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NEW 📀 Louie Louie - The Kingsmen {DES Stereo} 1963 

Smurfstools Oldies Music Time Machine
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1963-64......#2 U.S. Billboard Hot 100, #1 U.S. Cash Box Top 100, #1 Canada
This DES stereo video has been abridged to support the hard work of its creators. Without sales of the CD on which this first-time DES song appears there can be no more new stereo like this based on mono originals. Please visit www.ericrecords.com to order and express your support! To find out more about spectral editing and sound source separation, go to www.monotostereo.info/
"Louie Louie" is a rhythm and blues song written and composed by American musician Richard Berry in 1955, recorded in 1956, and released in 1957. It is best known for the 1963 hit version by the Kingsmen and has become a standard in pop and rock. The song is based on the tune "El Loco Cha Cha" popularized by bandleader René Touzet and is an example of Afro-Cuban influence on American popular music.
"Louie Louie" tells, in simple verse-chorus form, the first-person story of a Jamaican sailor returning to the island to see his lover.
A significant error on the Kingsmen version occurs just after the lead guitar break. As the group was going by the Wailers version, which has a brief restatement of the riff twice over before the lead vocalist comes back in, it would be expected that Ely would do the same. Ely, however, missed his mark, coming in two bars too soon, before the restatement of the riff. He realized his mistake and stopped the verse short, but the band did not realize that he had done so. As a quick fix, drummer Lynn Easton covered the pause with a drum fill. The error "imbued the Kingsmen recording with a touching humility and humanity" and is now so well known that multiple versions by other groups duplicate it.
First released in May 1963, the single was initially issued by the small Jerden label, before being picked up by the larger Wand Records in October 1963. Herb Alpert and A&M Records passed on the distribution opportunity, deeming it "too long" and "out of tune".
Sales of the Kingsmen record were initially so low (reportedly 600) that the group considered disbanding. Things changed when Boston's biggest DJ, Arnie Ginsburg, was given the record by a pitchman. Amused by its slapdash sound, he played it on his program as "The Worst Record of the Week". Despite the slam, listener response was swift and positive.
By the end of October, it was listed in Billboard as a regional breakout and a "bubbling under" entry for the national chart. Meanwhile, the Raiders version, with far stronger promotion, was becoming a hit in California and was also listed as "bubbling under" one week after the Kingsmen debuted on the chart. For a few weeks, the two singles appeared destined to battle each other, but demand for the Kingsmen single, backed by national promotion from Wand, acquired momentum and by the end of 1963, Columbia Records had stopped promoting the Raiders version.
It entered the top ten on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for December 7, and peaked at No. 2 the following week, a spot which it held for six non-consecutive weeks; it would remain in the top 10 throughout December 1963 and January 1964 before dropping off in early February. In total, the Kingsmen's version spent 16 weeks on the Hot 100, selling a million copies by April 1964. "Dominique" by the Singing Nun and "There! I've Said It Again" by Bobby Vinton prevented the single from reaching No. 1 (although Marsh asserts that it "far outsold" the other records, but was denied Billboard's top spot due to lack of "proper decorum".) "Louie Louie" did reach No. 1 on the Cash Box and Music Vendor/Record World pop charts, as well as No. 1 on the Cash Box R&B chart. It was the last No. 1 on Cash Box before Beatlemania hit the United States with "I Want to Hold Your Hand". The Kingsmen version quickly became a standard at teen parties in the U.S. during the 1960s and, reaching No. 26 on the UK Singles Chart, was the preferred tune for a popular British dance called "The Shake". The first album, The Kingsmen In Person, peaked at No. 20 in 1964 and remained on the charts for over two years (131 weeks total) until 1966.
Due to the lyrics controversy and supported by the band's heavy touring schedule, the single continued to sell throughout 1965 and briefly reappeared on the charts in 1966, reaching No. 65 in Cash Box, No. 76 in Record World, No. 97 in Billboard and cracking the Top 40 in the Washington market. Total sales estimates for the single range from 10 million to over 12 million with cover versions accounting for another 300 million. In July 2023, the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) certified the song silver for sales and streaming figures exceeding 200,000 units.

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15 сен 2021

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Комментарии : 913   
@smurfstoolsoldiesmusictimemach
@smurfstoolsoldiesmusictimemach 2 года назад
Welcome to Smurfstools Oldies Music Time Machine!
@matthewtomaszewski3269
My friend brought this song to music appreciation class in our Catholic school in 1964. About half way thru the nun pulled it off the turntable and broke it over her knee. It doesn’t get anymore rock and roll than that.
@johngaither9263
On trial for "Obscenity" in a state court the trial judge's ruling stated, "At any volume, speed or direction I find these lyrics totally incomprehensible!" End of trial.
@daryljay7057
@daryljay7057 19 часов назад
The guy actually singing here is Don Galucci, not Lynn Easton the guy you see. Half the guys you see here were NOT on the record. Don Gallucci, who was the keyboards & singer quit the band just after this was recorded in somebody's garage. His mom made him quit. He was way underage, & still in school. He went on to form his own band a couple of years later that had good success in the PNW called Don & The Goodtimes! The original song, written & performed first by Richard Berry, is a calypso Bellafonte kind of thing. A Northwest band, the biggest, most successful band on the PNW scene was The Wailers. They gave it the R & R treatment. In fact, the Kingsmen ripped The Wailers off, even down to every note of the guitar solo! Mike Mitchell, the guitar player you see here, went to Wailers shows many times to get it down. Rich Dangel, The Wailers guitar player at the time wrote the solo. It wasn't long until a zillion bands had their own versions. Paul Revere & The Raiders, The Sonics, The Counts, everybody was playing SOME version of it, whether they recorded it or not.. Richard Berry wrote the song in the late fifties, so it had been around a while even in '63. The Kingsmen got the National credit, & had a few other National releases that did moderately well. The Jolly Green Giant was one. A cover of The Olympics, Big Boy Pete with new lyrics. There was a big dance scene in the Northwest. Good bands, lots of skating rinks & school gyms turned into dance halls. I know because I was part of it. Moderate success with several bands.
@bigbadbillb
@bigbadbillb 21 день назад
Funny...there's an electric piano in the song but the keyboard player is sitting at a Hammond organ!
@dennisschnobrich9288
@dennisschnobrich9288 14 дней назад
This was thought to be a dirty song back then but it's not.If you listen to the Beach Boy's version the lyrics are very clear, all legit.
@PaulWilliams66
@PaulWilliams66 14 дней назад
I don’t know about the FBI but they’re on my shit list for those jackets alone.
@thunderbolt5354
@thunderbolt5354 14 дней назад
Do the Kids today (2024) still dance to Music ?
@ernestchacon4928
Oh wow this was the first song that really pissed Congress because they couldn't decifer the lyrics..., 👏 !!!
@TimothyBruneau
@TimothyBruneau 14 дней назад
And still to this day, other than "oh baby we gotta go", we have no f%&!ing clue what the lyrics are to that song.
@timjohnson8725
The FBI investigated the song for 31 months
@kokolanza7543
@kokolanza7543 4 часа назад
There are not many songs that could claim to define rock and roll. Maybe 10. Louie Louie is one of them.
@zzzsydneyhom1379
I've heard this song hundreds of times since 1963 and I'll be damned if I can't understand a word he sings beyond Louie Louie.
@ACinDorset
@ACinDorset День назад
Still feels edgy 61 years later. One of favourite tunes from the 60s.
@aglasserm1679
ouie, Louie, me gotta go
@ronaldrussell5481
Sounds just as good now as it did in '63!
@davidallison1732
I was there in '63 -----18 years old leather jacket on and rocking my socks off! Now 78 and this gem brings back wonderful memories of my teen years
@1950Grendel
I'm 73 and I can still play the solo. Some things never leave.
@pammiller942
@pammiller942 21 день назад
This is a great song I loved it when I was a child and I'm loving it at 70❤
@Dennis-br1lm
This is the first song every garage band learned back in the day.