Who’s that knockin’ at my door?
“Crazy Little Mama” The Eldorados Guest Artist: The Magnificents Vee Jay Records (1957) Listen up: “At My Front Door”
The El Dorados did a week at Chicago’s Regal Theater starting February 22, 1957. They shared the boards with Bobby Charles, the Spaniels, Jimmy Reed, Arthur Prysock, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins, the Rhythm Kings, Gene & Eunice, Big Joe Turner, Priscilla Bowman, Brook Benton, and the Tab Smith Orchestra.
In March, while the group was in Atlanta, Vee Jay announced that the El Dorados would have the honor of being the subject of the company’s first LP. Issued as VJLP-1001 (“Crazy Little Mama”), it contained ten songs by them: “My Loving Baby,” “Baby I Need You,” “Annie’s Answer,” “I Began To Realize,” “At My Front Door” (“Crazy Little Mama”), “Now That You’ve Gone,” “I’ll Be Forever Loving You,” “Rock ‘N Roll’s For Me,” “There In The Night,” and “A Fallen Tear.” For some reason, while they left off some of the El Dorados releases, they included two tunes by the Magnificents: “Up On The Mountain” and “Caddy Bo.”
Crazy little mamma come knockin’
Comes a-knockin’ at my front door, door, door
Crazy little mamma come knockin’
Knockin’ at my front door
Crazy little mamma come knock, knock, knockin’
Just like she did before
I woke up this morning with a feeling of despair
Looking for my baby and she wasn’t there
Heard someone knockin’ much to my surprise
There stood my babe lookin’ at my eyes
Crazy little mamma comes knock, knock, knockin’
Just like she did before
If you got a little mamma and you wanna keep her neat
Keep your little mama off my street
Same thing will happen like it did before
She’ll come knock, knock, knockin’ at my door
Crazy little mamma come knock, knock, knockin’
Just like she did before
June 20th, 2009 at 3:14 pm
Cliff Ricard makes a guest appearance on this album, unfortunately it was only on the cover and he was caught off gaurd in one of his more ambiguous moments.
October 12th, 2009 at 4:11 am
Pat Boone made the definitive version of this one.
Boone was the first rock’n’roll star on the U S charts