Love for Sale (song)


"Love for Sale" is a song by Cole Porter introduced by Kathryn Crawford in the musical The New Yorkers which opened on Broadway on December 8, 1930 and closed in May 1931 after 168 performances. The song is written from the viewpoint of a prostitute advertising "love for sale".

Early versions

The song's chorus, like many in the Great American Songbook, is written in the A-A-B-A format. However, instead of 32 bars, it has 64, plus an 8-bar tag. The tag is often dropped when the song is performed. The tune, like many of Porter's, shifts between a major and minor feeling. The A section is in the key of B-flat minor before modulating to B-flat major and back.

Background

When the song came out in 1930, a newspaper labelled it as 'in bad taste'. Radio stations avoided broadcasting it.
Because of the complaints, Porter shifted the setting of the song in the musical to the Cotton Club in Harlem where it was sung by an Afro-American Elisabeth Welch instead of a white singer Kathryn Crawford.
Popular recordings in 1931 were made by Libby Holman and by Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians.

Notable recordings

It is also widely recorded as a jazz standard. Notable instrumental versions included those by Sidney Bechet, Erroll Garner, Charlie Parker, The Three Sounds, Art Tatum, Cannonball Adderley, Dexter Gordon, and Cecil Taylor. There is a version of the song by Hal Kemp's Orch. & The Smoothies, 1940