How popular is the baby name Song in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name Song.

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Popularity of the baby name Song


Posts that mention the name Song

How did Anna May Wong get her name?

American actress Anna May Wong (1905-1961)
Anna May Wong

Chinese-American movie star Anna May Wong was born “Wong Liu Tsong” in Los Angeles in 1905.

Here’s what she had to say about her birth name in 1926:

I was named Wong Lew Song, which means Frosted Yellow Willows. A rather unusual name, isn’t it. Most Chinese children have names, which, interpreted into English, sound rather attractive, though they wouldn’t do for everyday use. They are all right in poetry, but I wouldn’t want to be called Frosted Yellow Willows by my acquaintances. It sounds altogether too quaint for a modern Chinese girl.

Here’s what she had to say about her American name and her stage name in 1928:

I was educated in Los Angeles. […] Our family did not live in the Chinese quarter but on Figueroa Street, where our neighbors were Americans and we were called by our English names. The doctor who brought me into the world named me ‘Anna’; my Chinese name is Tsong. When I was old enough to begin to think about a career, I added ‘May’ to ‘Anna,’ partly because we [daughters] all had four-letter names and I wanted to be different, and partly because it made a prettier signature.

(Her siblings’ American names were Lulu, James, Mary, Frank, Roger, and Richard.)

And, finally, here’s something funny I spotted in a newspaper about the 1924 movie Thief of Bagdad, which featured Wong:

The Mongol slave, a part that required emotional subtlety and balance, was played by Anna May Wong, a Chinese girl, educated in America. Her Chinese name is Lew Wong Song [sic], and means two yellow willows. When the picture was being filmed Miss Wong almost walked out on her job because an enthusiastic press agent misunderstood the translation of her name and published it as “two yelling widows.”

I saw several versions of this “two yelling widows” story, but never managed to track down the press agent’s original mis-translation.

Sources:

Image: Anna May Wong by Eugene Robert Richee, 1937

Musical baby names: Harper, Piper, Harmony, Melody

musical notes

Looking for baby names with musical associations?

Here are a few ideas (plus links to each name’s popularity graph):

  • Adagio, a musical term meaning “at ease” in Italian
  • Aria, a solo sung (with orchestral accompaniment) in an opera
  • Bell, a percussive instrument
  • Brio, a musical term meaning “vivacity” in Italian
  • Cadence, the final chords in a musical phrase
  • Calypso, a type of Caribbean music
  • Calliope, a keyboard instrument
    • The mother of bandleader Harry James played a circus calliope.
  • Carol, a type of festive song
  • Celesta, a keyboard instrument
  • Chanson, a lyric-driven French song
  • Chord, a harmonic set of three or more notes
  • Clarion, a medieval brass instrument
  • Coda, the concluding section of a piece of music
  • Dolce, a musical term meaning “sweet” in Italian
  • Dorian, a type of musical scale
  • Harmony, the sound of two or more notes being played simultaneously
  • Harper, a surname that originally referred to someone who played the harp
  • Jazz, a genre of music
  • Key, the scale around which a piece of music is built
  • Lydian, a type of musical scale
  • Lyric (often used in the plural), the words of a song
  • Mandolin, a stringed instrument
  • Medley, a single piece of music created from existing songs
  • Melody, the sequence of notes in a musical phrase
  • Music, an art form in which patterns of sounds are created as a means of emotional expression
  • Octave, the interval between one pitch and another with double/half its frequency
  • Piper, a surname that originally referred to someone who played a pipe
  • Reed, the vibrating piece of a woodwind instrument
  • Rhythm, the variation of strong and weak elements of sounds over time
  • Sonata, a piece of music played by instruments
    • Composer Bear McCreary welcomed a baby girl named Sonatine in 2014.
  • Song, a piece of music performed by a single voice
  • Staccato, a musical term meaning “disconnected” in Italian
  • Symphony, music written for an orchestra
  • Tango, a type of music (and dance)
  • Timbre (pronounced TAM-ber), the perceived sound of a musical note
  • Verse, a portion of a song
  • Viola, a stringed instrument

Other musical terms I’ve seen used as baby names include Allegro (“cheerful”), Largo (“broad”), Lento (“slow”), Condoleezza (based on con dolcezza, “with sweetness”), and Blues (the middle name of Justin Bieber’s son, born in 2024).

Sources: Wiktionary, Wikipedia, Encyclopedia Britannica

Image: Adapted from Clarinet Concerto No.1, Op.26 (public domain)

[Latest update: Jul. 2025]