Music Composers, Authors & Songs

A reference lookup guide of song / music titles and their composers.

Home Main Menu Singing & Playing Order & Order Info Support Search Voucher Codes



Share page  Visit Us On FB

Previous Contents Next
Warshauer, Frank
524
Everything"; "I Love My Baby"; "Down Argentina Way"; "Clemen­tine"; "Chica Chica Boom Chic"; "I Yi Yi Yi Yi I Like You Very Much"; "A Journey To a Star"; "Plenty of Money and You"; "Don't Say Good­night; "I Had the Craziest Dream"; "I ve Got a Gal in Kalamazoo"; "Chattanooga Choo Choo"; "Therell Never Be Another You"; "My Heart Tells Me"; "This Heart of Mine"; "The More I See You"; "I Wish I Knew"; "In Acapulco"; "Spring Isn't Every­thing"; "Stanley Steamer"; "My One and Only Highland Fling"; ^Coffee Time"; "Every So Often"; "Great Guns"; "Java Junction"; "Legend of Old California"; "Two Hearts Di­vided"; 'Ticket to Tomahawk"; "Me and the Blues." Home: Beverly Hills, Calif. Address: c/o ASCAP.
Warshauer, Frank, composer, author, drummer; b. New York, N.Y., Sept. 4, 1893. ASCAP 1945. Educ: Brook­lyn public schools; in music with father and mother. At ten played in Boys Symph. Orch. Played in vaude­ville, theaters, radio and toured with popular orchestras. Works: "Rainy Day Blues"; "My Cuban Dream ; "Lucky Dog"; "Your Eyes"; "Cuban Holiday"; "It Isn't Fair"; "Mv Ro-sanna"; "Llama Caravan." Author of A Manual for Drum. Home: 211 Beach 91 St., Rockaway Beach, N.Y.
Washburne, Joe, composer, author, conductor; b. Houston, Tex., Dec. 28, 1904. ASCAP 1943. Bass player, vari­ous popular orchestras; organized own orchestra featuring hillbilly music and playing radio networks. Songs: "Jig Time"; "Oh Mona"; "Everybody Calls It Swing"; "I Saw Esau"; "One Dozen Roses"; "That's The Reason"; "At Last I'm First With You"; "Red Grow the Roses"; "She Got the Job"; "Freshen Up"; "Well Sing the Old Songs"; "You Don't Know What Lone­some Is." Home: Tarzana, Calif. Ad­dress: c/o ASCAP.
Washington, Ned, author; b. Scranton, Pa., Aug. 15, 1901. ASCAP 1930. Educ: Technical High School, Scran­ton and Charles Sumner School. Master of ceremonies, vaudeville agent, and writer of special material and sketches. Winner of Box-Office Blue Ribbon Award for best song lyrics of 1940. Appointed Ambassador-at-Large for Scranton, Pa., 1950. Wrote songs and material for Earl CarroWs Vanities; Vanderbilt Revue; Murder At the Vanities; Tattle Tales; Lew Leslie's Blackbirds. Motion pic­tures: A Night At the Opera; Pinoc-chio (Acad. Award); My Foolish Heart; I Walk Alone; TIw Lucky Stiff; The Fabulous Dorseys; Keep 'Em Flyin; Romance in the Dark; The Perfect Gentleman; Show of Shows; Lilies of the Field; Mrs. Mike; Bright Lights; Saludos Amigos; The Hit Parade; Dumbo; Robin Hood of Eldorado; The Big Show; Mexicana; Happy Go Lucky; Brazil. Songs: "My Foolish Heart"; "Can't We Talk It Over"; "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You"; "When You Wish Upon a Star" (Acad. Award); "Someday 111 Meet You Again"; "Stella By Star­light"; "I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance With You"; "Sweet Madness"; "I'll Be Faithful"; "Love Me To­night"; "Singing In the Bathtub"; "Smoke Rings"; "Cosi-Cosa"; "Lazy Rhapsody"; "La Cucaracha"; "Give Me a Heart to Sing To"; "Hello Baby"; "Makin' Faces at the Man In the Moon"; "Don't Call It Love"; "London On a Rainy Night"; "Waltzing In a Dream"; "I Want You for Christmas"; "Someone Stole Gabriel's Horn"; "When I See an Elephant Fly"; "Mad About You"; "Jiminy Cricket." Home: Hollywood, Calif. Address: P.O. Box 1445, Hollywood, Calif.
Watts, H. Grady, composer, author; b. Texarkana, Tex., June 30, 1908. ASCAP 1942. Educ.: Allen Military Acad., Bryan, Tex.; Univ. of Okla­homa, three years. Trumpet player