Hank Ballard and the Midnighters caused a sensation with "Work with Me, Annie," which was followed by "Annie Had a Baby" and "Annie's Aunt Fanny." And those were followed by "Sexy Ways," one of the inspirations for this fine story. I still own my 45 of that one.
Hank went on to write a little number called "The Twist" that made Chubby Checker a household name and hit #1 on the charts twice, the second time after being off the charts for a year. No other song's ever done that. Hank's own version was a b-side but it got a lot of airplay. Still, for those of us who came a long a little before "The Twist," it's the sexy stuff that you could hear only on the jukebox or late at night on stations far away that will define Hank Ballard and the Midnighters.
9 comments:
You music collection continues to amaze me, Bill! Thanks for enlightening us on HANK BALLARD AND THE MIDNIGHTERS!
The tune for Work with me Annie and the backing vocals sound like another song I cannot remember. Maybe someone took the tune and changed the lyrics or wrote new ones?
I remember now. "Wallflower (roll with me Henry)" by Etta James. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=THGTLmVcilI
Great stuff, Bill. I like "Roll with me, Henry" too. It was soon sanitized as "Dance with me, Henry".
Yup, though sometimes the record said you were getting "Dance with Me, Henry," and you still got "Roll with Me, Henry." Ooo, ooo, ooo ooo whee.
I imagine that sort of thing didn't help Alan Freed with his detractors, either.
Hey, Bill...you're right, I believe, about the chart-topping of "Checker"'s version of "The Twist"...though a few have come within shouting distance. The Pointer Sisters' "I'm So Excited" sticks in the head thus...
Thanks for participating. I appreciate the subtle approach to subject matter rather than the overt way permeating modern music. Will read your story knowing it's musical inspiration...
Saw Shutter Island today and couldn't help but take joy in a turntable in a lovely wooden cabinet. We sacrificed a lot by giving up turntables. That record going around was mesmerizing.
To me there's still something magical about the sound of the needle's buzz just before it finds the grooves or a record.
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