american history
Music Monday: Hello Central! Give Me No Man’s Land 1918

One hundred, five years, ago…
Hello Central! Give Me No Man’s Land is a World War I era song released in 1918. Lyrics were written by Sam M. Lewis and Joe Young. Jean Schwartz composed the music. The song was published by Waterson Berlin & Snyder, Co. of New York City. Artist Albert Wilfred Barbelle designed the sheet music cover, which features a photo of Al Jolson next to a shadow of a child on the phone. Explosions in No Man’s Land take up the rest of the red background. The song was written for both voice and piano. It was first introduced in the 1918 musical Sinbad.
The song tells the story of a child attempting to call her father in No Man’s Land. She is unable to reach him over the telephone because her father has been killed fighting on the Western Front.
Wikipedia Summary
There is very little else written about this song. When I have gone to the Tsort charts, with these older pieces, I have usually chosen whatever was at the top of the particular chart, for the particular year. This time, I looked, specifically, for this month in 1918. According to (old) US Billboard 1, this song was on the chart for eight weeks. ~Vic
♦ The New York Public Library Digital Collections
♦ Library of Congress
♦ Smithsonian: National Museum Of American History
♦ WorldCat
♦ First World War: Multimedia History (Web Archive)
This entry was posted in Military, Music and tagged 1918, al jolson, albert wilfred barbelle, american history, archive, background, billboard 1, child, cover browser, explosions, internet archive, jean schwartz, joe young, july 24, library of congress, lyricist, multimedia, national museum, new york, new york city, new york public library, no man's land, piano, red, sam m. lewis, sheet music, sinbad, smithsonian, telephone, tsort, tsort charts, voice, waterson berlin & snyder co., web archive, western front, wikipedia, worldcat, WW I, WWI, youtube.