Tom Toce Music

Lyricist and Composer

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  • About
    • Tom Toce Bio
  • Reviews
    • New York Times Review of LIVING STANDARDS
    • New York Sheet Music Society review of Living Standards
    • Stu Hamstra’s review of Living Standards
    • Review of Hopelessly in Love CD by Rob Lester
    • New York Sheet Music Society Review
    • Review of Hopelessly In Love on Bistroawards.com
    • Hopelessly In Love Review in Cabaret Scenes
  • Songs
    • Listen
    • Hopelessly in Love
    • Say You’ll Remember
    • Bye-Bye, Aloha, Yo!
    • Michael’s Song
    • You’re in Love Again
    • That’s What I Like About the Rain
    • You Make Me Laugh
    • The Sweetness in the Air
    • Out of Fashion
    • Got to Learn to Emote
    • The Wrong Man
    • Shalom, Santa
    • Glad We Got Away
    • The Night I Fell In Love With Paris
    • Rid Of You
    • You Believe in Me
    • After All
    • Ask For The World
  • Videos
    • Video Clips from Songwriter in the House
    • Video Playlist from YouTube
    • Video clips from Living Standards
  • Events
    • Songwriter in the House at the Metropolitan Room
    • A Charles Dickens Christmas at Winter Rhythms Festival
    • The Harvard-Yale Cantata at 54 Below!
    • Mister Victor’s Cabaret for Hipsters: Songs of the 1990s at the Laurie Beechman Theatre on June 16th and 17th
    • Living Standards with Marissa Mulder at the Metropolitan Room
    • Hopelessly In Love at the Metropolitan Room
  • CD
    • Retrograde Music releases Songwriter in the House recording
    • Hopelessly In Love CD Release
  • Parodies
    • What’s with all the parodies?
    • Send in the Clams
    • The Ballad of Teddy K
    • To Keep From Being Bored
    • If Paul Would Get Married
    • Marcy the Birthday Chick
  • News
    • Update on the Pandemic Years
    •  Tom Toce Produces Winter Rhythms 2019
    • Tom Toce Produces Winter Rhythms 2018
    • Tom Toce Produces Summer Melodies 2019
    • Tom Toce Produces the Fifth Annual Harvard-Yale Cantata at Feinstein’s/54 Below (September, 2019)
    • Tom Toce Elected as Treasurer of the Board of Directors at TheaterworksUSA
    • Tom Toce Elected to the Board of Directors at Urban Stages: June 2018
    • Sept 2016 – Feb 2017
    • May-August 2016
    • January-April 2016
    • October-December 2015
    • July-September 2015
    • Jan-Jun 2015
    • September-December 2014
    • May – August 2014
    • March – April 2014
    • January-February 2014

If Paul Would Get Married

October 13, 2013 by wpadmin · Leave a Comment

to the tune of If Momma Was Married, by Stephen Sondheim and Jules Styne

A group of us performed this as part of a show at Paul Lazarus’s wedding. Way too many inside jokes to even begin to explain. Most of the song was sung by Paul’s brothers. The second A section was sung by his mother. Actually, someone (Marcy Heisler) playing his mother.

If Paul Would Get Married

If Paul would get married, he’d live in a house–
One wife and a couple of mutts.
Let’s make it our mission to find him a spouse,
‘Cause otherwise, Paul’s gonna drive us all nuts.
Paul ought to get married.

If Paul would get married, I’d not even care
If there were a huppa or not.
I wouldn’t care how and I wouldn’t care where.
Just make it a girl—is that asking a lot?
Paul ought to get married.

Hey, Paul, you don’t need a tux.
We know how you feel.
This wedding stuff sucks.
So, Paul, we’re all saying shucks,
It’s time to get real.
We all like our yuks.

Let’s cut to the crux, Paul, walk down the aisle while you can.
A cane to support you,
And dad to exhort you,
And mother to cook and to plan.
Oh, please Paul,
I’ll be your best man!

Filed Under: Parodies ·

What’s with all the parodies?

October 13, 2013 by wpadmin · Leave a Comment

A lot of lyricists write parodies, especially when they’re learning to write lyrics. It’s fun, and when they’re good, people like them and they’re fun to sing at parties and such. I made a little splash with my first parody, Send in the Clowns, which I wrote when I was in college. Maury Yeston was my music theory professor and mentor, and he got me Stephen Sondheim’s address and encouraged me to send it to him. Steve loved it, and played it for lots of his friends, and encouraged people to sing it in nightclubs. More than twenty years after I wrote it, Steve still referred to it as his favorite, and he has seen many, many parodies of that song. You can’t make money off parodies (unless they’re in something like Forbidden Broadway), and you have to be careful, because you can’t violate the copyright of the underlying authors. But if you’re just writing and performing them for fun, well, they’re fun!

Filed Under: Parodies ·

To Keep From Being Bored

October 13, 2013 by wpadmin · Leave a Comment

a parody of To Keep My Love Alive, by Rodgers and Hart

For his 70th birthday in 2000, I wanted to write a parody for Stephen Sondheim, worthy of the ones he had written for others, most especially The Saga of Lenny, for Leonard Bernstein’s 70th birthday. Steve displayed my parody of Send in the Clowns on his bulletin board in his office, and I wanted him to add another. There are a lot of inside jokes here. Sondheim and Bernstein used to play anagrams to relieve the tension during the creation of West Side Story. Steve told me that Lenny could never beat him, except once, a few weeks before he died. Steve said it may have hastened his death. The breaking harmonicas line is an anagram joke (hah-hah), because Steve had used harmonicas-maraschino in an old cryptic puzzle clue. There are other obscure references, too, but it’s hard to explain them all! Anyway, I sent the parody to Steve, there being no occasion when I could actually sing it to him, and he wrote me back, thanking me, and telling me he hung it next to Send in the Clams!

To Keep From Being Bored

No reprises, no sequels, no prequels, no dice!
Steve Sondheim would never do anything twice.
The reason’s quite simple–he’s got to move on.
And so even right now, he’s suppressing a yawn . . .

He’s written many shows–a ton of them.
Repeat himself, he does in none of them.
In fact, we hear he chose each one of them
To keep from being bored.

It’s basically he finds anxiety
More stimulating than propriety.
His jones is that he craves variety,
To keep from being bored.

They say that Steve’s competitive.
Well, here’s another take.
He might just need adrenaline
To keep himself awake.

This song is part homage and part attack.
The tune may not be all that smart a tack.
We figured he would need a Hart attack
To keep from being bored.
To keep from being bored.

A lyricist of such precocity,
A prisoner of curiosity,
Will usually evince verbosity
To keep from being bored.

In retrospect it makes you sick you let
Maria be as damned articulate
As any Ivy League matriculate,
To keep from being bored.

Said Lenny, “Let’s play anagrams.
I’m second best to none.”
True, Lenny did play very well,
And once he even won.

Through Gypsy, Forum, and a Whistle-stop.
The critics wonder when all this’ll stop,
This constant metamorphosis’ll stop.
To keep from being bored.
To keep from being bored.

Oh, do a show that hasn’t got a plot.
A movie–oy–with such a lot of plot.
And in-between you smoke a lot of pot
To keep from being bored.

The record shows you’ve done one spooky one.
And here’s the final count: one kooky one.
And Jesus, even one Kabuki one,
To keep from being bored.

Seurat had possibilities.
That’s mother’s milk to Steve.
A guy who breaks harmonicas
Has lots more up his sleeve.

Some fairy tales, Assassins, Passion, too.
My God, the things that folks put cash into.
And if they flop, well, it’s the fashion to,
To keep from being bored.
To keep from being bored.

The Young Turk’s turning seventy.
Astonishing but true.
The output of your inner quest–
It all still seems so new!

One figures that in any song for you,
A sentimental end rings wrong for you.
The message is, in short, we long for you
To keep from being bored.
Keep US from being bored!

Filed Under: Parodies ·

The Ballad of Teddy K

October 13, 2013 by wpadmin · Leave a Comment

a parody of The Ballad of Sweeney Todd, by Stephen Sondheim

Having enjoyed my parody of Send in the Clowns, a music publisher asked me if I could parody another Sondheim song. It was 1980, and Teddy Kennedy was driving everyone crazy over his inability to commit to running, or not running, for President.

The Ballad of Teddy K

Attend the tale of Teddy K.
His hair is wavy and slightly gray.
He’d be the Democrats fav’rite son
If only someone’d convince him to run.
He plays a game that few can play,
Does Teddy K.,
The younger brother of J. F.

To win support would not be hard.
His party holds him in high regard.
He has the power to take the crown
From President Carter or Governor Brown.
Relinquished on a silver tray,
To Teddy,
To Teddy K.,
The younger brother of J. F.

Raise your banner high, Teddy.
Hold it to the skies.
Be a friend to those who tend to
Idolize!

Attend the tale of Teddy K.
He won’t say yes and he won’t say nay.
He’s got the charm, he’s got the wealth,
He’s got a proposal for national health.
Then through the nose we all can pay
For Teddy,
For Teddy K.,
The younger brother of J. F.

Filed Under: Parodies ·

Send in the Clams

October 13, 2013 by wpadmin · 2 Comments

a parody of Send in the Clowns, by Stephen Sondheim
sung by a disgruntled diner

Send in the Clams

Isn’t it quiche?
What’s this—a pear?
I ordered Chateaubriand,
Medium rare.
Send in the clams.

Something’s amiss.
I don’t approve.
How can I put in my mouth
These things that move?
And where are the clams?
Send in the clams.

You brought me beer
From foreign shores,
Actually knowing the one that I wanted was Coors.
I ordered dinner tonight,
The usual fare.
You lost my clams,
And don’t seem to care.

Don’t you like tips?
Or can’t you hear?
You thought that I’d eat what you’d eat?
Sorry, my dear.
Send in the clams.
There ought to be clams.
Well, maybe next year.

Isn’t it quiche?
Isn’t it queer?
Losing my appetite for
Dinner, I fear.
And where are the clams?
Quick, send in the clams.
Oh, don’t bother—they’re here.

Filed Under: Parodies ·

New York Sheet Music Society Review

October 7, 2013 by wpadmin · Leave a Comment

NYSMS.NWSLTR-2013-10

Hopelessly in Love: The Lyrics of Tom Toce

Saturday, June 8, 2013

By Jerry Osterberg

To paraphrase one of Tom Toce’s most delightful songs, the words ‘You Make Us Smile’ are surely consistent with the lyricist’s intention. But Tom also made us laugh, recall sweet memories, and, perhaps more than anything else, feel. His magnificent creations are filled with tenderness, love, joy, heart, and are capable of bringing an audience to tears.

And so it was that NYSMS members had the good fortune of being present at a private performance of a well- received production that had graced the stage of the Metropolitan Room several times during the 2012-2013 cabaret year. Although this was not the only time that one of our directors has produced a show just for us, it must certainly be one of the few instances when a member presented his own program of superb music.

When one appreciates the number of composers Tom Toce has written with, and the exceptionally qualified singers on stage: Carole Bufford, Jack Donahue, Jennifer Sheehan and Hilary Gardner, in addition to excellent musicians such as Musical Director Matthew Martin Ward, bassist Boots Maleson, and the program’s Director, Peter Napolitano, the entertaining afternoon was a virtual music hall revue.

The entire company opened with two numbers “Listen” (Zina Goldrich) and “Hopelessly in Love” (Douglas J. Cohen), making for a lively, bouncy beginning in which Carole, Jack and Jennifer traded lines back and forth while achieving some gorgeous harmony. Jennifer’s first solo “Say You’ll Remember” (Peter Millrose), conveyed a warmth and wistfulness that was touching. Having heard her sing “You Make Me Laugh” (Shelly Markham) on three occasions, accompanied by her fantastic smile, I can’t imagine anyone else doing this audience pleaser much better. In “The Wrong Man” (Douglas J. Cohen), with a “Tara’s Theme” introduction by Mathew Martin Ward, Jennifer’s character imagines her life as if it were a movie, perhaps one by Hitchcock, but more likely starring Peter Lorre rather than Cary Grant.

Jack Donahue, who has personality to spare, got to perform “Michael’s Song” (David K. Israel), a Broadway style show-stopper if there ever was one, building to a dramatic crescendo that stilled the room. His best performance, without a doubt, was “After All” (Kim Oler), a romantic tear-jerker tale of a man speaking to his lover, reminding her What really matters is the life I share with you. Jack’s rendition was clearly a tour de force. For something completely different, he sang “Got to Learn to Emote” (Jeff Lazarus), a hysterical West Indian type tune, which allowed the audience to participate (as if they could have resisted) whenever the line sha la la la appeared. The audible foot tapping might have easily migrated to a Conga line!

Carole Bufford, a natural comedienne, was joined by the entire crew in “Bye-bye, Aloha, Yo!” (Jeff Lazarus). Her very amusing persona was a perfect match to the lyrics. There were moments when the presentation had the feel of a Big Band number from the 1940’s. Further along the spectrum, Carole demonstrated that she also has the wherewithal to put over a formidable ballad in “Rid of You” (Allan Garb), about a smart woman who survives a breakup and comes back with more confidence than she had before. Carole returned to her forte with a hilarious “Shalom, Santa” (Douglas J. Cohen), who as “Margaret Guggenheim Kelly” told us ‘My daddy is a lapsed Catholic and my mamma is a cultural Jew.

The remarkably talented Hilary Gardner made a special guest appearance, performing “The Night I Fell in Love With Paris,” with words and music by Tom Toce, a sweetly romantic tune with the potential of reaching the star status of a cabaret and recording standard. The lovely song, perhaps more personal to the songwriter than not, has all the sensitivity of a gentle lullaby. It was beautifully rendered by Ms. Gardner. Throughout the entire program were several excellent examples of effective harmony, enhanced from time to time by Matthew Martin Ward and Boots Maleson, two of the most talented and sought-after musicians in the business. The last song “Ask for the World,” (Tom Toce), was performed in that same vein. The inspired arrangement provided a strong foundation for the cast to underscore the meaning of the lyrics most effectively.

All and all, it was a wonderful way to end another successful season. It’s gratifying to realize that there are busy and talented creative artists in our midst like Tom Toce. And how could the NYSMS not feel good about the fact that so many excellent performers have given generously of their time so that our members can enjoy a pleasurable Saturday afternoon in New York City? As full- fledged citizens in the world of popular music, we should feel proud that our stage continues to represent one of just a few low- risk venues for aspiring professionals to be heard.

 

Filed Under: Reviews ·

Hopelessly In Love CD Release

September 29, 2013 by wpadmin · Leave a Comment

Out on Amazon!

Hopelessly In Love Cover

Out on iTunes!

Out on AllMusic!

Filed Under: CD ·

Hopelessly In Love at the Metropolitan Room

September 26, 2013 by wpadmin ·

Here are some shots from the Metropolitan Room show…

[easingsliderpro id=”1″]

Filed Under: Events ·

Video Playlist from YouTube

September 25, 2013 by wpadmin ·

Here’s a playlist of videos featuring Tom’s lyrics.

Tom’s You Tube page

Filed Under: Videos ·

Hopelessly in Love

September 25, 2013 by wpadmin ·

Hopelessly in Love appears on

Hopelessly In Love: The Lyrics Of Tom Toce
Featuring Carole J. Bufford, Jack Donahue, And Jennifer Sheehan
with a guest appearance by Jane Monheit

Sung by Carole, Jack, and Jennifer
Music by Douglas J. Cohen

Piano: Matthew Martin Ward
Bass: Boots Maleson

http://www.tomtocesongwriter.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/02.HopelesslyinLove.mp3

Hopelessly in Love

Thoroughly you fell
Drastically as well
Never thought you would but there you go
Humming all day long
Some familiar song
Don’t you know you’re
Hopelessly in love
I’ve been there before
Couple times or more
Frenzied, though your brain says take it slow
Things are going just the way they should
Much too much too good
Man, you know you’re
Hopelessly in love
Take a guy whose surface
Never could be scratched
See the icy surface get outmatched
She was so determined
You were disinclined
Whatever she did, she did
And now you’ve lost your mind
Humming all day long
That familiar song
Little tune to “roon” your status quo
Ain’t the slightest doubt
Brother, you’re found out
Clear as any quasar up above
Radiating
Hopelessly in love
Might as well confess it
Might as well rejoice
Any way you dress it
There’s no choice
For the lucky loser
I’ve some sage advice
Whatever is done is done, and son,
Let’s don’t think twice
Always thought you would
Much too much too good
Better just sit back, enjoy the show
As I mentioned
I’ve been there before
Guess I know the score
Aren’t you feeling
One day like a helpless baby
Next day—like a helpless baby
Could you, to your deep dismay, be
Hopelessly in love

Filed Under: Songs ·

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    Tom Toce Songs

    • Listen
    • Hopelessly in Love
    • Say You’ll Remember
    • Bye-Bye, Aloha, Yo!
    • Michael’s Song
    • You’re in Love Again
    • That’s What I Like About the Rain
    • You Make Me Laugh
    • The Sweetness in the Air
    • Out of Fashion
    • Got to Learn to Emote
    • The Wrong Man
    • Shalom, Santa
    • Glad We Got Away
    • The Night I Fell In Love With Paris
    • Rid Of You
    • You Believe in Me
    • You’re in Love Again
    • After All
    • Ask For The World

    © 2013 Tom Toce | site by jbQ