Lord Rockingham's XI

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Hoots Mon 02:15 Tools
Hoots Mon! 02:11 Tools
Fried Onions 01:46 Tools
Wee Tom 02:20 Tools
The Squelch 01:49 Tools
04 - Lord Rockingham's Xi - Hoots Mon! 02:15 Tools
Blue Train 01:51 Tools
Hoot's Mon 02:14 Tools
Lord Rockingham Meets the Monster 02:02 Tools
Newcastle Twist 01:51 Tools
Farewell to Rockingham 02:30 Tools
Hoots Mon There's a Moose Loose Aboot the Hoose 02:15 Tools
La Dee Dah 01:57 Tools
Lucky Ladybug 01:51 Tools
Lady Rockingham, I Presume 02:09 Tools
05 - Lord Rockingham's Xi - Wee Tom 02:15 Tools
Rockingham Twist 01:59 Tools
Hoots Mon (Digitally Remastered) 02:13 Tools
Hoots Mon (1958) 02:17 Tools
Ra-Ra Rockingham 01:25 Tools
Lord Rockingham's Lament 02:40 Tools
Hoots Mon - Digitally Re-Mastered 01:25 Tools
The Fat Washerwoman 02:09 Tools
What the Butler Saw 02:24 Tools
Rocky Mountain Gal 02:21 Tools
The Purple People Eater 02:17 Tools
Rock O' the North 02:31 Tools
Miss Valerie 02:14 Tools
The Fat Noise 02:05 Tools
Hoots Moon 02:24 Tools
Hoots Mon - Digitally Remastered 01:55 Tools
Hoots Mon ! 02:13 Tools
You-Oo 02:13 Tools
My Dream 02:09 Tools
Hoots Mon' 02:15 Tools
You're the Greatest 01:55 Tools
Gingerbread 01:47 Tools
Heavy Date 02:05 Tools
Sentimental Journey 02:35 Tools
Hoots Moni 01:47 Tools
Hoots Mon - Lord Rockingham's XI 01:47 Tools
Lady Rockingham, I Presume? 02:35 Tools
Hoots Man 02:35 Tools
Fired Onions 02:35 Tools
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Lord Rockingham's XI was a group of British session musicians, led by Harry Robinson (1932–1996), who had a No. 1 hit on the UK Singles Chart in 1958 with "Hoots Mon". The group was put together to play as the resident band on the pop TV programme Oh Boy!, which was produced by Jack Good, and shown nationally on ITV in the UK in 1958/59. They were fronted by Harry Robinson and also included jazz baritone saxophonist and later writer Benny Green, and organist Cherry Wainer. Other members were Don Storer (drums), Reg Weller (percussion), Red Price (tenor sax), Rex Morris (tenor sax), Cyril Reubens (baritone sax), Ronnie Black (double bass), Bernie Taylor (guitar), Eric Ford (guitar). Joining the group later were Kenny Packwood (guitar) and Ian Fraser (piano). In addition to backing singers such as Marty Wilde and Cuddly Dudley, they recorded several novelty rock instrumentals for Decca Records, the first being "Fried Onions", which failed to chart in the UK but did slip into the US Billboard charts for a week at No. 96. The second single, Robinson's "Hoots Mon", a rocked-up version of the traditional Scottish song "A Hundred Pipers", featuring Scotticisms like "Hoots mon, there's a moose loose aboot this hoose!", rose up the charts supported by weekly TV exposure, and stayed at number one for three weeks. They played "Long John" amongst others. Following a legal case brought by descendants of the real Lord Rockingham, which was settled out of court, the group toured and made several less successful follow-ups, including "Wee Tom" (#16, 1959). They disbanded with the end of the TV show in 1959, although the name was revived for a couple of albums in the 1960s. Robinson's career in TV and music continued, one notable credit being for his string arrangement on Nick Drake's track "River Man". "Fried Onions" was used in a television advertisement for Options indulgence chocolate drink, first shown on UK TV in December 2011. Cherry Wainer died in Las Vegas, Nevada on November 14, 2014, at the age of 79. Jack Good (7 August 1931 – 24 September 2017) was a pioneering British former television producer, musical theatre producer, record producer, musician and painter of icons. As a television producer, he was responsible for the early music showsSix-Five Special, Oh Boy!, Wham! and Boy Meets Girls TV series, the first UK teenage music programmes. Good managed some of the UK's first rock and roll stars, including Tommy Steele, Marty Wilde, Billy Fury, Jess Conrad and Cliff Richard. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.