Corner Pocket
"Corner Pocket" is a 1955 jazz standard. Versions with lyrics are titled "Until I Met You", or "Until I Met You (Corner Pocket)".
It was composed by Freddie Green, with lyrics by Donald E. Wolf.[1]
Recordings
The song was first popularized by Count Basie's instrumental recording for his album April in Paris; a vocalese version of this performance earned a Grammy Award for The Manhattan Transfer. (The vocalese lyrics are by Jon Hendricks[2], although he is not credited on either Mecca for Moderns or Anthology: Down in Birdland.
Harry James recorded a version on his 1976 album The King James Version.
gollark: But food can't be *that* energetically expensive to digest or it wouldn't work as food.
gollark: Well, that's digestion, not eating.
gollark: Celery.
gollark: I assume it's negligible, they're light and you just have to move your limbs a bit of distance.
gollark: I suppose if you do that a *lot*, you probably reach a point where you can't eat cereal bars rapidly enough.
See also
References
- "Until I Met You (Corner Pocket)". Jazzstandards.com. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
- "The Manhattan Transfer". The Vocalese Page. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
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