"My Old Flame" first appeared in the 1934 film Belle of the Nineties when it was sung by Mae West, backed by the Duke Ellington Orchestra.[1] Six weeks after filming wrapped with West, Ellington recorded the tune with singer Ivie Anderson,[2] released on Commodore 585.[3] It became a No. 7 hit for Guy Lombardo later that year but it was not until the early 1940s that the tune re-emerged, entering the repertoire of the orchestras of Benny Goodman and Count Basie.[2]
The music has an AABA structure.[7] It is written in the key of G major, and features a change to B♭ in the 'B' section.[7][8]
As a vehicle for West, while the lyric contains "characteristically flippant lines โ 'My old flame/ I can't even remember his name' โ it suggests that her brazen sexuality is the carapace for a lost youthful love": 'But their attempts at love/ Were only imitations of/ My old flame'.[9]
^Townsend, Peter (2007). Pearl Harbor Jazz: Change in Popular Music in the Early 1940s. University Press of Mississippi, Jackson. p. 140. ISBN978-1-57806-924-8.
^Furia, Philip; Patterson, Laurie (2010). The Songs of Hollywood. Oxford University Press. pp. 120โ121. ISBN978-0-19-533708-2.