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Vera Lynn

 
Artist: Vera Lynn

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Evelyn Dall, Ambrose
  • Born: March 20, 1917, London, England
  • Active: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Vocal Music
  • Instrument: Vocals
  • Representative Albums: "The Golden Hits," "We'll Meet Again," "Vera Lynn Collection"
  • Representative Songs: "We'll Meet Again," "White Cliffs of Dover," "Yours"

Biography

The mere mention of Vera Lynn's name evokes images of London skies filled with barrage balloons, and Britons riding out the German blitz in shelters and underground stations. England's sweetheart during the trying times of World War II, Lynn was still in her twenties when she took on that role. She was born Vera Margaret Welch in London's East Ham, to Bertram and Annie Welch, one year before the close of the First World War. She began singing as a girl of seven, also studying dance as a child. She later took her maternal grandmother's maiden name as her stage name, and her natural, unaffected vocal style and charm brought Lynn early success on the radio. At age 18, she was singing with Joe Loss' orchestra, nd she'd also begun recording for the Crown label. By the end of the 1930s, after stints working for Charlie Kunz's and Bert Ambrose's bands, Lynn got her own radio series. This event coincided with the end of what was known as the "Phony War," that period in which men were being conscripted and sent overseas, rearmament rushed, and nightly blackouts imposed, but no shots fired or bombs dropped. The shooting war started in 1940, and it was around that same time that Lynn became the host of the BBC radio program Sincerely Yours; the show became incredibly popular with overseas servicemen who missed their girlfriends, and her regular songs included such hopeful/heartsick ballads as "White Cliffs of Dover," "We'll Meet Again," "Wishing," and "Yours," which were taken to heart by the British public. Her recordings -- now done for Decca Records, which had absorbed the Crown label some years before -- all sold well, and Lynn also made several films during the war years, appeared in a stage revue, and sang for troops in Asia. Her sentimental brand of pop music was regarded as a huge help to morale, and Lynn herself virtually a national treasure.

Within just a few months of the end of the Second World War, Lynn surprised and shocked the public by announcing her retirement. As early as Christmas of 1946 she'd begun a limited return to recording, however, and by the end of 1947 she was working again, touring the variety circuit and gaining another BBC radio program. Decca seized a golden opportunity in 1948 by releasing Vera Lynn material in America during a musicians strike that had crippled the stateside music industry, and Lynn gained a Top Ten hit that year with "You Can't Be True, Dear." And in 1952, she became the first British artist to hit number one on the American charts when "Auf Wiederseh'n Sweetheart" spent nine weeks at the top spot. That same year, Lynn managed an astonishing hat trick back home with the advent of the first singles chart for England -- unveiled in New Musical Express in November of that year -- when her records occupied three of the top 12 positions. Her first (and only) British number one came two years later, with "My Son My Son," and she gradually moved from radio/variety work to television spots during the '50s in order to round out her schedule, recording increasingly contemporary material during the 1960s -- when she left Decca for EMI -- and '70s. She received an OBE from the British crown in 1969, and in 1975 was made a Dame Commander of the British Empire. Though she performed sparingly during the 1980s, she did appear at commemorations for the 40th anniversary of D-Day and the 50th anniversary of the beginning of World War II, and continued to do charity work. In 2005, she also spoke on behalf of veterans of World War II on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of VE Day.

And as it turned out, even in the twenty-first century, 70 years after she'd cut her first records, Lynn's career as a top-selling recording artist was not yet over. In September of 2009, the 92-year-old Lynn became the oldest singer ever to top the British album charts, when a new Decca collection of her World War II recordings, We'll Meet Again: The Very Best of Vera Lynn, hit the number one spot, a doubly extraordinary achievement in light of the reissue of the entire Beatles catalog that same month. It was an occasion noted by news services around the world, and spoke volumes about the love that the British hold for the singer and her music. ~ John Bush & Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Discography: Vera Lynn
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It's Like Old Times [Jasmine]

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Best of Vera Lynn [Spectrum]

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20 Great Songs

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Come Back to Me

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Collection

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Golden Hits

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Some of the Best

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More of the Best

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Forces Sweetheart: 49 Original Mono Recordings 1936-1952

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Encore of Golden Hits

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Wikipedia: Vera Lynn
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Vera Lynn

Vera Lynn at the War and Peace Show, in July 2009
Background information
Birth name Vera Margaret Welch
Born 20 March 1917 (1917-03-20) (age 92)
East Ham, London, England, UK
Genres Traditional Pop
Years active 1935–1995, 2009
Labels UK Decca/London, HMV

Dame Vera Lynn, DBE (born Vera Margaret Welch on 20 March 1917) is an English singer whose career flourished during World War II. Nicknamed "The Forces' Sweetheart", the songs most associated with her are "We'll Meet Again" and "The White Cliffs of Dover".

Contents

Early life

Lynn was born Vera Margaret Welch on 20 March 1917, in East Ham, then in Essex, now part of Greater London. Vera Lynn went to what is now called Brampton Primary School in East Ham. Her father was a plumber and Vera Welch grew up with her parents' Cockney accent, which can still be detected when she speaks. She began singing at the age of seven in a working men's club, and later adopted her grandmother's maiden name for her stage name. Lynn's first radio broadcast was in 1935 with the Joe Loss Orchestra. She was already being featured on the records of dance bands, including those led by Loss and Charlie Kunz. She made her first solo record on the Crown label in 1936, "Up the Wooden Hill to Bedfordshire". (The label was soon bought out by Decca.) After a short time with Loss, she sang with Kunz. Lynn then joined the dance band of Bert Ambrose.[1] She was a very good singer her alboums are still out xx

War years

In 1940, one year after the beginning of World War II, Lynn began her own radio programme, Sincerely Yours, sending messages to British troops serving abroad. She and a quartet would perform songs most requested by the soldiers. Lynn also visited hospitals to interview new mothers and send personal messages to their husbands overseas. During the war years she would tour Egypt, India, Burma, giving outdoor concerts for the troops.

In 1942, Lynn recorded the Ross Parker/Hughie Charles song "We'll Meet Again", also appearing in the film of that name. The nostalgic lyrics ("We'll meet again, don't know where, don't know when, but I know we'll meet again some sunny day") were very popular during the war and became one of the emblematic songs of the war. Contrary to later reports, she neither sang nor recorded the "Rose of England" during this time and it was only in 1966 when her producer, David Gooch, selected it for her album More Hits of the Blitz that she became familiar with it. The album itself was a follow up to Hits of the Blitz produced by Norman Newell.


Post-war career

Lynn's Auf Wiederseh'n Sweetheart became the first record by a British performer to top the charts in the United States, doing so for nine weeks. She also appeared regularly for a time on Tallulah Bankhead's U.S. radio programme, The Big Show. "Auf Wiedersehen, Sweetheart", along with "The Homing Waltz" and "Forget-Me-Not", gave Lynn a remarkable three entries on the first UK Singles Chart, a top 12 (which actually contained 15 songs owing to tied positions).

Lynn remained popular in the 1950s, peaking with "My Son, My Son", a number-one hit in 1954. Lynn co-wrote the song with Eddie Calvert. In early 1960, she left Decca Records after nearly 25 years, and joined EMI. She recorded for EMI's Columbia, MGM and HMV labels. She hit the top 10 on the Billboard Easy Listening chart in 1967 with "It Hurts To Say Goodbye".

Vera is also notable for being the only artist to have a chart span on the UK single and album charts reaching from the chart's inception to the 21st century — having three singles in the first ever singles chart, and most recently having a #1 album with We'll Meet Again — The Very Best Of Vera Lynn (see below).

Honours

Vera Lynn was appointed an Officer (OBE) of the Order of the British Empire in 1959, and a Dame Commander of the Order (DBE) in 1975. In 2000, she received a special "Spirit of the 20th Century" Award.[1] In 1976, vera lynn charity Breast Cancer Research Trust, was founded, with Lynn its chairperson and later its president.[2]

Later years

Lynn sang outside Buckingham Palace in 1995 in a ceremony that marked the golden jubilee of VE Day. This was her last known public performance.

In 2002, at age of 85, Lynn became the president of the cerebral palsy charity SOS and hosted a celebrity concert on its behalf at Queen Elizabeth Hall in London.[3]

The United Kingdom's VE Day Diamond Jubilee ceremonies in 2005 included a concert in Trafalgar Square in which Vera Lynn made a surprise appearance. She made a speech praising the veterans and calling upon the younger generation always to remember their sacrifice and joined in with a few bars of "We'll Meet Again". Following that year's Royal British Legion Festival of Remembrance, Dame Vera encouraged the Welsh mezzo-soprano singer Katherine Jenkins to assume the mantle of "Forces Sweetheart".

In her speech Lynn said, "These boys gave their lives and some came home badly injured and for some families, life would never be the same. We should always remember, we should never forget and we should teach the children to remember."

In September 2008, Vera Lynn helped launch a new social history recording website called "The Times of My Life" at the Cabinet War Rooms in London.[4]

Her autobiography Some Sunny Day was published in August 2009 at the age of ninety-two. She has already written two previous memoirs: Vocal Refrain in 1970, and We'll Meet Again in 1989.[5]

On 18 February 2009, The Daily Telegraph reported that Vera Lynn was suing the British National Party (BNP) for using "White Cliffs of Dover" on an anti-immigration album without her permission. Dame Vera's lawyer claimed sales of the song would earn the BNP money and seemed to link Vera Lynn to the party's right-wing views by association.[6]

On 13th September 2009, Dame Vera became the oldest living artist to make it into No. 1 in the UK album chart, at the age of 92. Her collection We'll Meet Again: The Very Best of Vera Lynn entered the chart at number 20 on 30th August, and then climbed to number 2 the following week, before reaching the top position.[7] In doing this, she beat out the re-mastered Beatles' album of songs.[8] In its third week the album went gold with sales of over 100,000.

Year Album Chart Positions Certifications Sales
UK IRE EU DUT NOR NZ DEN BEL AUS
2009 We'll Meet Again: The Very Best of Vera Lynn[9][10] 1 48 8 83 32 23 28 10 21
  • UK: Gold
  • UK: 100,000+

Personal life

In 1941, Vera Lynn married Harry Lewis (died 1999), a clarinetist and saxophonist she had met two years earlier. They had one child, Virginia Penelope Anne Lewis.[1]

Dame Vera has lived in Ditchling in Sussex since around the early 1960s.[11]

In popular culture

Both Vera Lynn and "We'll Meet Again" feature in Pink Floyd's 1979 album The Wall. They are directly cited in the track "Vera". In the live version of The Wall, Is There Anybody Out There: The Wall Live 1980-1981, "We'll Meet Again" opens the concert before the show starts. It serves as a link between band member Roger Waters and his father, who was killed during World War II. The film The Wall begins with Vera Lynn singing "The Little Boy that Santa Claus Forgot."

Vera Lynn and the words "We'll meet again some day" are mentioned in the Kinks' song "Mr. Churchill Says".

At the end of Stanley Kubricks "Dr. Strangelove-How I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb" a cryptic rendition of "We'll meet again" is played as many nuclear explosions are set off-showing it is the end of the world.

Recordings by Vera Lynn

  • 1935
  • 1936
  • "Heart Of Gold" (Rex Records); "A Star Fell Out Of Heaven" (Rex Records); "Crying My Heart Out For You" (Rex Records); "It's Love Again" (Rex Records); "Did Your Mother Come From Ireland?" (Rex Records): "Have You Forgotten So Soon?" (Rex Records); "Everything Is Rhythm" (Rex Records)
  • 1937
  • "So Many Memories"; "Roses in December"; "When My Dream Boat Comes Home" (Rex Records); "Goodnight, My Love" (Rex Records); "All Alone In Vienna" (Rex Records)
  • 1939
  • 1940
  • 1941
  • "Smilin' Through"; "When They Sound the Last All Clear"; "Yours"; "My Sister and I"; "I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire".
  • 1942
  • "You're in my Arms".
  • 1948
  • 1952
  • 1954 onwards
  • 1967
"It Hurts To Say Goodbye" (1967, US Easy Listening survey, her last US chart record)
  • 1982
  • Albums recorded from 1960 onwards
  • "Yours" 1961
  • "As Time Goes By" 1961
  • "Hits Of The Blitz" 1962
  • "Among My Souvenirs" 1964
  • "More Hits Of The Blitz" 1966
  • "Hits Of The 60's — My Way" 1970
  • "Favourite Sacred Songs" 1972
  • "Christmas With Vera Lynn" 1976
  • "Vera Lynn In Nashville" 1977
  • In March 2007 EMI issued a 2CD set of all Vera Lynn's single only recordings from her EMI contract from 1960 to 1977.

Films

Publications

  • Lynn, Vera (1975). Vocal Refrain. London: W.H. Allen.
  • Lynn, Vera and Cross, Robin (1989). We'll Meet Again. London: Sidgwick & Jackson.
  • Lynn, Vera (2009). Some Sunny Day. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 9780007318155

References

  1. ^ a b c "Vera Lynn Biography". Musicianguide.com. http://www.musicianguide.com/biographies/1608004524/Vera-Lynn.html. Retrieved 2009-10-23. 
  2. ^ "Breast Cancer Research Trust". Breast Cancer Research Trust. http://www.breastcancerresearchtrust.org.uk/. Retrieved 2009-10-23. 
  3. ^ "Dame Vera Lynn Trust for Children with Cerebral Palsy". Dvltrust.org.uk. http://www.dvltrust.org.uk/. Retrieved 2009-10-23. 
  4. ^ "Blessed are The Times of My Life". Response Source. 2008-09-17. http://www.responsesource.com/releases/rel_display.php?relid=LXTXT. Retrieved 2009-10-23. 
  5. ^ "At 92, forces' sweetheart Vera Lynn tells her life story | Books | The Observer". Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/feb/15/vera-lynn-memoirs. Retrieved 2009-10-23. 
  6. ^ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/4687730/Dame-Vera-Lynn-takes-on-BNP-over-White-Cliffs-of-Dover.html
  7. ^ "Entertainment | Dame Vera Lynn re-enters charts". BBC News. 2009-08-31. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/8229842.stm. Retrieved 2009-10-23. 
  8. ^ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/music/music-news/6183988/Dame-Vera-Lynn-becomes-oldest-living-artist-to-have-number-one-album.html
  9. ^ "Vera Lynn — We'll Meet Again — The Very Best Of — Music Charts". Acharts.us. http://acharts.us/album/49129. Retrieved 2009-10-23. 
  10. ^ "Vera Lynn — We'll Meet Again (the Very Best Of Vera Lynn) - Music Charts". Acharts.us. http://acharts.us/album/50877. Retrieved 2009-10-23. 
  11. ^ "Birthday chorus for Forces Sweetheart Dame Vera (From The Argus)". Theargus.co.uk. http://www.theargus.co.uk/search/1273007.Birthday_chorus_for_Forces_Sweetheart_Dame_Vera/. Retrieved 2009-10-23. 

External links


 
 
Learn More
1940s: Music, Memories and Milestones (1988 Music Film)
It's Like Old Times [Jasmine] (1999 Album by Vera Lynn)
Hits of '40 (1993 Album by Various Artists)

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