Blue Skies

blueskies

☀️ About the Song

When Irving Berlin dashed off Blue Skies in 1926, he thought he was just writing a filler number for the musical Betsy. Instead, the audience went ballistic and made him take 23 bows on opening night. Not bad for a bloke who couldn’t read music.

Nearly a century later it’s still the gold-standard “everything’s gonna be alright” tune — recorded by everyone from Bing Crosby and Ella Fitzgerald to Willie Nelson and even Disney’s Donald Duck (no, really). It’s been jazzed, crooned, country-fied and swing-ified, but the bones remain the same: a grin wrapped in four chords and a melody so smooth it practically smokes a cigar.

The lyric’s optimism hits different when you realise Berlin wrote it after losing both parents young and clawing his way out of poverty. When he says “Nothing but blue skies from now on,” he’s not being naïve — he’s daring the clouds to try him.


🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips

  • Chords: In C-tuning it sits beautifully around C – A7 – D7 – G7, with a turnaround through E7 – A7 – Dm – G7 if you fancy some jazzy swagger.
  • Strum pattern: Think swing, not march. A loose D – (x) U – U D U where (x) is a muted ghost stroke gives you that Charleston bounce.
  • Tempo: 110–120 bpm — enough pep for a grin but not so fast you spill your martini.
  • Feel: Keep the rhythm buoyant. Tap your heel on 2 and 4; this one’s meant for toe-taps and shoulder shimmies.
  • Jazz spice: Slip in C6 (0000) whenever you’re feeling too square, and end the song on a cheeky Cmaj7 (0002) for that lounge-lizard finish.
  • Vocal tip: Stretch the “Blue ski-i-i-ies…” — it’s showbiz, darling. Give it a wink, not a wail.

🧠 Trivia You Can Drop Casually

  • Blue Skies was the first song ever heard in a talking picture — Al Jolson sang it in The Jazz Singer (1927).
  • Berlin’s own daughter said he whistled the melody nonstop for days before writing the lyrics — apparently to everyone’s mild despair.
  • Ella Fitzgerald’s 1958 version (on Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Irving Berlin Song Book) is considered definitive; she basically turned it into vocal champagne.
  • Willie Nelson’s 1978 country cover hit #1 on the Billboard country chart — proof that great songs survive genre whiplash.

🌈 Final Word

Play Blue Skies like you’ve just found a tenner on the pavement and the sun came out at the same time.
Keep your swing loose, your grin wide, and finish with that lazy Cmaj7 smile.
If nobody near you starts humming along by the second chorus, check their pulse.


Album:Betsy (Broadway Musical, 1926)Year:1926Artist:Key:CDifficulty:Intermediate Download PDF
Song Sheet (PDF)
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