong in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki)
 - Free scores by Henry W. Armstrong at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
 - List of works
 - Harry Armstrong at IMDb
 
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