Dee Clark: Raindrops

Weekend Music

According to the text with the video, this came out in 1961, so I was thirteen years old. I loved it and can remember specific times when I heard it. I was particularly taken with that now-classic guitar lick, which, or some variant, has been heard in a lot of songs. I've always assumed this was the first but I could be wrong.

 

13 responses to “Dee Clark: Raindrops”

  1. That album cover with the white couple is kind of interesting.
    I never thought about that guitar lick beginning anywhere. How do you know stuff like that.
    AMDG

  2. I don’t know, it just sticks. Been sticking a long time, too, obviously.
    I noticed that album cover, too. I remember at times wondering about the race of this or that performer. I guess the record companies preferred not to draw attention to the race of black artists, at least until the mid-’60s or so. There was no mystery about the Four Tops or the Supremes or Otis Redding or Aretha Franklin.

  3. Dang, this is great.

  4. The song! I listened to it through my stereo. There’s so much more to it than I ever heard on AM radio, or through my computer speakers at work yesterday.

  5. Marianne

    I think album covers showed the artists were black before the 1960s. See a Johnny Mathis cover from 1957 here and one for Nat King Cole the same year here. And before that there were the Mills Brothers and <a href=”http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ella_sings_gershwin_1950.jpg” rel=”nofollow”> Ella Fitzgerald . Or maybe there were different covers for those same albums when they were sold in the South?

  6. Marianne

    Oops — I see that the Ella Fitzgerald link doesn’t work; maybe this will http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ella_Sings_Gershwin

  7. Oh yeah, I didn’t mean they never showed them. Certainly everyone knew that people like the ones you name were black (or “black” in the case of Johnny Mathis :-)). But it could be that in the case of lesser known artists, or when they were introducing a new artist, that they left the race unknown. I’m really just speculating.

  8. The thing about that particular album cover is that the man is very dark. It’s sort of suggestive.
    I love this song because it’s one of the ones I used to listen to on the radio in my grandparents bedroom when we went there on Sundays for lunch.
    AMDG

  9. right, there’s sort of a hint.
    I love it somewhat nostalgically, too, but I think I would love it if I had never heard it until today.

  10. I wouldn’t have thought it was a “white couple” – obviously not being attuned to the difference between tanned and coloured.

  11. “White” and “black” are not to be taken as physical descriptions.:-) “Black” means “of African ancestry”, which can be indicated in two ways: obvious physical characteristics, or inherited cultural identification, i.e. being part of the “black” community. So an Indian the color of walnut is not black, but a member of the black community who is the color of cafe au lait is. It’s a pretty crazy mess.
    The guy on the album cover doesn’t have African features at all, hence is presumptively white, but like Janet says it’s ambiguous.

  12. Having thought about it a little more, remembering Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley albums that showed them on the cover, I decided that my initial suggestion was wrong. But then I found this article. Scroll down about halfway, to the Chantels’ album. So apparently it was done at least sometimes.

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