"I Get A Kick Out Of You" - Karaoke Track - In The Style Of - Frank Sinatra

Details
Title | "I Get A Kick Out Of You" - Karaoke Track - In The Style Of - Frank Sinatra |
Author | jollyjuke |
Duration | 3:24 |
File Format | MP3 / MP4 |
Original URL | https://youtube.com/watch?v=hCc-RnjdKXM |
Description
"I Get a Kick Out of You" is a song by Cole Porter, which was first sung in the 1934 Broadway musical Anything Goes, and then in the 1936 film version. Originally sung by Ethel Merman, it has been covered by dozens of prominent performers, including Frank Sinatra, Dolly Parton, and Ella Fitzgerald. A cover by Mel Tormé won the 1996 Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Arrangement with Accompanying Vocal(s) for arranger Rob McConnell, while a duet version by Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga was nominated for three awards at the 2022 ceremony, including Record of the Year.
The lyrics were first altered shortly after being written. The last verse originally went as follows:
I get no kick in a plane
I shouldn't care for those nights in the air
That the fair Mrs. Lindbergh goes through
But I get a kick out of you.
After the 1932 Lindbergh kidnapping, Porter changed the second and third lines to:
Flying too high with some guy in the sky
Is my idea of nothing to do
In the 1936 movie version, alternative lyrics in the second verse were provided to replace a reference to the drug cocaine, which was not allowed by Hollywood's Production Code of 1934.
The original verse goes as follows:
Some get a kick from cocaine
I'm sure that if
I took even one sniff
That would bore me terrif-Ically, too
Yet, I get a kick out of you
Porter changed the first line to:
Some like the perfume from Spain
Frank Sinatra recorded both pre-Code and post-Code versions (with and without the cocaine reference): the first in 1953 and the second in 1962. On a recording live in Paris in 1962 (not released until 1994), Sinatra sings the altered version with the first line as "Some like the perfume from Spain". Other Porter-approved substitutions include "whiff of Guerlain." There is also a version with the lines "Some like the bop-type refrain, I'm sure that if I heard even one riff..." on Sinatra and Swingin' Brass.
Information sourced through Wikipedia. Backing track by "Definitive Karaoke Ltd".