About: Walking To New Orleans   Goto Sponge  NotDistinct  Permalink

An Entity of Type : wsb:Song, within Data Space : wasabi.inria.fr associated with source document(s)

AttributesValues
type
sameAs
has title
  • Walking To New Orleans
has language
  • eng
Subject
  • 1960 songs
  • 1960 singles
  • Songs about New Orleans, Louisiana
  • Fats Domino songs
  • Music of New Orleans, Louisiana
  • Songs written by Bobby Charles
abstract
  • %22Walking to New Orleans%22 is a 1960 song by Bobby Charles, written for and recorded by Fats Domino.Domino was a hero of Charles. Domino had previously recorded the Charles tune %22Before I Grow Too Old%22. When Domino stopped on tour in Lafayette, Louisiana, he invited Charles into his dressing room, and regretted he did not have a copy of his new record to give to Charles, but invited Charles to come visit him in Domino's home of New Orleans. Charles replied, %22I don't have a car. If I'd go, I'd have to walk.%22 Afterwards, the thought remained on Charles's mind, and he said he wrote the song for Domino in some 15 minutes.After he got to New Orleans to accept Domino's invitation, Charles sang %22Walking to New Orleans%22 for Domino. Domino was enthusiastic about the number and made a few modifications to it, including adding a quote from his earlier hit, %22Ain't That A Shame%22. Dave Bartholomew made an orchestration for the backup band, and Domino with Bartholomew and band recorded it in Cosimo Matassa's studio on Rampart Street.After the recording was made, Bartholomew decided to overdub a string section from the New Orleans Symphony. Use of classical strings was unusual for early rock and roll. Domino was at first somewhat surprised when Bartholomew played back the new version with strings, but warmed to the distinctive sweet melancholy sound it added. The strings were arranged by Milton Bush, a trombonist who was the first-call string arranger at Cosimo's Studio. Bush wrote the arrangements standing up in 10 minutes while Domino looked on. He basically had the strings mimic the melody in the previous phrase. When finished, Domino asked Bush how much he wanted for the arrangement. Bush figured that $1 a minute was pretty good, so he charged Fats $10. The song went on to sell over 2,000,000 copies. The record was a hit, released on Imperial Records, reaching #6 on the pop chart and #2 on the R&B chart.
schema:author
  • Bobby Charles
schema:datePublished
homepage
musicbrainz
Musicbrainz GUID
  • 5cfabe6f-2620-4d92-b635-5f209ce144f0
mo:performer
universally unique identifier
  • 5714decf25ac0d8aee41b411
wikipedia
bpm
mo:duration
isrc
  • USA560724536
track number
schema:album
schema:duration
  • PT133.04269841S
wsb:allMusic_page
wsb:deezer_artist_id
  • 7204
wsb:deezer_page
wsb:deezer_song_id
  • 1345212
wsb:explicit_lyrics_count
wsb:gain
wsb:goEar_page
wsb:has_explicit_lyrics
wsb:language_detected
  • english
wsb:rank
wsb:record_label
  • Imperial Records
wsb:title_without_accent
  • Walking To New Orleans
confidence
chord
wsb:arousal
wsb:has_emotion_tags
wsb:has_social_tags
wsb:lastFm_song_id
  • TRJEWUK128F14602C1
wsb:valence
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