Mr. Bloe

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Groovin' With Mr. Bloe 02:57 Tools
Groovin' With Mr Bloe 00:00 Tools
Groovin with Mr. Bloe 00:00 Tools
Chicken Feed 00:00 Tools
Groovin´ with Mr. Bloe 00:00 Tools
Sinful 00:00 Tools
Groovin' With Mr Blue 03:56 Tools
Groovin' With Mister Bloe 00:00 Tools
Groovin´with Mr. Bloe 00:00 Tools
Curried Soul 00:00 Tools
Groovin` With Mr.Bloe 00:00 Tools
Mighty Mouse 00:00 Tools
Sugar sugar 00:00 Tools
straight down the line 00:00 Tools
Land Of A Thousand Dances 00:00 Tools
Smokey Joe 00:00 Tools
Doo-Di-Dog-Dad 00:00 Tools
Dancing Machine 00:00 Tools
Ja-Da 00:00 Tools
If You've Gotta Make A Fool Of Somebody 00:00 Tools
Mr. Bloe / Groovin With Mr. Bloe 00:00 Tools
Groovin 00:00 Tools
Groovin´ With Mr Bloe 00:00 Tools
Groovin' 00:00 Tools
Groovin` With Mr. Bloe 00:00 Tools
Groovin' with Mr Blow 00:00 Tools
71-75 New Oxford Street 00:00 Tools
Groovin With Mr Bloe 1970 [Instr.] 00:00 Tools
A Skillz 26 00:00 Tools
Groovin' With Mr. Bloe (Greg Wilson edit) 00:00 Tools
Groovin'With Mr. Bloe 00:00 Tools
Groovin with mr.Bloe 00:00 Tools
71-75 New Oxford 00:00 Tools
Groovin' With Mr. Blow 00:00 Tools
Grooving With Mr. Blow 00:00 Tools
Groovin' With Mr Bloe (Greg Wilson Edit) 00:00 Tools
Mr. Bloe - Groovin' With Mr. Bloe 00:00 Tools
Groovin' with Mr. Bloe - 1970 00:00 Tools
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Mr. Bloe was an alias used by the DJM record label producer/arranger and multi-instrumentalist, Zack Laurence. "Groovin' With Mr Bloe", written by Bo Gentry, Bernard Cochrane, Paul Naumann and Kenny Laguna, featuring Harry Pitch on harmonica, and Zack Laurence on piano, entered the UK Singles Chart on 9 May 1970, peaking at Number 2.[1] It was denied the number one spot by "In the Summertime" by Mungo Jerry. In total "Groovin' With Mr Bloe" spent 18 weeks in the chart.[1] A follow up single, Curried Soul, failed to chart,and an album, also entitled Groovin' with Mr. Bloe, was released in 1970 but flopped, leaving the act with the one-hit wonder tag. However, Laurence's contributions to the Roger Whittaker worldwide hit single "The Last Farewell", included arranging the music to the song when it initially appeared on Whittaker's radio programme in the UK in 1971, as well as arranging the instrumental to the subsequent hit song in 1975. "Groovin' With Mr Bloe" is also a lyric in the song, "I Was a Mod Before You Was Mod", by the band, Television Personalities. The b-side to Madness' "Our House" single was "Walking With Mr Wheeze", another instrumental with occasional scratch mix effects. The tune's title was an asthmatic play on "Groovin' With Mr Bloe". The song was partly recorded by The Fall in 2003, for a Peel session as the beginning of their song, "Green Eyed Loco Man". "Groovin' With Mr Bloe" was used as the theme music to the 2009 BBC TV series, Oz and James Drink to Britain. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.