Sneha Girap (Editor)

Noël Regney

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Noel Regney


Role
  
Songwriter

Noel Regney image1findagravecomphotos200875253223271205

Died
  
December 2, 2002, Brewster, New York, United States

Similar People
  
Gloria Shayne Baker, Harry Simeone, The Singing Nun, Ralph Blane, Katherine Kennicott Davis

Do you hear what i hear no l regney gloria shayne baker live piano performance


Noël Regney (19 August 1922 - 22 November 2002), World War II veteran and French songwriter, composed the Christmas standard "Do You Hear What I Hear?" with his then-wife Gloria Shayne Baker in 1962. Originally from Alsace, France, he moved to New York City and then eventually Connecticut, where he lived out the remainder of his life. He is survived by his three children, Paul, Gabrielle, and Matthieu, and his ex-wife Dominique.

Contents

Noel Regney: "Slovenly Peter & His Friends"


Life and career

Noël Regney httpss3amazonawscomimagessheetmusicdirectc

He was born Léon Schlienger in Strasbourg, Alsace, France. Léon Schlienger, written backwards, is Noël Regnei (-lhcS. dropping "lhcS"replacing i by y). He grew up Catholic, but later became a Unitarian Universalist. He was drafted into the Nazi army despite being a Frenchman like many other "Malgré-nous." As an Alsatian, he spoke the German dialect Alsatian as fluently as French. It is said that he soon deserted, joined a group of French Resistance fighters, and became a double agent working for the French. He led a party of Nazis into an ambush, was shot in the arm, but survived. Eventually, while touring the USA, accompanying Lucienne Boyer, contemporary of Édith Piaf, he met his first wife pianist /composer Gloria Shayne with whom in 1962, he composed the famous Christmas song "Do You Hear What I Hear?"

In addition to "Do You Hear What I Hear?," Regney and Shayne composed "Rain, Rain, Go Away," "Sweet Little Darlin'," and "What's The Use of Crying." He led an ensemble that backed Kay Lande's vocals on For Sleepyheads Only. (1962) He wrote the English lyrics for The Singing Nun (Soeur Sourire)'s famous song "Dominique," the very name of his second wife, Dominique Gillain. Together they had a son Matthieu, born in 1982. Regney wrote the book and music for a musical biography of French writer Colette as well as other musicals: "Merrimount" and " Landsake". He knew the composers Darius Milhaud and Arthur Honegger; studied with Olivier Messiaen; may have studied with Honegger, and worked at Le Lido in Paris. In the mid-1960s, he led a group known as the Noel Regney Singers that released a children's album featuring folk songs in French and English called "Songs that Help You Learn French", which is only available on vinyl records. There was a Spanish-English version as well, but that one is much harder to find.

Noël died on 22 November 2002 in Brewster, New York, of complications from Pick's disease.

References

Noël Regney Wikipedia