Friday 27 November 2020

Eddie Rabbitt born 27 November 1941


Edward Thomas Rabbitt (November 27, 1941 – May 7, 1998) was an American country music singer and songwriter. During his career, Rabbitt scored 26 #1 hits on the country charts, and had 8 Top 40 pop hits. He was named the Top New Male Vocalist by the Academy of Country Music in 1977, and he won an American Music Award for Best Pop Male Vocalist in 1981. 

Eddie Rabbitt was born in Brooklyn, New York, but raised in New Jersey. His Irish- American father played both the fiddle and accordion and by the age of 12, having been taught by a scoutmaster who performed under the name "Texas" Bob Randall, young Eddie was proficient on guitar. 

A high school drop- out, he worked as a trucker, fruit picker and mental hospital orderly during the day whilst playing Newark's clubs in the evening. He later won a talent contest and was given an hour of Saturday night radio show time to broadcast a live performance from a bar in Paterson, New Jersey. In 1964 he cut an unmemorable debut single, "Six Nights & Seven Days" for 20th Century Records. 

In 1968 Rabbitt took the plunge and headed to Nashville by way of the famous WWVA Wheeling Jamboree. On his first night in Music City, whilst sitting in the bath, he penned "Working My Way Up to the Bottom", a song which soon after wards was recorded by Roy Drusky, who charted with it. Despite this initial and unexpected success he found himself earning just $37.50 a week as a staff writer with Hill & Range Publishing, living in an uncomfortable apartment with just a rooster for company. 

One of the more positive aspects of this period was the time he spent honing his craft alongside fellow songwriters, notably Kris Kristofferson. It paid off in 1970 when Elvis Presley scored with a Rabbitt composition, "Kentucky Rain". Four years later Ronnie Milsap took his "Pure Love" to the top of the country charts and Rabbitt signed with Elektra Records, making his chart debut for them with "You Get To Me". 


                             

In early 1976 he enjoyed his first No 1 as a vocalist with "Drinking My Baby (Off My Mind)". Co-written with his regular collaborator Even Stevens, it had originally been cut by Texas's honky-tonker Johnny Bush and was to prove the first of 17 trips to the top of the country charts. The next, "You Don't Love Me Anymore" (1978), was the first country record to feature synthesised drums, and pointed the way to other pop-flavoured hits including "Someone Could Use a Heart Tonight" and "You Can't Run From Love" (both 1982). 

"Every Which Way But Loose" (1979), taken from the Clint Eastwood movie of the same name, helped start a trend in country-oriented movie soundtracks, though Rabbitt refused to record the theme to its sequel Any Which Way You Can (1980). "Drivin' My Life Away" and "I Love a Rainy Night" were infectious up-tempo numbers; the former obviously indebted to Bob Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues" and the latter featuring rockabilly echoes. Both crossed over into the pop charts, selling a million copies each in the process. 

A 1982 duet with Crystal Gayle, "You and I", not only topped the charts but gained additional popularity when used as a love theme on the daytime soap All My Children. Four years later another duet, "Both To Each Other (Friends and Lovers)" with Juice Newton, followed suit, though this time propelled to No 1 courtesy of the rival soap Days of Our Lives. 

In 1983 Rabbitt's newborn son Timothy was diagnosed with biliary atresia, a condition which necessitated near constant care and ultimately a liver transplant. The child died two years later and Rabbitt, who had already cut back on his touring schedule, never returned to a full-throttle career. Also in 1985 he signed to RCA and, while the hits continued, it became clear that pop-country vocalists like himself were losing ground to the genre's emergent new traditionalist movement. In 1988 he paid tribute to his formative years on the East Coast with an insipid if chart-topping cover of Dion's "The Wanderer". Two years later he scored a final No 1 hit with "On Second Thought" before switching to Capitol where his chart career came to a close. 

Rabbitt was among the many country singers who suffered a dramatic decline in chart success beginning in 1991. That year, he released the album Ten Rounds, which produced the final charting single of his career, "Hang Up the Phone". Following that release, he left Capitol Records to tour with his band Hare Trigger. In 1997, Rabbitt signed with Intersound Records where, he released the album Beatin' the Odds. In 1998, he released his last studio album, Songs from Rabbittland.  

Rabbitt died on May 7, 1998, in Nashville from lung cancer at the age of 56. He had been diagnosed with the disease in March 1997 and had received radiation treatment and surgery to remove part of one lung. His body was interred at Calvary Cemetery in Nashville following a private burial on May 8, 1998. 

(Edited from article by Paul Wadey @ The Independent & Wikipedia)

3 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Eddie Rabbitt ‎– Number One Hits” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/12573385/Eddie_Rabbitt.-.Number_One_Hits__2009_.rar.html


1 Drinkin´ My Baby (Off My Mind)
2 You Don´t Love Me Anymore
3 I Just Want To Love You
4 Every Which Way But Loose
5 Suspicions
6 Gone Too Far
7 Drivin´ My Life Away
8 I Love A Rainy Night
9 Step By Step
10 Someone Could Lose A Heart Tonight
11 You And I / Duett med Crystal Gayle
12 You Can´t Run From Love
13 The Best Year Of My Life
14 Both To Each Over with Juice Newton
15 I Wanna Dance With You
16 The Wanderer
17 On Second Thought


Starting his career with major song writting success (Elvis Presley had a hit with his song "Kentucky Rain,") Eddie Rabbitt went on to become one of the most innovative country music stars - and crossover artists - of the '70s and '80s. Rabbitt was born in Brooklyn and bred in New Jersey, and his "citified" air all but defined what became known as the "Urban Cowboy" movement. It also led to 26 Billboard #1 country singles, 17 of which are collected here. Blending pop and R&B sensibilities into the mix, Rabbitt scored huge crossover smashes with "I Love a Rainy Night" - which also topped Billboard's Pop chart - "Drivin' My Life Away" and "Step By Step," both #5 pop hits. Other highlights on Number One Hits include Rabbitt's first #1, "Drinkin' My Baby (Off My Mind)," "You And I" (with Crystal Gayle), and "Someone Could Lose a Heart Tonight."

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Here’s another mp3 album available on Amazon, Apple Music (iTunes) and a myriad of others, but found on the Jazz n Blues Club posted by Mike 1985. Thanks Mike!

For “Eddie Rabbitt - The Complete Elektra Albums” go here:

https://filecat.net/f/Fkknjz


1. I Love a Rainy Night
2. 747
3. Drivin' My Life Away
4. Short Road to Love
5. Rockin' with My Baby
6. I Need to Fall In Love
7. So Deep In Your Love
8. What Will I Write
9. Pretty Lady
10. Just the Way It Is
11. Love Me to Sleep
12. Forgive and Forget
13. Long Gone
14. Pure Love
15. When I Was Young
16. Savin' My Love for My Baby
17. I Should Have Married You
18. Sweet Janine
19. You Get to Me
20. It Just Ain't Hit Me Yet
21. Leavin'
22. Do You Right Tonight
23. I Can't Get This Ring Off My Finger
24. Rocky Mountain Music
25. Two Dollars In the Jukebox
26. I Don't Wanna Make Love with Anyone Else but You
27. I Just Got to Have You
28. Tullohoma Dancing Pizza Man
29. Ain't I Something
30. There's Someone She Lies to (To Lay Here with Me)
31. Could You Love a Poor Boy Dolly
32. Drinkin' My Baby (Off My Mind)
33. I'm a Little Bit Lonesome (2008 Version)
34. I Can't Help Myself (2008 Version)
35. Stop, Look and Listen (2008 Version)
36. The Girl On My Mind (2008 Version)
37. You Make Love Beautiful (2008 Version)
38. Sure Thing (2008 Version)
39. Jewelry Store (2008 Version)
40. We Can't Go On Living Like This (2008 Version)
41. Is There a Country Song On the Jukebox? (2008 Version)
42. She Loves Me Like She Means It
43. Hearts On Fire (2008 Version)
44. The Room at the Top of the Stairs (2008 Version)
45. Crossin' the Mississippi (2008 Version)
46. Plain as the Pain On My Face (2008 Version)
47. Hurtin' for You (2008 Version)
48. You Don't Love Me Anymore (2008 Version)
49. Kentucky Rain (2008 Version)
50. I Just Want to Love You (2008 Version)
51. Caroline (2008 Version)
52. Song of Ireland (2008 Version)
53. Pour Me Another Tequila (2008 Version)
54. Gone Too Far (2008 Version)
55. Loveline (2008 Version)
56. One and Only One (2008 Version)
57. Suspicions (2008 Version)
58. So Fine (2008 Version)
59. I Will Never Let You Go Again (2008 Version)
60. Amazing Love (2008 Version)
61. It's Always Like the First Time (2008 Version)
62. I Don't Wanna Make Love (With Anyone Else but You) [2008 Version]

62 songs • 3 hours and 16 minutes • Apr 18, 2019

Aussie said...

I AUSSIE THANK YOU 4 THIS GREAT DOWNLOAD

Mario said...

Being May 2021 I want to thank you for posting this great performer my old daddy used to play his records everyday and dance with my mom, I was just a little kid. Thank you for bringing great memories.

Mario