It's Been a Long, Long Time


"It's Been a Long, Long Time" is a jazz song written by Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn that was a hit at the end of World War II. The lyrics are written from the perspective of a person welcoming home his or her spouse at the end of the war.

Background

The music was written by Jule Styne and the lyrics were written by Sammy Cahn.
A recording by Harry James with vocals by Kitty Kallen reached No. 1 Billboard Hot 100 chart on November 24, 1945. A version by Bing Crosby also charted and replaced James's version at No. 1 on December 8, 1945, to be replaced after a week by Sammy Kaye's "Chickery Chick." The Harry James recording returned to the top spot on December 22 for another week.
Other recordings of "It's Been a Long, Long Time" that charted in 1945 were recorded by Charlie Spivak & His Orchestra with vocal by Irene Daye and Stan Kenton & His Orchestra with vocal by June Christy.
Les Paul recalled in an interview for Mojo magazine, "Bing was a sucker for guitar and that particular song was a case of you don't have to play a lot of notes, you just have to play the right notes."
The song became a jazz standard with versions recorded by The DeMarco Sisters, June Haver and Dan Dailey, Perry Como, Al Hibbler, Peggy Lee, Keely Smith, Louis Armstrong, and Tom Jones. Frank Sinatra sang a version on his radio show that appeared on many compilation albums.

Uses in popular culture

Two different Harry James recordings of the song were used in two films in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, notably as a tragically ironic piece of music representing Steve Rogers/Captain America and love interest Peggy Carter being torn apart by time. The versions with vocals by Kitty Kallen is first used in ', when Nick Fury is hiding in Steve's apartment after an assassination attempt by HYDRA agents in the streets of Washington DC, before he is shot by the Winter Soldier. It is later used at the end of ' when Steve travels back in time and chooses to live out his life with Peggy. The two share a slow dance set to the song with vocals by Helen Forrest, a reference to the dance date Rogers promised Carter right before he was lost in ice for 70 years in .

Other notable recordings

Others who have recorded it include Doris Day, Guy Mitchell, Sammy Cahn, Shelley Fabares, Helen Forrest, Sammy Kaye, The Ink Spots, Tina Louise, Jimmy Roselli, Brook Benton, Rosemary Clooney, Chet Atkins with Les Paul, and Brent Spiner. Pete Fountain offered a performance of the song on his 1966 album "A Taste of Honey."