Everybody Loves My Baby


"Everybody Loves My Baby", also known as "Everybody Loves My Baby, but My Baby Don't Love Nobody but Me", is a popular and jazz standard song composed by Spencer Williams in 1924. Lyrics were written by Jack Palmer.
One important early recording was by the young Louis Armstrong with Clarence Williams' Blue Five on November 6, 1924, New York, NY.
Released as a single: "Everybody Loves My Baby " – Okeh 8181. Featuring: Williams, Clarence ; Taylor, Eva ; Armstrong, Louis ; Thompson, Aaron ; Bailey, Buster ; and Christian, Buddy. Before this recording, Armstrong won a vaudeville night at the Roseland Ballroom singing and playing this tune. Another popular recording in 1925 was by Aileen Stanley.
The song remained popular for decades and continues to be performed regularly in the 21st century.

Other notable recordings

The opening phrases of the song's lyrics are featured in a fine early Langston Hughes poem, "The Cat and the Saxophone, 2am", about a couple's interactions at a jazz club in the 1920s.
It is sung in Series 3, Episode 1 of Jeeves and Wooster.
It is played in the background of the film Cat's Meow, which tells the story of the mysterious death of Thomas H. Ince aboard the yacht of William Randolph Hearst.
It is sung onstage in Season 4, Episode 7 of Boardwalk Empire.

Grammar notes

The song is often sung by a woman about her man, but the lyrics are adaptable enough that either a man or a woman may sing it.
The song title has frequently led teachers and students of predicate logic to jestingly accuse the song's narrator of narcissism: The first half of the title, "everybody loves my baby," implies "my baby loves my baby." The second half, "my baby loves nobody but me", is logically equivalent to "if my baby loves a given person, then I am that person." The latter statement implies "if my baby loves my baby, then I am my baby." From "if my baby loves my baby, then I am my baby" and "my baby loves my baby" it follows that "I am my baby."