Goodbye, My Lady Love
Appearance
"Goodbye, My Lady Love" is a 1904 hit popular song written and sung by Joe Howard. The Henry Burr recording of the song was #3 on the charts, and it was a #5 hit for Harry MacDonough the same year. [1][2][3] The song was later used in a 1924 Max Fleischer film called Song Car-Tunes. [4]
References
[edit]- ^ Billboard - Jan 18, 1947 "JOE HOWARD'S GAY NINETIES REVUE (De Luxe 18) A name to reckon with since the gas-lit days of the gay nineties, ... Other everlastings include Saturday Night, Goodbye My 'Lady Love, Honeymoon, Hello Ma Baby, What's the Use of Dreaming..."
- ^ The Complete Entertainment Discography, from the Mid-1890s to 1942 Brian A. L. Rust, Allen G. Debus - 1973
- ^ James Robert Parish, Michael R. Pitts Hollywood Songsters: Garland to O'Connor 0415943337- - 2003 Page 369 "(1947), the fictional biography of 1890s' composer Joseph E. "Joe" Howard (played by Mark Stevens). June portrays an entertainer who performs many of Howard's tunes (the title song, "Honeymoon," and "What's the Use of Dreaming")"
- ^ "GOODBYE MY LADY LOVE". Fleischer AllStars. Retrieved 2024-09-20.