Harry M. Woods

Harry M. Woods

Known for: Sound
Biography: 1896-11-04
Deathday: 1970-01-14 (73 years old)

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Henry MacGregor "Harry" Woods (November 4, 1896 – January 14, 1970) was a Tin Pan Alley songwriter and pianist. Woods's first songwriting success came in 1923 with the song "I'm Goin' South", written with Abner Silver, which became a hit song in 1924 for Al Jolson. The same year, "Paddlin' Madelin Home" was published, with words & music by Woods.


By 1926, Woods was an established songwriter on Tin Pan Alley and would become legendary with his new song "When the Red, Red Robin (Comes Bob, Bob, Bobbin' Along)". The song was an instant hit for singers such as "Whispering" Jack Smith and Cliff Edwards. It was Al Jolson, though, who had the most success with his recording of the song. The song was recorded in 1953 by Doris Day and again achieved considerable success on the charts.


In 1929, Woods began contributing songs to Hollywood musicals such as The Vagabond Lover, A Lady's Morals, Artistic Temper, Aunt Sally, Twentieth Century, Road House, Limelight, It's Love Again, Merry Go Round of 1938, and She's For Me. In 1934, he moved to London, where he lived for three years and worked for the British film studio Gaumont British, contributing to the films Jack Ahoy and Evergreen.


While Woods usually wrote both words and music for his songs, he also collaborated with Mort Dixon, Al Sherman, Howard Johnson, Arthur Freed, Rube Bloom and Gus Kahn.

Information

Known For
Sound

Gender
Male

Birthday
1896-11-04

Deathday
1970-01-14 (73 years old)

Birth Name
Harry MacGregor Woods

Birth Place
North Chelmsford, Massachusetts, USA

Citizenships
United States of America

Also Known As
Harry MacGregor Woods, Harry Woods

This article uses material from Wikipedia.

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