
Sa-Ba-Hoola! Two Sides Of Lonnie Mack
When Lonnie Mackâs treatment of Chuck Berryâs âMemphisâ broke into the US Hot 100 on 8 June 1963 and peaked at #5 during its 13-week stay, he was initially pigeonholed as an instrumental artist. This perception was heightened by âDown In The Dumpsâ on the flip, and furthered by his double-sided instrumental follow-up whose topside, âWham!â, reached #28.
Six months later the other side of Lonnie was revealed with his first vocal 45. The topside was a dynamic re-vamp of Jimmy Reedâs âBaby, Whatâs Wrongâ, backed with a version of the gospel classic âWhere Thereâs A Willâ. Here you could hear him emoting in a way white singers never did â hollering, pleading and screaming in the very finest gospel tradition. The track was even picked up by some black radio stations in the south, but quietly dropped once it was realised that Lonnie was white.
âMemphisâ was recorded at King Records Studio in Cincinnati on 12 March 1963. Carl Edmondson had been booked to produce a split session for Max Falcon, Kenny Smith and the Charmaines, but Edmondsonâs band had recently broken up, so Lonnie and his crew were drafted in. With some time left at the end of the session, Lonnie was asked if he had anything he might like to record. âMemphisâ was the result. Edmondson thought the track had potential and suggested to Fraternity Records boss, Harry Carlson, that he should put it out. Within weeks it was climbing the charts, launching Lonnieâs long career.
Post-Fraternity releases on Elektra, Capitol, Epic and Alligator cemented his reputation as the man who brought gospel, soul, blues, country and rockânâroll together. He was one of the creators of blue-eyed soul, as well as the leading light for the legion of blues-based rock guitarists who plied their trade from the 60s onwards. It has to be said, though, that the bedrock of his legend rests on his Fraternity recordings, which highlighted both sides of Lonnie Mack â the vocalist and the guitarist.
Tracklist
SIDE ONE - InstrumentalsÂ
- SA-BA-HOOLAÂ
- LONNIE ON THE MOVE (Take 2)Â
- WHAM!Â
- MEMPHISÂ
- OMAHAÂ
- HONKY TONK â65Â
- TENSION (Part 1)Â
SIDE TWO - VocalsÂ
- OH, I APOLOGIZEÂ
- SAVE YOUR MONEYÂ
- BABY, WHATâS WRONGÂ
- WHERE THEREâS A WILLÂ
- IâLL KEEP YOU HAPPYÂ
- NO MORE PAINÂ
- IâVE HAD ITÂ
When Lonnie Mackâs treatment of Chuck Berryâs âMemphisâ broke into the US Hot 100 on 8 June 1963 and peaked at #5 during its 13-week stay, he was initially pigeonholed as an instrumental artist. This perception was heightened by âDown In The Dumpsâ on the flip, and furthered by his double-sided instrumental follow-up whose topside, âWham!â, reached #28.
Six months later the other side of Lonnie was revealed with his first vocal 45. The topside was a dynamic re-vamp of Jimmy Reedâs âBaby, Whatâs Wrongâ, backed with a version of the gospel classic âWhere Thereâs A Willâ. Here you could hear him emoting in a way white singers never did â hollering, pleading and screaming in the very finest gospel tradition. The track was even picked up by some black radio stations in the south, but quietly dropped once it was realised that Lonnie was white.
âMemphisâ was recorded at King Records Studio in Cincinnati on 12 March 1963. Carl Edmondson had been booked to produce a split session for Max Falcon, Kenny Smith and the Charmaines, but Edmondsonâs band had recently broken up, so Lonnie and his crew were drafted in. With some time left at the end of the session, Lonnie was asked if he had anything he might like to record. âMemphisâ was the result. Edmondson thought the track had potential and suggested to Fraternity Records boss, Harry Carlson, that he should put it out. Within weeks it was climbing the charts, launching Lonnieâs long career.
Post-Fraternity releases on Elektra, Capitol, Epic and Alligator cemented his reputation as the man who brought gospel, soul, blues, country and rockânâroll together. He was one of the creators of blue-eyed soul, as well as the leading light for the legion of blues-based rock guitarists who plied their trade from the 60s onwards. It has to be said, though, that the bedrock of his legend rests on his Fraternity recordings, which highlighted both sides of Lonnie Mack â the vocalist and the guitarist.
Tracklist
SIDE ONE - InstrumentalsÂ
- SA-BA-HOOLAÂ
- LONNIE ON THE MOVE (Take 2)Â
- WHAM!Â
- MEMPHISÂ
- OMAHAÂ
- HONKY TONK â65Â
- TENSION (Part 1)Â
SIDE TWO - VocalsÂ
- OH, I APOLOGIZEÂ
- SAVE YOUR MONEYÂ
- BABY, WHATâS WRONGÂ
- WHERE THEREâS A WILLÂ
- IâLL KEEP YOU HAPPYÂ
- NO MORE PAINÂ
- IâVE HAD ITÂ
Original: $24.00
-65%$24.00
$8.40Description
When Lonnie Mackâs treatment of Chuck Berryâs âMemphisâ broke into the US Hot 100 on 8 June 1963 and peaked at #5 during its 13-week stay, he was initially pigeonholed as an instrumental artist. This perception was heightened by âDown In The Dumpsâ on the flip, and furthered by his double-sided instrumental follow-up whose topside, âWham!â, reached #28.
Six months later the other side of Lonnie was revealed with his first vocal 45. The topside was a dynamic re-vamp of Jimmy Reedâs âBaby, Whatâs Wrongâ, backed with a version of the gospel classic âWhere Thereâs A Willâ. Here you could hear him emoting in a way white singers never did â hollering, pleading and screaming in the very finest gospel tradition. The track was even picked up by some black radio stations in the south, but quietly dropped once it was realised that Lonnie was white.
âMemphisâ was recorded at King Records Studio in Cincinnati on 12 March 1963. Carl Edmondson had been booked to produce a split session for Max Falcon, Kenny Smith and the Charmaines, but Edmondsonâs band had recently broken up, so Lonnie and his crew were drafted in. With some time left at the end of the session, Lonnie was asked if he had anything he might like to record. âMemphisâ was the result. Edmondson thought the track had potential and suggested to Fraternity Records boss, Harry Carlson, that he should put it out. Within weeks it was climbing the charts, launching Lonnieâs long career.
Post-Fraternity releases on Elektra, Capitol, Epic and Alligator cemented his reputation as the man who brought gospel, soul, blues, country and rockânâroll together. He was one of the creators of blue-eyed soul, as well as the leading light for the legion of blues-based rock guitarists who plied their trade from the 60s onwards. It has to be said, though, that the bedrock of his legend rests on his Fraternity recordings, which highlighted both sides of Lonnie Mack â the vocalist and the guitarist.
Tracklist
SIDE ONE - InstrumentalsÂ
- SA-BA-HOOLAÂ
- LONNIE ON THE MOVE (Take 2)Â
- WHAM!Â
- MEMPHISÂ
- OMAHAÂ
- HONKY TONK â65Â
- TENSION (Part 1)Â
SIDE TWO - VocalsÂ
- OH, I APOLOGIZEÂ
- SAVE YOUR MONEYÂ
- BABY, WHATâS WRONGÂ
- WHERE THEREâS A WILLÂ
- IâLL KEEP YOU HAPPYÂ
- NO MORE PAINÂ
- IâVE HAD ITÂ











