Broadway Records

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Broadway Records has been the name of three otherwise unrelated American record labels:

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"The Man I Love" is a popular standard with music by George Gershwin and lyrics by his brother Ira. Part of the 1924 score for the Gershwin musical comedy Lady, Be Good, the song was deleted from that show and put into the Gershwins' 1927 government satire Strike Up the Band, which closed out-of-town. It was considered for, then rejected from, the 1928 Ziegfeld hit Rosalie.

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"Honeysuckle Rose" is a 1929 song composed by Fats Waller with lyrics by Andy Razaf. It was introduced in the 1929 Off-Broadway revue "Load of Coal" at Connie's Inn as a soft-shoe dance number. Waller's 1934 recording was inducted in the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999.

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Broadway Records is an American record label focusing on cast albums from Broadway and Off-Broadway musical theatre, new studio recordings and single-artist albums and new albums no one else would publish. They are an off-shoot of The Broadway Consortium, which has been responsible for Broadway revivals of Godspell, Evita and Porgy and Bess, as well as new shows such as Frank Wildhorn and Don Black's Bonnie and Clyde.