Slim Harpo Rainin In My Heart Rare

Slim Harpo Rainin In My Heart Rate

Sings Raining in My Heart, an Album by Slim Harpo. Released in 1961 on Excello (catalog no. LP-8003; Vinyl LP). Genres: Swamp Blues. Rated #101 in the best albums of 1961. SLIM HARPO Rainin' In My Heart (US issue of the Late 60s / Early 70s 12-track vinyl LP with the pink & blue Excello label featuring an electronically re-channeled stereo version of the rare 1961 album, housed in the card picture sleeve with sleevenotes from Dick Allen printed on the back. There is a little shelfwear to the.

Animate It Screensaver Toolkit 2 64 Serial Crack Cs6. Quite Imposing Plus Serial Number. Excello Album Discography Excello Album Discography By David Edwards and Mike Callahan Last update: February 18, 2002 Excello was formed by Ernie Young as a subsidiary of Nashboro Records in 1952 to record blues. Jay Miller was the primary studio producer for Excello.

Excello was the first blues label established in Nashville, Tennessee. The label made an important contribution to rock and roll in 1954 when it recorded an answer song to Eddy Arnold's country and western record 'I Wanna Play House With You' called 'Baby, Let's Play House,' by Arthur Gunter. The song was covered by Elvis Presley a year later in one of his finest performances on Sun. Presley's cover version was closely based on the Gunter original. Excello had a wonderful array of blues singers who even today have a strong following among collectors.

Chief among these was Slim Harpo (James Moore), whose unmistakable voice droning 'I'm a king bee, buzzin' 'round your hive' was imitated years later by groups such as the Rolling Stones. His inimitable '60s hit 'Baby, Scratch My Back' has been recently unearthed in the 1992 motion picture Rush. Other Excello blues masters included Lightnin' Slim, Silas Hogan, Lazy Lester, and Lonesome Sundown. In 1957, an Excello group (the Gladiolas), featuring a lead singer named Maurice Williams, recorded an original song, 'Little Darlin',' in a fairly uptempo r&b arrangement. The song sold well enough to make #11 on the R&B charts, but it was 'covered' for the pop market by a Canadian quartet called the Diamonds on Mercury Records. The Diamonds, with a slight change of wording and a lean toward parody, propelled the song to a major pop hit. Today, the original Excello record is obviously worth more to collectors.