Irene Kitchings/Wilson/Armstrong/Higginbotham ??
#1
Posted 18 February 2006 - 11:44 PM
BTW, I think Michael Brooks goofs in his liner notes for QUINTESSENTIAL B. HOLIDAY V. 7 (replicated in the complete Columbia box) when he says that Kitchings wrote the lyrics for "Some Other Spring" and that Herzog Jr. wrote the music--Clarke quotes Kitchings herself as saying that Billie took the music Kitchings wrote to Herzog, who added the lyrics.
#2
Posted 19 February 2006 - 12:10 AM
While her closest connection in the popular music of the '30s and '40s was the great jazz singer Billie Holiday, prolific songwriter Irene Higginbotham was also related by blood and marriage to several famous musicians from this genre. The songwriter was the niece of classic jazz trombonist J.C. Higginbotham. She was also the ex-wife of Teddy Wilson
http://jazzclub-overseas.com/tribute_tommy_flanagan/pictures/irene1.jpg
#3
Posted 19 February 2006 - 02:48 PM
marcello, on Feb 19 2006, 12:10 AM, said:
While her closest connection in the popular music of the '30s and '40s was the great jazz singer Billie Holiday, prolific songwriter Irene Higginbotham was also related by blood and marriage to several famous musicians from this genre. The songwriter was the niece of classic jazz trombonist J.C. Higginbotham. She was also the ex-wife of Teddy Wilson
http://jazzclub-overseas.com/tribute_tommy_flanagan/pictures/irene1.jpg
Man, thanks much, Marcello--I had never come across a picture of Irene Kitchings. Well, I'm becoming more & more convinced that Irene H. and Irene K/W are one and the same... wonder where Linda Dahl got the "Armstrong" name? Also, I hadn't thought of Irene H. as a "prolific" songwriter, but I'll have to dig a bit more... she's probably going to take up half of the program at this point.
#4
Posted 19 February 2006 - 03:04 PM
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However, this para contains an inaccuracy: it was Kitchings, not Higginbotham, who co-wrote "Ghost of Yesterday"--unless they are indeed the same person.
Or did Teddy marry two songwriters named Irene? :wacko:
This thread begs for Chris A.'s intervention in at least a couple of ways! ^_^
#5
Posted 19 February 2006 - 03:42 PM
She was always pleasant company--as was Higgy.
#6
Posted 19 February 2006 - 03:44 PM
Christiern, on Feb 19 2006, 03:42 PM, said:
She was always pleasant company--as was Higgy.
Chris, thanks! So she was definitely NOT the former Mrs. Wilson aka Irene Kitchings? Was she J.C.'s sister or niece? Re: your closet, I'm beginning to think you should lease it to Mosaic! :D
#7
Posted 19 February 2006 - 03:54 PM
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:wacko: Chris, I await your historical verdict. What a hash! If they are indeed two different people, then a number of writers on Billie Holiday are incorrect in their references. Even the folks on Yahoo Songbirds haven't been able to sort this one out yet...
#9
Posted 20 February 2006 - 10:56 AM
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and the appearance of this thread spurred me finally to do something
practical about it, i.e. go to the ASCAP site. Alas, only more
frustration. I. Higginotham is there all right, credited with Good
Morning Heartache, This Will Make You Laugh, Are You Living Old Man
No Good Man, and 39 songs I've never heard of. No sign however of
any of the Kitchings songs, nor could I locate them by title. So I
went to BMI and typed in Some Other Spring, which is listed there
but credited to Arthur Herzog and no-one else. I tried again with
Ghost of Yesterday, and here Herzog indeed shares credit with I.
Kitchings who however is listed as NA: No Affiliation. Same with I'm
Pulling Through and with a song I don't remember hearing of before
called What Is This Going to Get Us, and which for some reason is
listed twice. Nothing else under Kitchings at all. So, either
they're two different people (which seems to me likelier, despite
the coincidence of them both being associated with Billie) or when
Higginbotham became Kitchings she left ASCAP but didn't go anywhere
else.
For what it's worth, the Kitchings songs (granting her the
authorship BMI denies her for Some Other Spring) strike me as of
finer quality than the Higginbotham ones.
Robert
#11
Posted 20 February 2006 - 08:45 PM
Christiern, on Feb 19 2006, 03:42 PM, said:
She was always pleasant company--as was Higgy.
Chris, I think I'm closer to solving this, partly on the basis of your post here. Was Irene H. married when you knew her? Was this in New York City?
Donald Clarke, in WISHING ON THE MOON, asserts that the "Irene" who wrote "Good Morning Heartache" is the same Irene who wrote "Some Other Spring" and "I'm Pulling Through." But... he devotes several pages to Irene Wilson/Kitchings earlier in the book, and states that Irene Kitchings moved back to Cleveland (her birthplace), met an Ohio state Youth Commissioner named Elden Kitchings, and married him in 1946. They were together for the rest of their lives; Clarke doesn't say so, but the implication seems to be that they stayed in Ohio.
If the Irene H. you knew was unmarried, or married to somebody else (not Elden Kitchings)... well, I think it's clearer and clearer that they are two different people, and that the similar first names have led to numerous wrong statements about authorship of "Good Morning Heartache" and "No Good Man" (the other Irene H. song recorded by Billie).
#17
Posted 22 February 2006 - 08:58 PM
medjuck, on Feb 22 2006, 07:30 PM, said:
Kitchings-Herzog:
Some Other Spring
Ghost of Yesterday
What Is This Going to Get Us
I'm Pulling Through
(all rec. by B. Holiday for Columbia 1939-40)
Higginbotham:
This Will Make You Laugh (rec. by Nat King Cole and Carmen McRae)
Good Morning, Heartache (co-writer; rec. by Billie for Decca)
No Good Man (co-writer; rec. by Billie for Decca)
Are You Livin' Old Man (co-writer; rec. by Stan Kenton w/Anita O'Day)
Herzog-Holiday:
Don't Explain (rec. by Billie for Decca)
God Bless the Child (rec. by Billie for Columbia and Decca)
All of these will be featured in the program. I've left out the later Verve renditions of some of the above songs, although they were my gateway into Holiday.
#18
Posted 06 May 2007 - 11:35 AM
Christiern, on Feb 19 2006, 04:42 PM, said:
She was always pleasant company--as was Higgy.
I'm working on a feature about Irene Higginbotham. As many of you know David Brent Johnson claims to have solved the riddle of the two Irenes on radio show “Night Lights.” It is a convincing argument.
If they are two separate songwriters, I'm trying to find out what became of Higginbotham. Is she the one who used the pseudonym Glenn Gibson?
The picture with the beautiful Irene in a hat, the one that is circulated on the 'net, is that Higginbotham or Kitchings?
Most history books say she was born in Worcester, MA in 1918. She died in 1988. Does any know where?
#19
Posted 06 May 2007 - 02:10 PM
One of the best sources of info on Kitchings, btw--if you haven't come across it already--is in Sally Placksin's American Women in Jazz.
#20
Posted 15 May 2007 - 05:50 PM
#23
Posted 01 July 2007 - 06:53 PM
chromatic, on May 6 2007, 11:35 AM, said:
Christiern, on Feb 19 2006, 04:42 PM, said:
She was always pleasant company--as was Higgy.
I'm working on a feature about Irene Higginbotham. As many of you know David Brent Johnson claims to have solved the riddle of the two Irenes on radio show “Night Lights.” It is a convincing argument.
If they are two separate songwriters, I'm trying to find out what became of Higginbotham. Is she the one who used the pseudonym Glenn Gibson?
The picture with the beautiful Irene in a hat, the one that is circulated on the 'net, is that Higginbotham or Kitchings?
Most history books say she was born in Worcester, MA in 1918. She died in 1988. Does any know where?
The beautiful Irene in a hat is Kitchings. That's cropped out of a larger picture that shows her sitting with Billie Holiday, Kenny Clarke, and Dorothy Donegan at Cafe Society in 1944 (full picture in Robert O'Meally's LADY DAY book).
I've been corresponding with a woman here in Indiana--Irene K. was her "aunt" (in the close-friend-of-the-family sense). According to this woman's mother, Irene K. always said she was from Muncie, IN. News to me, and I'm hoping to verify.
This post has been edited by ghost of miles: 01 July 2007 - 07:03 PM

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