Tomorrow Night
( F d7 g7 C7/x3 F Cis* g7 C7 )
F F7 B7 b
Tomorrow night will you remember what you said tonight
C7 F7 B7 F7 C7
Tomorrow night will all the thrill be gone
F F7 B7 b
Tomorrow night will it be just another memory
C7 F7 B7 F F7
Or just another lovely song that's in my heart to linger on
C7 F C7 F7 Fis7-G7-Gis7-A7
Your lips are so tender your heart is beating fast
d7 G7 C7 Cis7-C7
You'll willingly surrender tell me darling will it last
F F7 B7 b7
Tomorrow night will you be with me when the moon is bright
C7 F B7 F7 C7
Tomorrow night will you say those lovely things you said tonight
solo( F F7 B7 b7 C7 F d7 g7 C7 F F7 B7 b7 C7 F B7 F F )
C7 F C7 F7 Fis7-G7-Gis7-A7
Your lips are so tender your heart is beating fast
d7 G7 C7 Cis7-C7
You'll willingly surrender tell me darling will it last
F F7 B7 b
Tomorrow night will you be with me when the moon is bright
C7 F B7 F7 C7 F7
Tomorrow night will you say those lovely things you said tonight
solo( F F7 B7 b7 C7 F d7 g7 C7
F F7 B7 b7 C7 F d7 g7 Cis7*-C7* F d7 g7 Cis7*-C7* F d7 g7
Cis7*-C7* F )
D7 Cis7* C7* B7 b7 d7
Sam Coslow (December 27, 1902 - April 2, 1982) was an American songwriter, singer and film producer. Coslow was born in New York City. He began writing songs as a teenager. He contributed songs to Broadway revues, formed the music publishing company Spier and Coslow in 1928 and made a number of vocal recordings.
With the explosion of film musicals in the late 1920s, Hollywood attracted a number of ambitious young songwriters and Coslow joined the exodus in 1929. Coslow and his partner Larry Spier sold their publishing business to Paramount Pictures and Coslow became a Paramount songwriter. One of his first assignments for the studio was the score for the 1930 film The Virtuous Sin. He formed a successful partnership with composer Arthur Johnston and together they provided the scores for a number of films including Bing Crosby vehicles.
Coslow became a film producer in the 1940s and won the Academy Award for Best Short Film for his production Heavenly Music in 1943. He was married to actress Esther Muir from 1934 to 1948, and they had a daughter Jacqueline Coslow, who also worked as an actress. He died in New York City.
Wilhelm Grosz (August 11, 1894 – December 10, 1939) (aka Hugh Williams) was an Austrian composer, pianist and conductor.
Wilhelm Grosz was born in Vienna. He studied music with Franz Schreker and Guido Adler. In 1921 he was appointed conductor of the Mannheim Opera, but returned to Vienna in 1922, where he worked as a pianist and composer. From 1927 he was the artistic manager of the Ultraphone Gramophone company in Berlin. In 1933 he became conductor of the Kammerspiele Theater in Vienna.
Forced to flee his native land because of the Nazi takeover, Grosz resettled in England in 1934. However, he found little interest there for his avant garde musical style. Luckily, he was able to apply a considerable melodic gift to setting the lyrics of popular songs, some of which became international successes. Most of his most popular titles were written with lyricist Jimmy Kennedy: „Harbour Lights,” „Red Sails in the Sunset,” „When Budapest Was Young,” and „Isle of Capri.”
Grosz's classical compositions include three operas, two ballets, incidental music for three plays, scores for a number of films, orchestral works, a Symphonic Dance for piano and orchestra, chamber music, piano pieces and songs.
Afrika-Songs, a song cycle for two vocal soloists and chamber ensemble, was first performed in 1930. It utilizes texts by Afro-American poets, mainly Langston Hughes, and a strongly blues-flavored sound. Both Afrika-Songs and a selection of the pop tunes, along with other of Grosz's works, were recorded in the mid-1990s by Decca Records, are part of their series called Entartete Musik (subtitled „Music Suppressed By the Third Reich”).
He died in 1939 in New York City.