Ernie Freeman

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Raunchy 00:00 Tools
Rock House - 1996 Digital Remaster 00:00 Tools
Rock House 00:00 Tools
Mountain Greenery 00:00 Tools
Live It Up 00:00 Tools
Jivin' Around 00:00 Tools
Mountain Greenery - 1996 Digital Remaster 00:00 Tools
Jivin' Around (Part 1) 00:00 Tools
Rock House (1996 Digital Remaster) 00:00 Tools
Fever / Comin' Home Baby (Medley) - 1996 Digital Remaster 00:00 Tools
Dumplin's 00:00 Tools
Fever / Comin' Home Baby 00:00 Tools
Rock House - Remastered 00:00 Tools
Return to Me 00:00 Tools
Rockhouse 00:00 Tools
Spring Fever 00:00 Tools
Night Sounds 00:00 Tools
Fever / Comin' Home Baby (Medley) 00:00 Tools
The Twist 00:00 Tools
Indian Love Call 00:00 Tools
The Stripper 00:00 Tools
Jivin Around 00:00 Tools
Mountain Greenery - Remastered 00:00 Tools
Theme From Igor 00:00 Tools
Puddin' 00:00 Tools
Indian Love Call (58) 00:00 Tools
The World We Know 00:00 Tools
Raunchy '65 00:00 Tools
Rockin' Red Wing 00:00 Tools
Mountain Greenery (1996 Digital Remaster) 00:00 Tools
Lost Dreams 00:00 Tools
Rockin' Around 00:00 Tools
Fever / Comin' Home Baby (Medley) (1996 Digital Remaster) 00:00 Tools
Raunch 00:00 Tools
Marshmallows, Popcorn, and Soda Pop 00:00 Tools
Conquest 00:00 Tools
Ranchy 00:00 Tools
Summer Serenade 00:00 Tools
Beautiful Weekend 00:00 Tools
Jivin' Around, PT.1 00:00 Tools
Dumplins 00:00 Tools
Junior Jive 00:00 Tools
Limbo Rock 00:00 Tools
In The Mood 00:00 Tools
Theme From "The Dark At The Top Of The Stairs" 00:00 Tools
Jivin' Around (Part 2) 00:00 Tools
A Touch Of The Blues 00:00 Tools
Save the Last Dance for Me 00:00 Tools
Swamp Meeting 00:00 Tools
After Sunset 00:00 Tools
Shape Up 00:00 Tools
Jivin´ Around, Part I 00:00 Tools
Fever 00:00 Tools
Tweedlee Dee 00:00 Tools
Blues After Hours 00:00 Tools
Jamboree 00:00 Tools
River Boat 00:00 Tools
Swing It 00:00 Tools
Always With You 00:00 Tools
Walking The Beat 00:00 Tools
Diane 00:00 Tools
Honey Dripper 00:00 Tools
The Tuttle 00:00 Tools
Riverboat 00:00 Tools
Schoolroom Rock 00:00 Tools
Rock House (Remastered) 00:00 Tools
Theme From 'Dark at the Top of the Stairs' 00:00 Tools
Medley: Fever / Comin' Home Baby (Remastered) 00:00 Tools
Big River 00:00 Tools
Leaps And Bounds 00:00 Tools
The Walk 00:00 Tools
Volare 00:00 Tools
Ernie Freeman / Raunchy 00:00 Tools
I'll See You In My Dreams 00:00 Tools
Return to Me [Instrumental] 00:00 Tools
Dumplin’s 00:00 Tools
Raunchy [12Gf] 00:00 Tools
Jivin Around [12Mv] 00:00 Tools
Rock House (1996 Digital Remaster) (1996 Digital Remaster) 00:00 Tools
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* Born 16 August 1922, Cleveland, Ohio * Died 15 May 1981, Beverly Hills, California Although Ernie Freeman is best known for his work with Frank Sinatra in the mid-1960s, space age pop fans should check out his own instrumental albums, particularly those cleared targeted for heavy rotation at dance parties in the early 1960s. Limbo Dance Party and Comin' Home Baby (with a Top 100-charting cover of Mel Torme's tune) will definitely get you out there doing a Pee-Wee Herman dance (in the privacy of your own home, of course). Freeman started playing with groups in Cleveland while he was still in high school, and he and his sister Evelyn formed a combo that became quite popular among young black audiences in the area. After serving in World War Two, he spent a few years working as a pianist, alone and with groups, before he decided to try his luck in the studio business in Los Angeles. For the first few years, Freeman scraped by as a free-lancer, pinch-hitting as an R&B and rock 'n' roll pianist on a variety of major and minor label recordings, all without credit. After the studio group, B. Bumble and the Stinger had a minor hit with their upbeat version of "Flight of the Bumblebee," "B. Bumble Boogie," Freeman was brought in to raise the quality of musicianship, and he played lead for most of the groups' other releases. Around 1955, Freeman also had a hit on the R&B charts with his original rocker, "Jivin' 'O' Round." Freeman's first major break came when Lew Chudd hired him to work alongside Jimmy Haskell as the backbone of Imperial Records' music department. Freeman arranged, conducted, and played on many Imperial releases, and it's been suggested that he ghosted for Fats Domino on some of the singles Imperial rushed to market during Fats' heyday. But Chudd also let him record under his own name regularly, and Freeman scored several small hits, with a re-recording of "Jivin' O' Round," "Dumplin'," a Freeman original, "Indian Love Call," and a cover of Bill Justis' "Raunchy." Freeman then switched to Liberty, which was just kicking into high gear with the success of Martin Denny, and he continued to record current pop instrumentals while handling a variety of other musical chores. In 1966, he was hired as the musical director of Sinatra's Reprise label, and he backed Sinatra on a number of recordings, most of them rated as merely passing entries in the Sinatra catalog. However, he held the baton for Sinatra's biggest hit, his cover of Bert Kaempfert's "Strangers in the Night," for which he earned a Grammy for Best Arrangement Accompanying a Vocalist or Instrumentalist. He won the same award in 1970 for his arrangement of "Bridge Over Troubled Water" by Simon and Garfunkel. He also accompanied Dean Martin, helping his career shoot back to center stage with his huge hit, "Everybody Loves Somebody," and continuing through most of his very successful 60s albums, many with a country-western tinge, produced by Jimmy Bowen. Freeman left Reprise in 1971 as the label mutated into a rock-oriented company and worked as a freelancer thereafter. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.