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The Tarriers - The Banana Boat Song / No Hidin' Place FLAC album


Performer: The Tarriers
Genre: Pop
Title: The Banana Boat Song / No Hidin' Place
Country: Germany
Style: Vocal
Label: Columbia
Catalog Number: 45-DW 5576
FLAC version ZIP size: 2159 mb
MP3 version ZIP size: 2202 mb
WMA version ZIP size: 2188 mb
Rating: 4.8
Votes: 531

Tracklist

1No Hidin' Place
2The Banana Boat Song

Versions

CategoryArtistTitle (Format)LabelCategoryCountryYear
45-249The Tarriers The Banana Boat Song ‎(7", Single)Glory45-249US1956
PS-1029The Tarriers Banana Boat Song / No Hidin' Place ‎(Shellac, 10")Prestige Records PS-1029New ZealandUnknown
45-DB 3891The Tarriers The Banana Boat Song ‎(7", Single)Columbia45-DB 3891NetherlandsUnknown
249The Tarriers The Banana Boat Song / No Hidin' Place ‎(Shellac, 10")Glory249US1956
45-249The Tarriers The Banana Boat Song / No Hidin' Place ‎(7", Single)Glory45-249US1956

Credits

  • Written-ByArkin, Carey, Darling

Notes

Made In Germany

Barcodes

  • Rights Society: BIEM
  • Matrix / Runout (Label A-Side): 45-G 282
  • Matrix / Runout (Label B-Side): 45-G 285

Video

Gldasiy
The song was originally a Jamaican folk song. Its popular version was adapted by Irving Burgie. It was thought to be sung by Jamaican banana workers, with a repeated melody and refrain (call and response), with each set lyric there would be a response from the workers but with many different sets of lyrics, some possibly improvised on the spot. The first recorded version was done by Trinidadian singer Edric Connor and his band "Edric Connor and the Caribbeans" in 1952, on the album Songs From Jamaica; the song was called "Day De Light".[1] It was also recorded by Jamaican folk singer Louise Bennett in 1954. In 1955, singer/songwriters Irving Burgie and William Attaway wrote a version of the lyrics for the Colgate Comedy Hour in which the song was performed by Harry Belafonte.[2] This is the version that is by far the best known to listeners today, as it reached number five on the Billboard charts in 1957 and later became Belafonte's signature song. Side two of Harry Belafonte's 1956 Calypso album opens with Star O, a song referring to the day shift ending with the first star seen in the sky. Also in 1956, folk singer Bob Gibson, who had travelled to Jamaica and heard the song, taught his version of it to the folk band The Tarriers. They recorded a version of that song that mixed in the chorus of another Jamaican folk song, "Hill and Gully Rider", and released it, spawning what became their biggest hit. It outdid Belafonte's original on the pop charts, reaching number four. This version was re-recorded by Shirley Bassey in 1957, and became a hit in the United Kingdom.[3] The Tarriers, or some subset of the three members of the group (Erik Darling, Bob Carey and Alan Arkin) are sometimes credited as the writers of the song, perhaps because their version of the song, which mixed in another song, was an original creation. (Wikipedia-Quote)