One of the first recordings of this tune written by Tommy Malie (also co-wrote "Looking At the World Through Rose-Colored Glasses"), Jack Little (also known as "Little Jack Little", a bandleader of some note, who also wrote the classic "I'm
In the Mood For Love") and Dick Finch (not known for anything besides this song). Abe and company recorded this for Brunswick on June 14 of 1924, several years before the Andrews Sisters revived the song in 1941. Charles Kaley does the vocal,
and it's a different sound to his voice on this acoustic side that what people became accustomed to when electric recording began a year or so later. The arrangement starts out as regular dance music and gradually gathers energy toward the end.
This particular copy wasn't played very hard, so some of the natural tone of this unusually well-recorded acoustic side could emerge - there's some bass response on this side, and without distortion at that.