The 40 songs:- 
              Memory (Cats); Love Me Tender; 
                Edelweiss; For He’s A Jolly Good 
                Fellow; The Star-Spangled Banner; 
                Danny Boy; Auld Lang Syne; 
                Hello Dolly!; Lili Marlene; 
                Somewhere Over the Rainbow; Yesterday; 
                White Christmas; Amazing Grace; 
                Home Sweet Home; Moon River; 
                Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star; 
                Begin the Beguine; God Save the 
                King/Queen; I Don’t Know How 
                to Love Him; Rudolph the Red-Nosed 
                Reindeer; Galway Bay; 
                I Could Have danced All Night; 
                Blue Moon; You Made Me Love You; 
                Silent Night; Beyond the Blue 
                Horizon; Ave Maria; Now 
                is the Hour; Mad Dogs and Englishmen; 
                Falling in Love Again; Happy 
                Birthday; Candle in the Wind; 
                Waltzing Matilda; Send in the 
                Clowns; Greensleeves; 
                The Loveliest Night of the Year; 
                Bali Ha’i; You Don’t Have to 
                say You Love Me; It’s a Long 
                Way to Tipperary. 
                
              Ever wondered how a 
                song originated, the story behind it? 
                Ever wondered whether the music comes 
                before the lyrics or vice versa, 
                or speculated about the people or 
                things that might have influenced the 
                words? Well this intriguing little book 
                offers such information on forty of 
                the world’s best-loved songs.
              
              Beginning with the 
                smash hit song ‘Memory’ from the musical 
                Cats with Andrew Lloyd Webber’s 
                music - pity the rest of the Cats 
                music was so much less distinguished 
                - and lyrics by Trevor Nunn based on 
                T.S. Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book of 
                Cats. We learn about how T.S. Eliot’s 
                poems came to be written and how Lloyd 
                Webber first considered his settings 
                as a concert song-cycle. Nunn was not 
                impressed with the idea and besides 
                there were legal considerations and 
                the Eliot estate was very fussy about 
                who and how the poems were to be set 
                to music. It was not until Eliot’s widow, 
                Valerie Eliot, heard and warmed to Lloyd 
                Webber’s evocative treatment of the 
                cat poems that the idea of a musical 
                with the notion of dancing cats gained 
                momentum. Valerie Eliot also passed 
                on the idea that, in death, cats would 
                travel up to "cat heaven" 
                and a few lines about a once-glamorous 
                cat called Grizabella who was forced 
                to face the loss of her looks. Grizabella 
                gradually became an important part of 
                the Cats story and Elaine Page, 
                the original stage Grizabella, sang 
                the heart rending song, ‘Memory’, as 
                the old cat recalled, at the end of 
                her life, all that had been so joyous 
                in her youth. Incidentally, we also 
                discover that an alternative set of 
                lyrics had been written by Tim Rice 
                but Nunn’s words were chosen. 
              
              At the other end of 
                the book is a very different song, ‘It’s 
                a Long Way to Tipperary’. Apparently 
                one night in 1912 a fishmonger and part-time 
                composer took on a bet that he could 
                write a song the next day and sing it 
                on stage that same night. The bet was 
                for five shillings, a not inconsiderable 
                sum in those days. On the way home he 
                overheard somebody giving directions, 
                "It’s a long way to …" and 
                that phrase stuck in his mind and, for 
                no accountable reason – he had never 
                been to Ireland, the word "Tipperary" 
                came in to his mind and a classic was 
                born. It became extremely popular amongst 
                the troops of the Great War. 
              
              In between there are 
                38 more intriguing stories. An Irish 
                woman, Jane Ross, who collected old-time 
                melodies and folk music, heard and was 
                entranced by a particularly lovely melody 
                and the famous lyricist Fred Weatherley, 
                took out a song lyric that he had never 
                used, from a drawer, and seamlessly 
                applied it to that tune to create ‘Danny 
                Boy’. Weatherley wrote the words for 
                ‘The Holy City’ and the poignant First 
                World War song, ‘Roses of Picardy’ and 
                he had collaborated with the Italian 
                composer, Paolo Tosti in a series of 
                songs. Weatherley also wrote the lyrics 
                for a number of hit songs by Eric Coates. 
                ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ had an interesting 
                story on its way to becoming America’s 
                National Anthem in 1931. The tune was 
                composed by an English musician, John 
                Stafford Smith (1750-1836) who was a 
                choir member of the Chapel Royal and 
                later its organist. The tune was wedded 
                to words by a young American lawyer 
                and poet, Francis Scott Key who had 
                witnessed how the star-shaped Fort McHenry 
                in Baltimore had withstood an English 
                naval bombardment. It will be recalled 
                that the poem begins, "Oh, say, 
                can you see, By the dawn’s early light 
                …" The story of ‘Hello Dolly’ is 
                traced through a 19th century 
                farce A Day Well Spent through 
                Thornton Wilder’s play The Merchant 
                of Yonkers in which the action was 
                moved from Europe to the outskirts of 
                New York with the addition of a strong 
                woman in keeping with the times of women’s 
                emancipation. The play was none too 
                successful and it was not until Tyrone 
                Guthrie took an interest and suggested 
                a re-staging of The Merchant of Yonkers 
                with a considerably expanded role for 
                Dolly Levi plus a re-naming for the 
                play, as The Matchmaker, that 
                the project became successful. The musical 
                Hello Dolly and that song, belted 
                out, most famously in the film version, 
                by Barbra Streisand, followed. It was 
                first sung, in the stage premiere, in 
                1963 by Carol Channing, others who rejoiced 
                in it included: Mary Martin, Betty Grable, 
                Ethel Merman, Dorothy Lamour and Eve 
                Arden.
              
              We also discover how 
                ‘Love Me Tender’ came to be one of Elvis 
                Presley’s greatest hits, how Paul McCartney’s 
                ‘Yesterday’ ‘evolved’ from scrambled 
                eggs, and what Marie Antoinette had 
                to do with ‘For He’s a Jolly Good fellow’! 
              
              
              An intriguing little 
                book that would make an ideal Christmas 
                stocking filler.
              Ian Lace