Product Details
Wheelin' and Dealin': The Definitive Collection

Wheelin' and Dealin': The Definitive Collection
Lee Dorsey

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Track Listing

  1. Ya Ya
  2. Do-Re-Mi
  3. Ride Your Pony
  4. Work, Work, Work
  5. Can You Hear Me
  6. Get Out of My Life Woman
  7. Confusion
  8. Working in the Coal Mine
  9. Holy Cow
  10. Operation Heartache
  11. Gotta Find a Job
  12. Love Lots of Lovin' - Lee Dorsey, Betty Harris
  13. My Old Car
  14. Go-Go Girl
  15. I Can't Get Away
  16. Lottie Mo '68 [#]
  17. Lover Was Born
  18. Everything I Do Gonh Be Funky (From Now On)
  19. Give It Up
  20. Candy Yam

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #64467 in Music
  • Released on: 1997-08-26
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Original recording remastered

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
New Orleans native Lee Dorsey spent most of his life working as an auto mechanic--"the best body man in the 9th Ward"--but managed, off and on through the '60s, to knock off some of the greatest R&B performances ever put on record. Dorsey's success came through singles--from 1961's "Ya Ya" to 1966's "Working in the Coal Mine" to "Everything I Do Gohn Be Funky" in 1969--which feature the swaying New Orleans style (made famous by Fats Domino) and Dorsey's silky smooth vocals. Wheelin' and Dealin' includes all the hits, as well as a number of misses, available for the first time on CD. --Roni Sarig

Living Blues
The 20-track compilation ... opens with Dorsey's impossibly infectious first smash ... in 1961.... Dorsey tended toward a laconic vocal approach.


Customer Reviews

Human music from the early 60's.5
Lee Dorsey's music has something that immediately attracts and appeals. It may be his smooth delivery, the groove, the bluesy New Orleans R&B melodies, the great piano and horn section, the human feeling... Whatever it is - I loved Lee Dorsey when I first heard him on LP 12 years ago, and I love it now, listening and dancing to his songs with my little daughter.
This is a great compilation, great song selection and remastering. The tunes that catch on quickly are "Ya-ya", "Do-Re Mi", "Ride Your Pony", "work", and "Working in the Coal mine". After a few more times, the rest of the songs catch up with these.
This is fun music, groovy and happy. For some reason I wanr my daughter to grow up listening to this stuff rather than what she might hear on MTV.

Guaranteed to make you feel good!5
Lee Dorsey is 100%, true, straight from the heart entertainment. There's no one like him. Old folks and children like him, too!

Some Of The 60s Happiest Hits5
In addition to being a mechanic, Irving Lee Dorsey - born on Christmas Eve in 1924 in New Orleans - also did a bit of boxing and served a stint with the Marines before launching his singing career with the small Fury label in 1961. When he was almost 37 years old!

Ya Ya was quite a debut, climbing to # 1 R&B and # 7 Hot 100 that November. Early in 1962 the follow-up Do-Re-Mi made it to # 22 R&B/# 27 Hot 100. But after that the hits dried up, and when Fury folded Dorsey moved over to the Amy label where he came under the guidance of Allen Toussaint and Marshall Schorn. The combination worked as Dorsey, now 41, saw Ride Your Pony reach # 7 R&B and # 28 Hot 100 in August 1965.

Early the next year Get Out Of My Life, Woman peaked at # 5 R&B and # 44 Hot 100, followed by his second most successful single, Working In The Coal Mine which topped out at # 5 R&B/# 8 Hot 100 in September. Three months later the comical Holy Cow b/w Operation Heartache went to # 10 R&B and # 23 Hot 100.

In May 1967 My Old Car just made the Hot 100, settling in at # 97, followed that November by Go-Go Girl (# 31 R&B/# 62 Hot 100). Then the well dried up for over a year before he found another hit, the title of which perhaps indicated a new musical direction - Everything I Do Gohn Be Funky (From Now On) - which levelled off at # 33 R&B and # 95 Hot 100 in July 1969.

In 1970 Dorsey switched to Polydor where, in 1970, he cut a concept LP entitled Yes We Can, which was also, like his hits with Amy, produced by Toussaint. From that album Yes We Can - Part 1 made it to # 46 on the R&B singles charts in November. That cut is not included in this cmpilation, nor is his final charter which came eight years later in 1978. Now 54, and with ABC, Dorsey's Night People struggled to the # 93 spot on the R&B charts.

A lifetime smoker, Dorsey died of emphysema one month before his 66th birthday on December 1, 1986.

None of his songs will ever fit into the "classic" category. But you know, it's hard to find a Sixties retrospective compilation without at least ONE Dorsey hit included. This CD will give you just about all of them.