From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"At Last" is a 1941 song written by Mack Gordon and Harry Warren for the
musical film
Orchestra
Wives, starring George Montgomery and Ann Rutherford.
It was first performed in the film and on record by Glenn Miller and his
orchestra, vocal by Ray
Eberle and Pat
Friday. The song was a major hit for Miller, reaching number 14
on the Billboard pop charts in 1942,
and it soon became a standard. Nat King Cole recorded it in 1957 on his
number one album Love Is the Thing. In 1960, it
was covered by blues singer Etta James in a
performance that improvised on Warren's melody. James' version was
inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in
1999.[1]
Original and cover
versions
The song was a favorite of Warren's and he would occasionally
draw the melody of the first two bars of the song when signing an
autograph.
The song became James's signature song and was the third in a
string of successful songs from her Chess Records debut album At Last!. Upon the
song's release in April 1961, it became her second number 2 R&B
hit and crossed over to pop radio, reaching number 47 on the Billboard Hot
100. Despite its rather low pop chart standing, the song is
well-known and is still played regularly on oldies radio stations.
In the decades since its release it has been covered by a number
of artists, chronological including Miles Davis, Brenda Lee, Doris Day, Stevie Wonder, Randy Crawford, Ella
Fitzgerald, Diana
Krall and Lou Rawls,
Phoebe Snow, Jimmy Scott, Diane Schuur and B. B.
King, Stevie
Nicks, Eva
Cassidy, Joni
Mitchell, Jason
Mraz, Céline
Dion, The
Temptations, Christina Aguilera, Cyndi Lauper, Michael Bolton,
Martina
McBride, Kenny G feat.
Arturo
Sandoval, Baby Washington, Ben E. King, Norah Jones, Aretha Franklin and Beyoncé
Knowles. The Etta James version is perhaps the most famous, and
is known to be performed at weddings and wedding receptions because of its romantic
lyrics and sweeping orchestration. It was used in the trailer for
the movie Wall-E and is also heard in a scene in
the 1999 movie, Pleasantville.
On January 20, 2009, President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama
danced to various renditions of the song at each of the 10 official
balls honoring his inauguration.
Céline
Dion version
"At Last" was covered by Céline Dion and included on her 2002 album
A New
Day Has Come.[2] Her
version was produced by Humberto Gatica and Guy Roche, and released as
a promotional single in the United States on December 9, 2002.
However, there was no music video made for the song. It was also
the last single released from the A New Day Has Come
album.
"At Last" peaked at number 16 on the Hot Adult Contemporary
Tracks.
A live version of this song was included on the A New Day... Live in Las
Vegas album in 2004, as Dion performed it for four years
during her A New
Day... show in Las Vegas.
Beyoncé
version
"At Last" was also covered by Beyoncé Knowles and included on the
Cadillac Records: Music From the Motion Picture. In the
film, Knowles portrays Etta James. Knowles also sang the song at Barack Obama's first
dance with his wife Michelle during the Neighborhood Ball on
the night of his inauguration as President of the United
States, much to the chagrin of Etta James, who remarked to the
audience at a concert a week later "that woman...singing my song,
she gonna get her ass whupped," and "I can't stand Beyoncé,"[3][4] though
she later told the New York Daily News she "didn't
really mean anything" by her comments.[5] The
event was telecast live on multiple broadcast and cable television
networks. At each of the balls, the Obamas' dance song remained "At
Last."The song is currently Grammy nominated for Best Traditional
R&B Vocal Performance.
Charts
| Artist |
Chart (1961) |
Peak
position |
| Etta James |
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[6] |
47 |
| U.S. Billboard Hot R&B Sides[7] |
2 |
| Artist |
Chart (2002) |
Peak
position |
| Céline Dion |
U.S. Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary
Tracks[8] |
16 |
| Artist |
Chart (2008) |
Peak
position |
| Beyoncé Knowles |
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[9] |
67 |
| U.S. Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs[10] |
79 |
Cultural
references
On the May 10, 2004, series finale of the UPN sitcom The Parkers, Kim Parker (Countess
Vaughn) sings the song following the wedding of her mother
Nikki Parker (Mo'Nique)
and the longtime object of Nikki's affection, Professor Stanley
Oglevee (Dorien
Wilson). Appropriately, the episode is entitled "At Last."
A brief clip of the song (Etta James) is heard on Strong
Arms of the Ma of the TV series, The Simpsons,
when Marge rips the jukebox out of the wall at Moe's Tavern.
The Etta James version is in the 1998 film Pleasantville, appearing in
the score behind the decisive scene when the pink 1950s-era Buick convertible carries the newly
enlightened kids down to the park by the lake in a gentle shower of
pink blossoms.
The song was used in FOX's post-game coverage of Game 4 of the
2004 World Series when the Boston Red Sox ended an 86-year
championship drought.
References
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Celine Dion |
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French
language
studio albums |
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English
language
studio albums |
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| Live
albums |
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Compilations |
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Videography |
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| Tours |
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| Notable
concerts |
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| Related
articles |
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| See also: The Celine Dion portal |
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