Shoo Shoo Baby (song)

The song was made famous by The Andrews Sisters,[1] as they sang it in the 1943 film Three Cheers for the Boys.

Their version features a jazzy vocal pop arrangement typical of the time, with a key hook provided by the horns, and has appeared on many compilation albums of 1940s music.

The R&B girl group Mis-Teeq covered the song for the soundtrack to the Vanguard Animation film Valiant in 2005.

A version of the song by an uncredited male singer is played over a radio at the Heavenly trial of the airman in the 1946 film A Matter of Life and Death as a symbol of modern America.

An additional Shoo was added when its captain completed a tour of duty during WW2; the aircraft survived the war and is on display at the Smithsonian, in Washington, D.C. [4] There was also a B-24 named for this song.

B-24 named Shoo Shoo Baby