According to the lyrics, a renowned trumpet player from
Chicago,
Illinois is drafted into the
U.S. Army but is reduced to blowing the
wake-up call (reveille). Restrained from playing boogie-woogie, he is depressed until the captain empathizes and drafts other musicians. The bugler now plays reveille in his own style, with a positive effect on the rest of the company.
Creation
Abbott and Costello's first starring film for
Universal pictures, Buck Privates, was designed to capitalize on the
Selective Training and Service Act of 1940. The studio added the Andrews Sisters, who were also under contract, for musical relief, and hired
Don Raye and
Hughie Prince to compose songs for the film. (The sisters also performed songs written by others in the film.) Raye and Prince had previously composed the hits "Rhumboogie" and "
Beat Me Daddy, Eight to the Bar" for the trio. The songwriters turned in "You're a Lucky Fellow, Mr. Smith"; "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy"; and "Bounce Me Brother, With a Solid Four", while also composing a novelty tune, "When Private Brown Becomes a Captain", for Lou Costello.
"Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" closely follows the template of "Beat Me Daddy, Eight to the Bar", which is about a famous syncopated piano player. However, in its earliest stages, "Boogie Woogie Bugler" (as it was then known) was originally conceived for Lou Costello, but reworked for the Andrews Sisters, while a separate song was composed for the comedian.[4]
Inspiration
Articles published in Stars & Stripes on 19 March 1943, as well as Billboard Magazine and The Christian Science Monitor during WWII claimed that Clarence Zylman of
Muskegon, Michigan, was the original Boogie Woogie Bugler.[5] The song's lyrics agree with several aspects of Zylman's life. Drafted at age 35, Clarence had been performing for 20 years, beginning with Chicago radio station
WBBM and then with several big bands, beginning with Paul Specht and Connie Connaughton, and most recently with the Tommy Tucker Orchestra. He brought his playing style to
England where he was a bugler for an engineer company, playing Taps and Reveille. He eventually was transferred to an army band. Articles in Billboard and The Plain Dealer (
Cleveland,
Ohio) support this, and go on to claim that Clarence was sent to teach other buglers his techniques. However, Clarence Zylman did not enlist in the Army until June 9, 1942, well after "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" was written and recorded. Nonetheless, a sculpture of Zylman as the Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy has been dedicated in his hometown of Muskegon, Michigan, at the LST-393 Veterans Museum. The sculpture was created by artist Ari Norris.[6]
A more likely claimant to the title—though he seldom mentioned it—was Harry L. Gish, Jr. (1922–2005), who recorded with songwriters Raye and Prince. At age 17, after a meteoric rise in the mid-1930s based out of the Ritz Hotel in
Paducah, Kentucky, Gish ventured to
New York City where he appeared (studio only) with the Will Bradley "All Star Orchestra" with highly regarded solos on the Raye-Prince songs "Celery Stalks at Midnight", "Scrub Me Mama With a Boogie Beat" and "The Boogilly Woogilly Piggie". He also performed with the
Olsen & Johnson (of Hellzapoppin' fame) band,
Ray Anthony and was popular in the
Plattsburgh, New York (
Lake Placid) area before returning to
Decca Records in Chicago. He also had a "summer replacement" radio show there for
CBS from WBBM radio.
In the 1980s and 1990s, he honored many requests to play at services for veterans' funerals, and in 1995, in the character of The Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy (still able to fit in his World War II uniform: he enlisted in the
Army Air Corps) he opened the combined service units (
American Legion,
VFW and others) celebration of the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II in
Little Rock, Arkansas, where he opened with "
Reveille" and closed the ceremony with "
Taps."
American actress and singer
Bette Midler included a remake of the song on her 1972 The Divine Miss M album, and released it as the B side of the album's second single, "
Delta Dawn". However, faced with the near-simultaneous release of
Helen Reddy's rendition of Delta Dawn (which would peak at #1 on both the Billboard Hot 100 and Easy Listening charts) on
Long Hard Climb, Midler's singles were quickly flipped, with "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" becoming the new A side.[7] Midler's version peaked at number eight on the
Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in mid-1973, introducing it to a new generation of pop music fans. The single was produced by Barry Manilow. The track was also a number-one single on the BillboardEasy Listening chart.[8]
Chart performance
Weekly charts
Weekly chart performance for "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy"
In 1990, pop/R&B group
En Vogue did a shortened version of the song for their album Born to Sing, rewording it to sound more
urban, i.e. "boogie woogie hip hop boy".
In 2015, Brazilian vocal trio Cluster Sisters recorded the song for their self-titled debut album.
In 2017,
Pentatonix published an a cappella cover of the song as part of their Classics EP. They had previously included a fragment of the song their medley "Evolution of music"
Homage
The song inspired the 1941 cartoon Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy of Company B produced by
Walter Lantz Productions.[21]
The Miami-based girl group
Company B took their name from the song. They recorded their own version of the song in 1989.
In the Sesame Street song "Dance Myself to Sleep", Ernie has Rubber Duckie play the bugle and calls him "The Boogie Woogie Bugle Duck of Sesame Street."
On an episode of A Different World, Whitley, Kim, and Jaleesa dress up in military attire and sing "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" to pay homage to their friend Zelmer (played by
Blair Underwood), who is about to depart for war in the
Persian Gulf.
A first place and $100,000-winning video featured in Season 13 of America's Funniest Home Videos is titled "Boogie Woogie Booger Boy,"[23] a reference to the song's title.
The Simpsons episode "
Catch 'Em If You Can" features an elderly man listening to the song on a 1940s radio that he carries on his shoulder.
Grampa Simpson struts along the beach in Miami as the song plays.
An animatronic toy created by
Gemmy Industries called the "Sing & Swing Bear" sung this song and danced to it.
In May 2015, the movie Pitch Perfect 2 used it as reference to returning to basics and to help the "Barden Bellas" rediscover their original sound.
In episode 14 of the first season of Starz's Outlander, Claire suggests to Murtaugh that they add a song to liven up the dance Murtaugh is performing along the road to attract Jamie's attention. The song she sings is "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," but since it is 1743, Murtaugh has obviously never heard the song. He likes the tune, however, and Claire ends up performing a traditional bawdy Scots song "The Reels o' Bogie" to the tune of "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy."
The adult-oriented stage musical Let My People Come featured the song "The Cunnilingus Champion of Company C". It became the subject of a lawsuit filed by
MCA Music against composer Earl Wilson Jr., and which was decided in favor of the plaintiffs in 1976. The court found that the song, which openly borrows the "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" melody, "could not be construed as a burlesque of plaintiff's work per se", but was merely a "commentary on an era" and therefore was not protected by
fair use. As a result, the defendants were found liable for
copyright infringement.[24]
^Hyatt, Wesley (1999). The Billboard Book of Number One Adult Contemporary Hits. New York City: Watson-Guptill Publications. p. 126.
ISBN0-8230-7693-8.
^Whitburn, Joel (2002). Top Adult Contemporary: 1961–2001. Record Research. p. 170.