Bruce Channel
Bruce Channel (born as Bruce McMeans, on November 28, 1940, in Jacksonville, Texas) was a one-hit wonder known for his 1962 number one hit, "Hey! Baby". Channel originally performed on the Louisiana Hayride radio show, and then joined up with harmonica-player Delbert McClinton singing country music. Bruce wrote "Hey! Baby" in 1959, together with Margaret Cobb, and had been performing it for two years before recording it for Fort Worth record producer Bill Smith. It was originally released on Bill Smith's label, but as it started to sell well, it was distributed by Smash. ...show more
Bruce Channel (born as Bruce McMeans, on November 28, 1940, in Jacksonville, Texas) was a one-hit wonder known for his 1962 number one hit, "Hey! Baby". Channel originally performed on the Louisiana Hayride radio show, and then joined up with harmonica-player Delbert McClinton singing country music. Bruce wrote "Hey! Baby" in 1959, together with Margaret Cobb, and had been performing it for two years before recording it for Fort Worth record producer Bill Smith. It was originally released on Bill Smith's label, but as it started to sell well, it was distributed by Smash.
Besides topping the U.S. pop charts, it became No. 2 in the UK in 1962 as well. Channel toured Europe and was supported at one gig by The Beatles, who were then still unknown.
John Lennon, who had "Hey! Baby" on his jukebox, was fascinated by McClinton's harmonica and asked McClinton to teach him to play. The harmonica break in "Hey! Baby" not only inspired Lennon's harmonica playing on The Beatles' 1962 first single "Love Me Do" and later records, but the harmonica break on Frank Ifield's "I Remember You" in 1962. The key to the appeal of "Hey! Baby" is the sustained first note, with a rhythmic shuffle in the background. This had previously occurred on a recent hit "Sherry" (1962) by The Four Seasons, and was later to recur on a Beatles song, "I Should Have Known Better" (on A Hard Day's Night - 1964). ...show less
Albums & Singles by Bruce Channel
Page 1 of 1
Playlists Containing Tracks by Bruce Channel

The ultimate blues,funk,soull list

Ultimate list of love songs

Woodstock / Hippies / Flower Power

Giant Oldies Jukebox

Sixties (Ultimate)

The '60s Party Mix

New Year's Party!

Dave Marsh's 1001 Greatest Singles Ever

Oldies

All along the 60's [1960-1969]

The 60´s

Soundtracks (Movies

ULTIMATE POOL PARTY

Northern Soul

The Roots of The Beatles

PAN AM

Original Motion Picture Soundtrack – Dirty …

60's

60´s

Weekend Beach Run: Upbeat Oldies

The Best Film Soundtracks Album in...

GOLD 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s

Classic golden oldies

oldies but goodies

Vintage - old songs (30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s)

Summer

60's a Go-Go

Decade/Oldies Playlist

PePe's Mad Men Classics!

In the Beginning-The Mod Story

One-Hit Wonders (everyone's a winner)

50s & 60s faves
Playlists We Love
-
Easy Like Sunday Morning
Silky slow jams for the morning after the night before.
-
Weekly Top 100 Tracks
Every Monday we publish a chart of the Top 100 tracks added to playlists in the previous week
-
New Dream Pop
An exploration of new artists creating pop with influences and sounds drawn from the dream pop of the late 80s
-
Music like Daft Punk
Tracks that sound a bit like daft punk to keep you going until the new album comes out!
-
This Is House Music
The ultimate playlist featuring the best of today's House music. Updated regularly
-
MAD MEN Essentials
To celebrate the return of Mad Men enjoy this playlist of the most memorable songs from the first 5 seasons
-
Pitchfork's Top 500 Tracks of the 2000s
Remember when everyone was partying like it was 1999 because it was, in fact, 1999? That was 10 years ago.
-
2013: The Best Remixes
A continuously updated playlist with the best remixes released on Spotify throughout 2013
-
Top Hits USA
The top 100 songs in the USA right now. Updated weekly, subscribe for automatic updates
-
once you INDIE POP you can't stop
Upbeat indie songs, with tracks from Savoir Adore, Alt-J, Peter Bjorn and John, Bastille and many more

























