Puneet Varma (Editor)

Have Ya Got Any Gum, Chum

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Recorded
  
3 November 1945

Length
  
2:30

Genre
  
Jazz, big-band

Writer(s)
  
Murray Kane

"Have Ya Got Any Gum, Chum?" is a big band jazz song written by Murray Kane in 1944. The music and lyrics were registered in the United States Copyright Catalog on 6 February 1945.

Contents

Recordings

On 8 December 1944, the song was recorded by Fred Waring and His Pennsylvanians. This version, however, was not released until June 1950 when it was included on his Pleasure Time album, released by Decca Records.

In November 1945, it was recorded by the Glenn Miller Orchestra shortly before they disbanded. This version was recorded for a radio broadcast and featured Kane on vocals, backed by The Crew Chiefs. It was recorded the following year by Ray McKinley, with a Billboard review that described the recording as "cute novelty" but with "plain and effective" vocals. McKinley's version was released as the b-side to his version of "We'll Gather Lilacs" from Ivor Novello's Perchance to Dream.

Origin

The song originates from the phrase "got any gum, chum?", which was popular with British children at the time of World War II. Children would shout the phrase at passing American soldiers in an attempt to be given chewing gum or similar rations. In the liner notes to the 1983 compilation In the USA and Europe (Vol. II), Richard C March (then-secretary of the UK-based International Glenn Miller Society) described the song as a "topical period piece" that would not be appreciated by "today's younger generation", but would be understood by those "brought up at the time of sweet rationing".

The lyrics reference a number of gum-related terms, including peptin, Chiclets, Spearmint, Doublemint, and Juicy Fruit.

References

Have Ya Got Any Gum, Chum? Wikipedia


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