You Do Something to Me (Cole Porter song)
1929 song written by Cole Porter
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"You Do Something to Me" was the first number in Cole Porter's first fully integrated-book musical Fifty Million Frenchmen (1929). In the original production, the song was performed by Genevieve Tobin and William Gaxton, performing the roles of Looloo Carroll and Peter Forbes, respectively.
| "You Do Something to Me" | |
|---|---|
| Song by Genevieve Tobin and William Gaxton | |
| from the album Fifty Million Frenchmen | |
| Released | 1929 |
| Genre | Show tune |
| Songwriter | Cole Porter |
Background
There are two verses and two choruses. The song has been described as "a tender prequel" to "Let's Do It, Let's Fall in Love," Porter's first popular song.[citation needed]
Recorded versions
The song has been recorded by artists including:
- The Clicquot Club Eskimos directed by Harry Reser (1929)
- Lena Horne on It's Love (1955)
- Perry Como on So Smooth (1955)
- Bing Crosby recorded the song in 1955[1] for his radio show. It was subsequently included in The Bing Crosby CBS Radio Recordings (1954-56) (Mosaic Records MD7-245, 2009).[2]
- Frank Sinatra on Sinatra’s Swingin’ Session!!! (1961)[3]
- Ella Fitzgerald, on Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Cole Porter Songbook (1956) and Ella à Nice (recorded 1971, released 1982)
- Sinéad O'Connor on Red Hot + Blue (1990)
- Bryan Ferry on As Time Goes By (1999)
- Doris Day
- Johnny Mathis
- Marlene Dietrich
Popular culture
- The phrase "the voodoo that you do so well" is quoted by Hedley Lamarr (Harvey Korman) in the 1974 film Blazing Saddles as he exhorts his gang to attack a frontier town.
- Bette Midler's version of the song plays over the final credits of the 1991 film Scenes from a Mall, which starred her and Woody Allen.
- The "voodoo" phrase is also quoted in the 1993 Salt-N-Pepa song "Shoop".[4]
- A 2011 Paul Krugman editorial in The New York Times was headlined "Do Do that Voodoo". It was about trickle-down economics.[5]