Wednesday, 19 February 2014
56 ( 27a) Hello Fats Domino - I'm In Love Again
Chart entered : 27 July 1956
Chart peak : 12
Number of hits : 20
Oh Hell. I've just realised I missed someone out. I'm not sure how this happened - a spreadsheet error I suppose.
OK well back to 1956 and Fats should have slipped in between Elvis and Tommy Steele.
Antoine Domino was born in New Orleans in 1928 to a French Creole family. His father played violin and his uncle was a jazz guitarist. One look at the square-headed behemoth tells you how the nickname originated.
Fats was making R & B records from the early fifties and when they crossed over to being rock and roll is a moot point. The first to make an impact in the US was "The Fat Man" in 1950 a great, mainly instrumental piano pounder which doesn't let up. "Every Night About This Time" is a drowsy New Orleans blues with barely disguised lyrics about sexual frustration. "Cheatin" which he wrote by himself brings in the sax on a swing tune admonishing his errant lover. The suicidal "Going To The River" is dense and dark while "Please Don't Leave Me" is a stomper with two short verses bookended by Fats singing "Whoo Whoo Whoo" over his rolling keys. He released half a dozen more singles before "Ain't That A Shame" broke him into the mainstream charts where as we've already seen Pat Boone outflanked him.
London had been releasing certain of his singles in the UK since 1955 starting with "Love Me" a mid-paced blues with a long sax break and an understated electric guitar in the mix. "Thinking Of You" has a much clearer production and boasts the blowsy horns and piano sound that has made New Orleans a musical adjective. "Ain't That A Shame " followed and was a hit on re-release the following year. "Bo Weevil" is a bit of a novelty song but has two great guitar solos from Justin Adams.
That brings us to "I'm In Love Again" . It doesn't sound like an obvious breakout hit but Elvis and Bill had opened the door to this music, the production is clean and there's a sly sexual undercurrent to the song. I guess the teens knew what he was singing about even if their parents didn't.
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