MURFREESBORO — The Center for Popular Music at Middle Tennessee State University
has expanded its internationally recognized collection with the works of songwriter,
arranger and bandleader Joel S. Herron, who teamed with Frank Sinatra to write
one of the crooner's classics, "I'm a Fool to Want You."
The newest
collection, a gift from Herron’s youngest son, Roark Herron, includes
approximately 40 linear feet of business correspondence, scores, arrangements,
contracts, photographs, tapes and other materials from the musician’s
professional life.
Herron, who passed
away in 2012, wrote the music for “I'm a Fool to Want You,” his best-known song.
Sinatra and Jack Wolfe wrote the lyrics.
The 1951 tune,
reportedly reflecting Sinatra’s tumultuous relationship with Ava Gardner, turned
out to be the most famous from his tenure with Columbia Records. The song also
has been covered by Billie Holiday, Dexter Gordon, Chet Baker, Linda Ronstadt,
Shirley Bassey and Tony Bennett, to name a few.
“The center
is delighted to receive this valuable collection and to make it publicly
available for research by scholars and students near and far,” said Dr. Dale
Cockrell, director of MTSU’s Center for Popular Music.
During
his career, Herron copyrighted 118 songs and other musical works and worked
extensively in both radio and television, serving as musical director for “The
Jane Froman Show,” “The Jimmy Dean Show” and “The Jaye P. Morgan Show.”
He led
the Joel Herron Orchestra for many years and performed regularly in clubs and
hotels in the New York City area, headlining at such renowned sites as the
Copacabana Club, the Embassy Club and the Persian Room at the Plaza Hotel.
The Herron family
gift will join works donated by musicians, scholars and collectors ranging from
Grand Ole Opry and Country Radio DJ Hall of Fame member Charlie Walker and former
Music City News editor Everett J. Corbin to the
Charles K. Wolfe Collection and the Tennessee Valley Old Time Fiddlers
Association Collection, just to name a handful.
The Tennessee
Board of Regents established the Center for Popular Music in 1985 as one of 16
Centers of Excellence across the TBR system. The archive and research center promotes
research, scholarship and programs in American music from the early 18th century
to the present day, specializing in specialize in rock and roll and its roots, various
forms of vernacular religious music and the music of Tennessee and the
Southeast.
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