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An Entity of Type : wsb:Classic_Song, within Data Space : wasabi.inria.fr associated with source document(s)

AttributesValues
type
sameAs
has title
  • Moon River
Subject
  • 1961 singles
  • 1961 songs
  • Johnny Mathis songs
  • Pop standards
  • Willie Nelson songs
  • Andy Williams songs
  • Aretha Franklin songs
  • Bobby Vinton songs
  • Barbra Streisand songs
  • Frank Sinatra songs
  • Grammy Hall of Fame Award recipients
  • Grammy Award for Song of the Year
  • Judy Garland songs
  • Grammy Award for Record of the Year
  • NHK Kōhaku Uta Gassen songs
  • Rod Stewart songs
  • Songs with lyrics by Johnny Mercer
  • UK Singles Chart number-one singles
  • Westlife songs
  • Perry Como songs
  • Jay and the Americans songs
  • Connie Francis songs
  • Best Original Song Academy Award winning songs
  • Trini Lopez songs
  • Louis Armstrong songs
  • Eartha Kitt songs
  • 1960s jazz standards
  • Ben E. King songs
  • Bobby Darin songs
  • Dick and Dee Dee songs
  • Jerry Butler songs
  • Jim Reeves songs
  • Paul Anka songs
  • R.E.M. songs
  • Songs with music by Henry Mancini
  • The Killers songs
abstract
  • %22Moon River%22 is a song composed by Henry Mancini with lyrics written by Johnny Mercer. It received an Academy Award for Best Original Song for its first performance by Audrey Hepburn in the 1961 movie Breakfast at Tiffany's. It also won Mancini the 1962 Grammy Award for Record of the Year and Mancini and Mercer the Grammy Award for Song of the Year. The song has been covered by many other artists.It became the theme song for Andy Williams, who first recorded it in 1961 and performed it at the Academy Awards ceremonies in 1962. He sang the first eight bars at the beginning of his eponymous television show and named his production company and venue in Branson, Missouri after it. Williams' version was never released as a single, but charted as an LP track that he recorded for Columbia on a hit album of 1962. Cadence Records' president Archie Bleyer disliked Williams' version, as Bleyer believed it had little or no appeal to teenagers. Forty years later in 2002, a 74-year-old Williams sang the song at the conclusion of the live telecast of the NBC 75th Anniversary Special to a standing ovation.The song's success was responsible for relaunching Mercer's career as a songwriter, which had stalled in the mid-1950s because rock and roll had replaced jazz standards as the popular music of the time. The song's popularity is such that it has been used as a test sample in a study on people's memories of popular songs.Comments about the lyrics have noted that they are particularly reminiscent of Mercer's youth in the Southern United States and his longing to expand his horizons. An inlet near Savannah, Georgia, Johnny Mercer's hometown, was named Moon River in honor of him and this song.
schema:author
  • Johnny Mercer
schema:datePublished
homepage
mo:performer
universally unique identifier
  • 5714dec525ac0d8aee396dde
wikipedia
bpm
mo:duration
isrc
  • USSM16201105
track number
schema:album
wsb:deezer_artist_id
  • 516
wsb:deezer_page
wsb:deezer_song_id
  • 546033
wsb:gain
wsb:has_explicit_lyrics
wsb:language_detected
  • english
wsb:rank
wsb:record_label
  • RCA Records
wsb:recording_description
  • 1961
wsb:title_without_accent
  • Moon River
wsb:youTube_page
wsb:arousal
wsb:has_emotion_tags
wsb:has_social_tags
wsb:valence
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