Number One Songs—The House of the Rising Sun



The Animals "One of the most important bands originating from England's R&B scene during the early '60s, the Animals were second only to the Rolling Stones in influence among R&B-based bands in the first wave of the British Invasion...A studio session in February 1964 yielded their Columbia debut single, 'Baby Let Me Take You Home' (adapted from 'Baby Let Me Follow You Down'), which rose to number 21 on the British charts. For years, it was rumored incorrectly that the Animals got their next single, 'House of the Rising Sun,' from Bob Dylan's first album, but it has been revealed that, like 'Baby Let Me Take You Home,' the song came to them courtesy of Josh White. In any event, the song — given a new guitar riff by [Hilton] Valentine and a soulful organ accompaniment devised by [Alan] Price — shot to the top of the U.K. and U.S. charts early that summer." —Allmusic.com

"'House of the Rising Sun' is a song so steeped in American folklore and tradition that it's almost impossible to put a date on its origins. It is possible however to trace back the exact moment when it stepped into 20th century popular culture, that date was September 15 1937 and it all happened in Middlesboro, not Middlesbrough in the north east of England, although the north east of England does play its part in the story some three decades later. No, it all began in Middlesboro, Kentucky when a music historian by the name of Alan Lomax arrived at the doorstep of a poor miner's daughter by the name of Georgia Turner. Lomax was making recordings of popular folk songs sung by ordinary people in their natural environments for the Library of Congress and his travels brought him to little Georgia who was just 16, he hulked out his cumbersome presto reproducer recording machine and she sang her favourite sad song for him, an old bluesy folk tune about living a life of sin called 'Rising Son Blues.' It had been about for years but never committed to tape before, indeed Lomax believed it dated back to 1600's England while others dated it to the American Civil War, either way history had been made!

"The song was recorded in 1937, from there the legendary Lomax put the song in a songbook and it spread like wildfire through the folk music scene on the east coast with versions springing up in the 1940's from the likes of Pete Seeger, Woody Guthrie and bluesman Josh White. Not bad for a song warning about the perils of prostitution eh? The House of the Rising Sun was traditionally a euphemism for a bordello in English circles, and the song is really little more than a tale of woe concerning a woman's decline into the oldest profession in the world. Amazing that no one really picked up on that and censored the whole thing from the start! With every passing year the song's fame grew until Bob Dylan covered it on his debut album (calling it 'House of the Rising Sun') and in 1964 a band of R&B reprobates from Newcastle in the north east of England called The Animals came to record it and the face of modern music was changed for ever.

"Apparently Chas Chandler of the band heard the Josh White version, not the Bob Dylan version as is often thought. Eric Burdon has famously been quoted as saying the band's famous producer Mickie Most did nothing but nod his head when the song was being recorded something that Most himself doesn't really deny.

"It was a revolutionary single, it was over four minutes for a start - a length unheard of in pop circles. But more than anything, it was the wonderful arrangement that really sold it as something different. The Animals electric version of Georgia Turner's favourite tune swept across the world taking them to #1 at home and also hitting the top spot Stateside on Sept 5th 1964, replacing the Supreme's 'Where did our Love Go' at number one on the Billboard charts. It was arguably the first folk rock tune, Bob Dylan loved it so much he decided to drop the acoustic sound he was famous for and took up the electric sound for his next album Bringing it All Back Home - pop music thus changed forever...

"In the years since, The Animals version has caused any amount of legal wrangling because Alan Price took the arrangers credit for the keyboard refrain he added to the song, arguably Hilton Valentine’s guitar work is just as influential (just ask anyone who's ever learned guitar and they'll tell you they learned that famous riff!) but he never made a penny from it, the band still hold grudges about the credit to this day.

"Ever since that break through hit in 1964, the song has been recorded in disco style, Cajun style, there are punk, jazz, even easy listening versions of it - even the hip hop world has embraced the tune with Wyclef Jeanrecently recording a version.

"Needless to say every old building in New Orleans claims to be that fateful House of the Rising Sun, but in reality it's impossible to judge if it's all just to get publicity and encourage tourism.

"As we remember the song with that immortal opening line 'there is a house in New Orleans...' it's worth remembering that the woman who sang that very first recorded version, Georgia Turner, died penniless of emphysema in 1969. She was just 48 years old, she made just 117.50 dollars from the song in royalties, a sobering thought when you think how famous the song is now." —Ralph McLean

"This song's archaic roots are traced back to England in the 1700's; where its melody is associated with several British folk songs including, 'Lord Bernard' and 'Little Musgrove.' Two British folk songs name 'Risin' Sun' as houses of ill-repute. It is an old symbol in England for prostitution, carried over to America, and popularized as such in southern ballads.

"Three houses in New Orleans, in particular, claim to be the 'house' - the first, a hotel on Conti St. in the 1820's. Evidence surfaced in 2005, from an excavation and research, that unearthed an ad for this house that alluded to prostitution.

"A guidebook called Offbeat New Orleans places the second house at 826-830 Louis St. between the years of 1862-1864. According to StraightDope.com, the building was supposedly named after its madam, Marianne LeSolei Levant. Her surname translates to 'The Rising Sun.'

"The third, Rising Sun Hall along the riverfront in the uptown Carrollton neighborhood during the late 19th Century, where meetings of a Social Aid and Pleasure Club were held, as well as dances and functions. The Conti St. house and 'Rising Sun Hall are listed in old period directories.

"Dave van Ronk wrote in his autobiography [The Mayor of Macdougal Street: A Memoir] that he had seen photos of the old New Orleans Prison for Women, and over the entrance he saw a design of a Risin' Sun. Thus, some believe that the ballad is about a young girl who goes to prison. Others think she ended up as a 'lady of the night.' —Colette Dumont

The Animals were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994.

SIDEBAR: "The gender of the singer is flexible. Earlier versions of the song are often sung from the female perspective, a woman who followed a drunk or a gambler to New Orleans and became a prostitute in the House of the Rising Sun (or, depending on one's interpretation, an inmate in a prison of the same name), such as in Joan Baez's version on her self-titled 1960 debut album. The Animals version was sung from a perspective of a male, warning about gambling and drinking. Shawn Mullins' recent covered version on his album 9th Ward Pickin' Parlor is sung from the female perspective." —Wikipedia

The House of the Rising Sun Lyrics
(As sung by Nina Simone)

There is a house in New Orleans
They call it the Rising Sun.
And it's been the ruin of many a poor girl,
And me, oh God, I'm one.

If I had only listen to what my mamma said
I'd be at home today
But being so young and foolish, my Lord
Let a gambler lead me astray.

Now my mother is a tailor
She sews new blue jeans
And my sweetheart is a drunker, Lord
Drinks down in New Orleans.

Now the only thing a gambler man needs
Is a suitcase and the trunk
And the only time he's satisfied
Long is when he's on a drunk.

Somebody go get my baby sister
Tell her to do never to do what I have done
But shun that house in New Orleans
They call it the Rising Sun.

Well, I'm going back to New Orleans
My race is almost won
Yes I'm going back
To spend my life beneath the Rising Sun.

Alan Price - The House of the Rising Sun - Guitar Guru File

Alan Price - The House of the Rising Sun - Sheet Music (Digital Download)






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