For today’s WAW spin‑off from Something to Live For, the logical landing point — at least for me — is the 1938 Johnny Mercer–Harry Warren tune Something Tells Me.
It had a surprisingly busy little year, popping up across labels, bands, and even an animated operating room.
Fats Starts the Conversation
Fats gives it that patented sly, side‑eye delivery — but he’s not mocking the song. He’s just letting it wink.
Bluebird Brightness: Jan Savitt & Bon Bon
Recorded just after Fats but released a bit earlier was the Bluebird entry by Jan Savitt and his Top Hatters, featuring George “Bon Bon” Tunnell:
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: Bon Bon was one of the best band vocalists of the era!
Kay’s “Sassy” Sully Session
Maybe it’s my imagination, but it always sounds like Kay introduces him as “Sassy” Sully Mason.” Sully is a prime example of one of my favorite side characters — the sax‑section guy with a fun nickname who steps up to the mic for a novelty vocal!
Sweet Bands and Bell Music
Even more gimmicky than Kyser’s late‑’30s outfit were Bert Block and his Bell Music, who cut the tune for Vocalion with Bill Johnson singing:
These late‑1930s sweet bands have a charm all their own — a kind of earnest, slightly sugary optimism.
Decca Doubles: Will Osborne & Louis Armstrong
Those wonderfully slurpy trombones are pure period flavor too!
Satch gives the song a little grit and credibility after all that sweetness while still keeping it fun.
Across the Pond: Silvester Steps In
Silvester made mountains of dance‑oriented records, and you can practically see a couple quick‑stepping across a parquet floor to this one.
A 1938 Time Capsule
The song didn’t travel far beyond its debut year, but it remains a delightful artifact — a snapshot of how a mid‑tier pop tune could ripple across labels, bands, and styles in the late ’30s.
Warehouse Whispers
You’d think a Johnny Mercer–Harry Warren song published by Warner Bros. would’ve come from a movie. Something tells me it was probably part of a stack of tunes written by the pair — some destined for films, some left to float around the publishing department.
But all was not lost: The tune did find a second life in several Warner Bros. cartoons, most notably 1938’s The Daffy Doc:
Recognizing popular songs in Carl Stalling’s scores for Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies never stops being a thrill — like catching a familiar face in a crowd of animated chaos!

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