Essential Songs of the Early 1930s

From a commercial perspective, the early 1930s was a time of big bands and crooners, who made gentle, sophisticated sounds. Far below the surface of mainstream music, blues records were being made by Blind Willie McTell, Big Bill Broonzy, and a few others with scary adjectives in their names. The charts were more diverse than one might suspect – African- American performers Louis Armstrong, the Mills Brothers, and Cab Calloway were scoring hits, while The California Ramblers were one of pop music's first integrated bands. Records sales tumbled after the Great Depression, but the popular music of the day rarely reflected society's economic realities. One exception to that was Bing Crosby's "Brother, Can You Spare Me a Dime?," which became a Hoover era soup line catch-phrase.

1930

Fred Waring’s Pennsylvanians, Crying for the Carolines

Hoagy Carmichael, Georgia on My Mind

Leo Reisman and His Orchestra, Happy Days Are Here Again

Charlie Poole, If the River Was Whiskey

Bessemer Melody Boys, Motherless Children

Fred Astaire, Puttin’ on the Ritz

Blind Willie McTell, Razor Ball

Mississippi Shieks, Sitting on Top of the World

Big Bill Broonzy, Somebody’s Been Using That Thing

Ruth Etting, Ten Cents a Dance


1931

Rudy Vallee, As Time Goes By

Ted Lewis & His Band, Dallas Blues

Wayne King, Dream A Little Dream of Me

Louis Armstrong, Lazy River

Cab Calloway & His Cotton Club Orchestra, Minnie the Moocher

The California Ramblers, The Peanut Vendor

Louis Armstrong, Stardust


1932

Louis Armstrong, All of Me

Bing Crosby, Brother, Can You Spare Me a Dime?

The Mills Brothers, Chinatown, My Chinatown

The Mills Brothers, Diga Diga Doo

Duke Ellington, It Don’t Mean a Thing (If Ain’t Got That Swing)

Noel Coward, Mad Dogs and Englishmen

Fred Astaire & Leo Reisman, Night and Day

Louis Armstrong, St. James Infirmary

Bing Crosby, Sweet Georgia Brown


1933

Gene Austin, The Easter Parade

Ginger Rogers, Gold Digger’s Song (We’re in the Money)

The Delmore Brothers, I’ve Got the Big River Blues

Ethel Waters, Stormy Weather

Bing Crosby, You’re Getting to Be a Habit with Me

 

1934

Ginger Rogers, The Continental

Fats Waller, Honeysuckle Rose

Ethel Merman, I Get a Kick Out of You

Jimmy Durante, Inka Dinka Doo

Patsy Montana, Montana Plains

Memphis Jug Band, Memphis Shakedown

Pinky Tomlin, The Object of My Affection

Sons of the Pioneers, Tumbling Tumbleweeds

Freddy Martin Orchestra, What A Difference A Day Makes

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