George Shearing wrote "Lullaby of Birdland" in 1952 for Morris Levy, the owner of the New York jazz club Birdland. Levy had gotten in touch with Shearing and explained that he'd started a regular Birdland-sponsored disk jockey show, and he wanted Shearing to record a theme which was "to be played every hour on the hour." Levy originally wanted his own music to be recorded, but Shearing insisted he couldn't relate very well with it and wanted to compose his own music. They compromised by sharing the rights of the song; the composer's rights went to Shearing, and the publishing rights went to Levy.[1][5]
Shearing stated in his autobiography that he had composed "the whole thing [...] within ten minutes."[1] The chord changes were partly from Walter Donaldson's "Love Me Or Leave Me".[6][7]
Jean Constantin composed the lyrics to a French version, "Lola ou La légende du pays aux oiseaux".[8]
Musical characteristics
"Lullaby of Birdland" is in thirty-two bar form, and its original key was F minor (or A♭ major). The song spends an equal amount of time in both minor and major modes. It follows a I – vi – ii7 – V7harmonic progression, and it has a I – viø7 – iiø7 – V7 minor variation.[9]
Notable recordings
The original single was issued on MGM 11354 - "Lullaby Of Birdland" (Shearing) by The George Shearing Quintet, recorded July 17, 1952.[10]