User:Eurodog/sandbox281
Appearance
Jack Gale and Ada Kurtz.
- Jack Gale, in 1963, founded a distributing company.[1]
- Re: Ada Kurtz, Jack's wife
- Re: Ada Kurtz
- Re: Ada Kurtz
- Ada Kurtz, co-composer with Sammy Gallop, of "Somewhere Along the Way"
- Ada Kurtz's pseduonyms:
- Ted Johnson, lyricist
- Kurt Adams, music
- Ada Kurtz's pseduonyms:
- Ada Kurtz was an aunt of Larry Rosen (1936–2020), a producer of The Partridge Family TV sitcom.
Ada Kurtz songs
[edit]- "Even As You and I"
John L. Clark, words
Ada Kurtz, music
© Spitzer Songs, Inc., New York
11 May 51; EU238643 - "More Than I Care to Remember"
From Honey Child (Honeychile)[2]
Matt Terry, words
Ted Johnson (pseudonym of Ada Kurtz), music
© Spitzer Songs, Inc., New York
30 October 1950; EP219944
Renewed 5 January 1978; RE114
OCLC 498687754 - "More Than I Care to Remember"
Matt Terry, words
Ted Johnson (pseudonym of Ada Kurtz), music
© Spitzer Songs, Inc., New York
29 December 1950; EP52327
Renewed 30 Dec 1977; R682478 - "Oh, How I Love You"
John L. Clark, words
Ada Kurtz, music
© Spitzer Songs, Inc., New York
11 May 1951; EU238644
OCLC 498837686 (all editions) - "Somewhere Along the Way"
Sammy Gallop, words
Kurt Adams, music
© United Music Corp.
28 March 1952; EP61485
Renewed 18 November 1980; RE78547
OCLC 43856846 (all editions) - "In Napoli"
Robert Mellin, words
Carmen Vitale (pseudonym of Ada Kurtz), music
© Robert Mellin, Inc., New York
16 September 1954; EP83342
Renewed 8 March 1982; RE126890 - "When You Pass By"
Kurt Adams (pseudonym of Ada Kurtz), music
Sammy Gallop (pseudonym of Robert M. Mellon), lyrics
© Robert Mellin, Inc., New York
16 September 1954; EP83343
Renewed 15 March 1982; RE125118
- Note: Henry Spitzer (né Henry Morris Spitzer; 1897–1952), head of Henry Spitzer Music, Spitzer Songs, Inc., and Vogue Music, Inc., committed suicide September 21, 1952, by inhaling illuminating gas in his apartment at 333 West 57th Street. Before founding his own publishing firms, he had been long affiliated with M. Witmark & Sons and Chappell Music. Spitzer, in 1933, published the famous song, "Gloomy Sunday" – a song that was blamed for touching off a wave of suicides during the nineteen-thirties. The song's composer, Rezső Seress (1899–1968) – some sources give his birth name as Rudolf ("Rudi") Spitzer – also committed suicide.
Copyrights
[edit]Original copyright
- Vol. 6; Part 5A, No. 1, January–June 1952 (1952). © United Music Corp., New York; 28 March 1952; EP61485. p. 2.
Renewal
- "Somewhere Along the Way" by Ada Kurtz a.k.a. Kurt Adams, lyrics: Sammy Gallop
- By Ada Kurtz a.k.a. Kurt Adams, lyrics: Sammy Gallop. Renewed 18 November 1980; RE78547.
- Copyright Claimant:
- Ada Kurtz (A)
- "Jimmy Van Heusen papers, 1853–1994, bulk 1939–1972". Online Archive of California. OCLC 39623153 – Agreement by Ada Kurtz, a/k/a Kurt Adams, regarding James Van Heusen being the author of "Somewhere Along the Way", July 23, 1963.
Bibliography
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- Cashbox (July 13, 1963). "Cole & Gale Form Distrib for Pubberies' Printed Matter" (PDF). Vol. 24, , no. 44. p. 28. Retrieved December 7, 2020 – via americanradiohistory.com; David Frackelton Gleason (born 1946), Cleveland.
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- Ohmart, Ben (2010). Davis, Lon (ed.). Judy Canova: Singin' in the Corn!. Duncan, Oklahoma: BearManor Media. p. 212. ISBN 978-1-59393-316-6. Retrieved December 15, 2020 – via Google Books.
- "Illinois, Cook County, Birth Certificates, 1871–1949". FamilySearch (free database with images). Searching "Delores Evans," born November 11, 1929, Chicago, Cook, Illinois, Birth Certificate No. 50974, Cook County Clerk, Cook County Courthouse, Chicago. FHL microfilm; Digital Folder No. 100664390; Image No. 00549. 18 May 2016.