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The Electric Indian

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Active until
  
1969

Genre
  
Pop

Albums
  
Keem-O-Sabe

Active from
  
1969

Record label
  

Similar
  
Len Barry, Dull Knife, Vincent Montana - Jr, John Medora, Joe Jeffrey Group

The electric indian keem o sabe


The Electric Indian was a studio group assembled by Bernie Binnick, co-founder of Swan Records which included Daryl Hall of Hall & Oates fame. Influenced by the popularity of American Indians in the media, Binnick put together the group to record an Indian-esque instrumental, "Keem-O-Sabe." It was released nationally on the United Artists label in 1969 and reached the U.S. Top 20 in the Billboard Hot 100. It also made #6 on Billboard's Easy Listening survey, and crossed to the R&B chart. In Canada, the song reached #19 on the RPM Magazine top singles charts.

Contents

The Electric Indian Oh wow Song Of The Day The Electric Indian KeemOSabe 1969

An album of similar material was recorded, and the follow-up, an Indian style cover version of "Land of a Thousand Dances," (#95, 1969) charted. No future releases were forthcoming. Many of the tracks on the LP were engineered by Joseph Tarsia and recorded at his Philadelphia-based Sigma Sound Studio, with many of the musicians later becoming members of the studio's notable in-house group, MFSB.

The Electric Indian Way Back Attack The Electric Indian
The Electric Indian The Electric Indian KeemOSabe Vinyl LP Album at Discogs

The Electric Indian The Electric Indian KeemOSabe YouTube

The Electric Indian THE ELECTRIC INDIAN KEEMOSABE BIG DIVISION RECORDS

The Electric Indian Oh wow Song Of The Day The Electric Indian KeemOSabe 1969

Songs

Keem-O-SabeKeem-O-Sabe · 1969
What Does It Take to Win Your LoveKeem-O-Sabe · 1969
Storm WarningKeem-O-Sabe · 1969

References

The Electric Indian Wikipedia


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