User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
croons- third-person singular of croon
Extensive Definition
Crooner is an epithet given to a male singer
of a certain style of popular songs, dubbed pop
standards. A crooner is a singer of popular ballads and thus a "balladeer".
The singer is normally backed by a full orchestra or big band.
Generally, crooners sang and popularized the songs from the
Great American Songbook. Crooner was originally bestowed as a
negative term, and many people given the term, such as Russ
Colombo, did not consider themselves to be crooners. In an
interview, Frank
Sinatra said that he did not consider himself or Bing Crosby
to be crooners.
Evolution
Crooning is a style that has its roots in the
Bel
Canto of Italian opera, but with the emphasis on
subtle vocal nuances and phrasing found in jazz as opposed to elaborate
ornamentation or sheer acoustic volume found in opera houses.
Before the advent of the microphone, popular singers,
like Al
Jolson, had to project to the rear seats of a theater, which
made for a very loud vocal style. The microphone made possible the
more personal style. Crooning is not so much a style of music as it
is a technique in which to sing.
Some crooners, most notably Nat King
Cole, Frank
Sinatra, Dean Martin,
Bing
Crosby or Jean Sablon,
incorporated other popular styles into their music, such as
blues, dixieland and even native
Hawaiian
music. Crooning became the dominant form of popular vocal music
from the late 1920s to the early 1960s, coinciding with the advent
of radio broadcasting and electrical recording. For example,
Bing
Crosby's radio show,
Kraft
Music Hall (1935-1946) was heard by 50 million listeners every
Thursday evening
Decline
After 1954 popular music became dominated by other styles, especially rock 'n' roll, while the music of latter-day crooners such as Perry Como and Matt Monro was recategorized as "easy listening" or "adult contemporary." Crooners have remained popular among fans of traditional pop music, with contemporary performers such as Tony Bennett, Tom Jones, Michael Bublé and Engelbert Humperdinck keeping the form alive. While both male and female singers sang in this style, the term "crooner" is rarely, and improperly, used to describe a female singer.List of famous crooners
Sources
- Michael Pitts and Frank Hoffman. The Rise of the Crooners (Scarecrow Press, 2002).
- Giddins, Gary. "A Pocketful of Dreams" Boston: (Little, Brown and Company, 2001).
- Various Artists. "Fabulous 50's Crooners Sing Their Hard To Find Hits" Ontario: (Hit Parade Records, 2006)
croons in Danish: Crooner
croons in German: Crooner
croons in Spanish: Crooner
croons in French: Crooner
croons in Italian: Crooner
croons in Dutch: Crooner
croons in Norwegian: Crooning
croons in Portuguese: Crooner
croons in Romanian: Crooner
croons in Russian: Крунер
croons in Swedish: Croon