"Some of These Days" is a jazz standard written and composed by Canadian songwriter Shelton Brooks in 1910 and first published that year by Will Rossiter in Chicago.[1] The song became an immediate hit in vaudeville and ragtime circles, with its sheet music selling over two million copies during its initial popularity.[2]Most notably associated with Russian-born performer Sophie Tucker, who recorded it in 1911 and adopted it as her lifelong theme song, "Some of These Days" propelled Tucker's career and remained a staple of her act for over 50 years.[3] Brooks drew inspiration for the lyrics from an overheard argument in a Chicago café, capturing themes of romantic regret in a bluesy, torch-song style that resonated widely.[3] Tucker's 1926 Victor recording topped the charts and further cemented its status as a million-selling hit.[4]The song's enduring legacy includes over 500 recorded covers by artists such as Louis Armstrong, Bing Crosby, Ella Fitzgerald, and Billie Holiday, and it has appeared in numerous films like Honky Tonk (1929) and Broadway Melody of 1938.[5] Recognized for its cultural impact, Sophie Tucker's 1911 Edison recording was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1995.[6] Brooks, born in 1886 and later known for other hits like "Darktown Strutters' Ball," saw "Some of These Days" inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2005.[3]
Composition and Lyrics
Writing and Inspiration
Shelton Brooks, born on May 4, 1886, in Amherstburg, Ontario, Canada, was a self-taught musician who developed his skills on the pump organ in his father's church before his family relocated to Detroit, where he immersed himself in vaudeville performances and ragtime piano playing.[2][7] As a Canadian-born African American composer, Brooks toured extensively across the United States, Canada, and Great Britain, establishing himself as a versatile entertainer in the burgeoning vaudeville circuit of the early 1900s.[2]In 1910, Brooks drew inspiration for "Some of These Days" from an overheard conversation at a Chicago restaurant, where a woman angrily remarked to her companion, "Some of these days, you're gonna miss me, honey," capturing a moment of romantic regret and defiant independence that shaped the song's core theme.[2] This personal anecdote fueled the composition, which Brooks crafted as a vaudeville-style piece blending ragtime rhythms with the melodic conventions of early 20th-century popular music.[3]Completed in 1910, the song marked Brooks' breakthrough as a songwriter, serving as his first major hit and reflecting the lively, syncopated influences of ragtime prevalent in Chicago's music scene at the time.[8]
Lyrics and Musical Structure
The lyrics of "Some of These Days," written by Shelton Brooks, revolve around a theme of romantic separation and anticipated regret, narrated from the perspective of a woman addressing her unfaithful or departing lover. The song's verses depict a couple's initial happiness disrupted by the man's sudden decision to leave alone, despite the woman's offer to wait for him, leading to her heartbroken farewell.[9] The chorus warns of his future loneliness, emphasizing her emotional resilience with lines such as "Some of these days, you'll miss me, honey / You'll feel so lonely / You'll miss my hugging, you'll miss my kissing / You'll miss me, honey, when you're away."[9] This structure highlights foreshadowed heartbreak while conveying subtle empowerment through the woman's prophetic voice, an element resonant with early 20th-century vaudeville's portrayal of female agency in love songs.[10]Musically, the song follows the verse-chorus form characteristic of Tin Pan Alley compositions, consisting of two verses leading into a repeating refrain that serves as the emotional core.[10] It is written in 4/4 time at a moderato tempo, with the melody incorporating ragtimesyncopation—off-beat accents that add rhythmic vitality and align with the era's popular influences from African American musical traditions. The original publication is in G major, facilitating its bright, accessible tonality suitable for vaudeville performance.[11] The harmonic foundation relies on a straightforward I-IV-V chord progression, particularly evident in the chorus (G-C-D in the key of G), which provides simplicity and adaptability for later jazz interpretations.[12] This elemental progression, combined with the syncopated melody, underscores the song's enduring versatility without requiring complex orchestration.[13]
Early History and Performances
Publication and Initial Release
"Some of These Days," written and composed by Shelton Brooks, was first published in sheet music format in 1910 by the Chicago-based publisher Will Rossiter. An initial edition appeared from William Foster on July 6, 1910, followed by Rossiter's version on July 25 of the same year. These publications marked the song's commercial debut amid the thriving sheet music industry, which served as the primary vehicle for disseminating popular tunes before widespread phonograph recordings.[10])The song was introduced in vaudeville performances in Chicago during 1910, including by Blossom Seeley, and later by Sophie Tucker at venues like White City Park as part of the city's vibrant entertainment circuit.[14][8]Vaudeville acts helped propel its early visibility, with the format's diverse bills allowing novelty numbers like this one to reach wide audiences in an era of rapid urbanization and leisure expansion. This debut aligned with the pre-World War I boom in American vaudeville, a period when the industry featured thousands of theaters nationwide and fueled the popularity of ragtime-infused popular songs.[3]Upon release, "Some of These Days" garnered moderate success as a ragtime novelty tune, boosted by the era's enthusiasm for syncopated rhythms and accessible sheet music for home pianists. Without formal chart systems—such as Billboard's sheet music rankings, which began in 1913—the song's reception was gauged through performance demand and publisher reports, establishing it as an early hit in Brooks' catalog.[3][10]
Sophie Tucker's Role and Early Recordings
Sophie Tucker, a prominent vaudeville performer known for her powerful voice and bold stage presence, first encountered "Some of These Days" in 1911 through her maid and personal assistant, Mollie Elkins, who arranged a meeting with the song's composer, Shelton Brooks.[15][16] Elkins, previously employed by performer Lillian Lorraine, insisted Tucker hear the tune, leading to its immediate adoption into her repertoire during Chicago shows that year.[15] Tucker debuted the song live in 1911, delivering it with an energetic, brassy style that highlighted its themes of romantic independence and regret, quickly establishing it as her signature piece.[8][15] She performed it for over 50 years, using it as her theme song and even titling her 1945 autobiography after it.[17]Tucker's early recordings of the song further amplified its popularity. Her debut version appeared on an Edison wax cylinder in 1911, capturing her robust vocal delivery and marking one of her first commercial successes.[17] This recording, inducted into the National Recording Registry in 2004, showcased her ability to infuse the bluesy, empowering lyrics with emotional depth and humor.[17] In her initial performances and recordings, Tucker often appeared in blackface—a common vaudeville practice at the time—which she later abandoned, citing discomfort with the disguise and a desire to perform authentically as herself.[15][18]A later recording in 1926, issued on Victor 20092 with accompaniment by Ted Lewis and His Band, became a major hit, reaching number one on the charts for five weeks beginning November 23, 1926, and earning a gold disc.[19] This version retained Tucker's signature energetic interpretation, emphasizing the song's wry empowerment through her full-voiced, theatrical phrasing.[20] The success solidified her nickname, "The Last of the Red Hot Mamas," transforming her from a rising vaudeville act into an enduring icon of early 20th-century entertainment.[15]
Recordings and Covers
Vaudeville and Early Jazz Versions
The song "Some of These Days," composed by Shelton Brooks in 1910, quickly became a staple in vaudeville circuits during the 1910s, where it was performed by headliners in traveling shows to evoke themes of romantic regret through comedic or dramatic staging. Sophie Tucker, who adopted it as her signature tune after performing it in 1910, recorded the first known version in 1911 for Edison Records on a wax cylinder, delivering a vaudeville-style rendition with piano accompaniment that emphasized her powerful, emotive vocals.[21] Other vaudeville performers, including Eddie Cantor and George Burns, popularized the number in live acts throughout the decade, often integrating it into sketch comedy routines that highlighted its bluesy lament over lost love.[22]By the late 1910s and into the 1920s, the song saw broader adaptations in recordings beyond Tucker's orbit, reflecting its growing appeal in popular entertainment. Ted Lewis and His Band, featuring Tucker on vocals, released a remake in 1926 on Columbia Records, which topped the U.S. charts for five weeks starting in late 1926, marking one of the era's biggest hits and demonstrating the song's enduring commercial draw before widespread radio dissemination limited its international reach.[23] This version retained vaudeville flair but incorporated band orchestration, bridging stage traditions with emerging recording culture.The transition to early jazz in the 1920s drew on the song's ragtime-influenced roots—Brooks was a prominent ragtime composer—allowing for improvisational treatments in small ensembles. The Original Dixieland Jazz Band recorded an instrumental take in 1923 for Okeh Records, infusing the melody with syncopated rhythms and collective improvisation characteristic of New Orleans-style jazz, adapting it for clarinet, cornet, and trombone-driven arrangements that emphasized rhythmic drive over vocal storytelling.[24] Such versions highlighted the tune's versatility, transforming its vaudeville sentiment into a vehicle for jazz expression without altering its core harmonic structure.
Mid-20th Century and Later Interpretations
In the swing and big band era of the 1940s and early 1950s, "Some of These Days" saw interpretations that infused the song with orchestral swing rhythms and improvisational flair, moving beyond its vaudeville origins. Bing Crosby's 1932 recording, featuring his signature crooning style backed by Lennie Hayton and his orchestra, exemplified this shift toward polished, ensemble-driven arrangements, though it predated the full swing peak; Crosby's version highlighted melodic warmth and subtle scat elements that influenced later big band covers.[25]Louis Armstrong delivered a trumpet-led instrumental take in 1956 on his album Satchmo: A Musical Autobiography, emphasizing bold brassimprovisation and rhythmic drive characteristic of post-war jazz, transforming the tune into a vehicle for virtuosic solos.[26]Post-war interpretations in the 1950s and 1960s further evolved the song into sophisticated vocal jazz standards, often performed live to capture intimate emotional depth. Billie Holiday recorded a poignant version in 1957 for Verve Records, showcasing her emotive phrasing in the post-war jazz style.[27] Judy Garland incorporated "Some of These Days" into medleys during her 1951-1952 Palace Theatre residency, as heard on live recordings like Judy Garland at the Palace, where her dramatic phrasing and belting style added a theatrical intensity, separate from her film appearances.[28] Ella Fitzgerald's live rendition at the 1973 Newport Jazz Festival, captured on Newport Jazz Festival: Live at Carnegie Hall July 5, 1973, showcased her scat innovations and swinging scat chorus, elongating the melody into a playful yet poignant ballad that underscored the song's enduring appeal in festival settings.[29]Modern revivals from the late 20th century to the present have sustained "Some of These Days" through jazz standards compilations and contemporary homages, often reissuing classic takes alongside new recordings. Ethel Waters' 1927 recording appeared in mid-20th-century reissues, such as those in 1933 Columbia compilations, preserving her blues-inflected warmth for later audiences and bridging early jazz with post-war listening. In 2024, Canadian vocalist Matt Forbes released a music video homage recorded at Capitol Studios, blending retro orchestration with modern production to evoke the song's timeless lament, attracting new listeners via streaming platforms.[30]Over time, interpretations of "Some of These Days" transitioned from the high-energy vaudeville style of its early 20th-century roots to more introspective jazz ballads in the mid-20th century and beyond, emphasizing lyrical regret through varied tempos and improvisations. This evolution is evident in its inclusion as a standard in fake books like The Real Book, where simplified chord charts from the 1970s onward facilitated performances by generations of jazz musicians, solidifying its place in the Great American Songbook.[10][31]
Cultural Impact and Appearances
In Film
The song "Some of These Days" debuted in cinema with the 1928 film Lights of New York, directed by Bryan Foy, which holds the distinction as the first all-talking feature-length motion picture produced by Warner Bros. In a nightclub scene, the tune is performed as part of the film's early sound experimentation, highlighting the transition from silent films to synchronized dialogue and music.[32]Subsequent key appearances underscored the song's vaudeville roots in early Hollywood sound films. Sophie Tucker, for whom the song became a signature number, sang it in the 1929 musical Honky Tonk, where she portrayed a performer in a lively cabaret setting, reprising her stage persona as "The Last of the Red Hot Mamas."[3] The track also featured in Howard Hawks's 1932 gangster classic Scarface, played by Gus Arnheim and His Orchestra during a dance sequence that evokes the era's underworld glamour.[33] In the 1937 MGM musical Broadway Melody of 1938, Tucker delivered a reprise in a theatrical finale, blending her robust style with the film's star-studded revue format.[3] Hawks revisited the song in his 1939 aviation adventure Only Angels Have Wings, where Jean Arthur's character plays it on piano in a South American cantina, adding a layer of casual entertainment amid tense drama.[34] Tucker returned for another performance in the 1944 all-star revue Follow the Boys, singing it in a segment that celebrated wartime morale through nostalgic entertainment.[35]Instrumental and vocal renditions appeared in other pre-World War II features, such as the 1936 MGM operetta Rose-Marie, where Jeanette MacDonald and Gilda Gray perform it in a Klondike saloon scene, contrasting the song's urban jazz origins with frontier motifs.[36] No major film uses of "Some of These Days" are documented after the 1940s, though its enduring popularity suggests potential for revivals in later nostalgia-driven productions.[3]Throughout these appearances, the song often served to underscore themes of nostalgia, romantic regret, and the vibrancy of urban nightlife, particularly in depictions of cabarets and speakeasies that mirrored its vaudeville heritage.[32]
In Literature and Other Media
In Jean-Paul Sartre's novel Nausea (1938), the song "Some of These Days" recurs as a central motif, with protagonist Antoine Roquentin listening to a recording that evokes a sense of existential malaise and the repetitive contingency of existence.[37] The phonograph record, featuring the song's melody, provides Roquentin a fleeting escape from his nausea, symbolizing both the allure of art's transcendence and its ultimate failure to resolve human absurdity.[38] This literary use underscores the song's enduring power as a cultural artifact in modernist fiction, highlighting themes of loss and regret.[39]On television, Sophie Tucker performed "Some of These Days" live on The Ed Sullivan Show on October 12, 1952, delivering a vaudeville-style rendition that showcased her signature raspy voice and comedic flair.[40] The song also appeared in the HBO series Boardwalk Empire (2010–2014), where Kathy Brier's cover was featured in the soundtrack to evoke 1920s Atlantic City authenticity during key scenes of period drama.[41] These appearances reinforced the track's role in visually and narratively capturing early 20th-century American entertainment culture.Beyond literature and television, "Some of These Days" featured prominently in radio broadcasts during the 1930s and 1940s, including Bing Crosby's performances on air in 1931–1933, which popularized it among a mass audience via emerging broadcast media.[42] In modern contexts, the song thrives through countless YouTube covers by jazz and swing artists, such as The Hot Sardines' upbeat rendition, and its inclusion in streaming playlists dedicated to vintage jazz standards.[43] No significant appearances in major video games or commercial advertisements have been documented.As a symbol of early 20th-century Americanpopular culture, "Some of These Days" was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2005, recognizing composer Shelton Brooks's Canadian heritage and the song's foundational influence on jazz and vaudeville traditions.[3]