Tramp were a Britishblues band, active during the late 1960s and early 1970s on an intermittent basis. This on/off activity and the loose, transient nature of the band's line-up were reflected in the group's name.
The line-up centred on the brother-sister pairing of Dave Kelly and Jo Ann Kelly, and included various members of Fleetwood Mac, plus various session musicians. The band released two albums; Tramp in 1969, and Put A Record On in 1974. All members participated in many other projects before, after and even during their time with Tramp.
"Tramp" is a soul blues song first recorded by Lowell Fulson in 1967. It was written by Fulson and Jimmy McCracklin. The song became a hit, reaching #5 in the Billboard R&B chart and #52 in the pop Billboard Hot 100 chart. Since the original recording, "Tramp" has been recorded by several R&B and other artists.
The original version recorded by Lowell Fulson was sampled in the 1990 song "Rampage" by EPMD (featuring LL Cool J), the 1991 song "Let, Let Me In" by De La Soul and the 1992 song "7" by Prince.
The following are characters who first appeared, or returned, in the BBCsoap operaEastEnders during 2013 listed by order of first appearance . New characters were introduced by Lorraine Newman, executive producer until December 2013, when Dominic Treadwell-Collins took over.
+/-, or Plus/Minus, is an Americanindietronic band formed in 2001. The band makes use of both electronic and traditional instruments, and has sought to use electronics to recreate traditional indie rock song forms and instrumental structures. The group has released two albums on each of the American indie labels Teenbeat Records and Absolutely Kosher, and their track "All I do" was prominently featured in the soundtrack for the major film Wicker Park. The group has developed a devoted following in Japan and Taiwan, and has toured there frequently. Although many artists append bonus tracks onto the end of Japanese album releases to discourage purchasers from buying cheaper US import versions, the overseas versions of +/- albums are usually quite different from the US versions - tracklists can be rearranged, artwork with noticeable changes is used, and tracks from the US version can be replaced as well as augmented by bonus tracks.
!!! is a dance-punk band that formed in Sacramento, California, in 1996 by lead singer Nic Offer. Its name is most commonly pronounced "Chk Chk Chk" ([/tʃk.tʃk.tʃk/]). Members of !!! came from other local bands such as The Yah Mos, Black Liquorice and Popesmashers. They are currently based in New York City, Sacramento, and Portland, Oregon. The band's sixth full-length album, As If, was released in October 2015.
Background and history
!!! is an American band formed in the summer of 1995 by the merger of part of the group Black Liquorice and Popesmashers. After a successful joint tour, these two teams decided to mix the disco-funk with more aggressive sounds and integrate the hardcore singer Nic Offer from the The Yah Mos. The band's name was inspired by the subtitles of the movie The Gods Must Be Crazy, in which the clicking sounds of the Bushmens' Khoisan language were represented as "!". However, as the bandmembers themselves say, !!! is pronounced by repeating thrice any monosyllabic sound. "Chk Chk Chk" is the most common pronunciation, which the URL of their official website and the title of their Myspace page suggest is the preferred pronunciation.
"Tramp" - Lowell Fulson (1966)
Album: The Tramp Years (1967)
"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
published: 17 Jun 2014
Lowell Fulsom(n) - Tramp 1966
Some debate on who wrote this. Most claim this was written by Jimmy McCracklin and Fulsom had no part in it. Otis Redding and Carla Thomas had a big hit with this in the same year.
published: 23 Mar 2013
Tramp - Lowell Fulson
published: 23 Mar 2019
Lowell Fulsom - Tramp
Album: Tramp
Year: 1967
Label: Kent
sampled by:
Papa Was Too by Joe Tex (1966)
Country Girl by The Johnny Otis Show feat. Mighty Mouth Evans and Shuggie Otis (1968)
Get Your Girl in the Mood Quicker by Ice Cube feat. King Tee (1990)
Rampage by EPMD feat. LL Cool J (1990)
Jackin' for Beats by Ice Cube (1990)
Keep on Ya'll by Larry Larr (1991)
2 Skanless by Hi-C (1991)
Let, Let Me In by De La Soul (1991)
How I Could Just Kill a Man by Cypress Hill (1991)
Ca You Get Wreck by M.C. Evil (1992)
Back Off by Fu-Schnickens (1992)
There It Is by Black A.G. (1992)
Dope Charge by Underground Mafia (1992)
7 by Prince (1992)
Time 4 Sum Aksion by Redman (1992)
King Tee's Beer Stand by King Tee feat. Ice Cube (1993)
Girls N' Guns by Just-Ice (1993)
Lyrical Assassin by T-Bone (1993)
Six Million Ways to...
Here’s the original version of “Tramp” by the veteran blues performer, co-written with Jimmy McCracklin. It was successfully covered later in the year by Otis Redding & Carla Thomas ( https://youtu.be/WRGU-868Gco ) and it also inspired Joe Tex to write and record “Papa Was Too” ( https://youtu.be/IOsp2sBtDqQ ).
Pop Chart Peaks: Record World 30, Cash Box 31, Billboard 52 - R&B Peak: 5
Transferred from mono 45 single Kent 456 - Tramp (McCracklin-Fulsom) by Lowell Fulsom
THE 1967 HITS ARCHIVE - Here in one place, a comprehensive collection of ‘pop’ best-sellers and songs which made an impact that were either released or enjoyed a major chunk of their popularity within the calendar year 1967 (some were recorded in 1966)
West Coast Bluesman Lowell and his original Tramp, better known by Otis Redding in '67. The beats and bass influencing artists many years later
published: 14 Jul 2019
BACK TO PARADISE: BRANJAE - Tramp (Lowell Fulson) - Official Video
BRANJAE - "Tramp (Lowell Fulson)" - Official Video from the album Back To Paradise: A Tulsa Tribute to Okie Music. Released 08.28.20 on Horton Records. Branjae - vocals, Paul Benjaman - guitar, Jesse Aycock - guitar, Paddy Ryan - drums, Aaron Boehler - bass, John Fullbright - keys, Andy McCormick - sax, Austin Stunkard - trumpet. Video by FireThief Productions.
ORDER HERE: https://hortonrecords.bandcamp.com/al...
This song was written by Lowell Fulson. It was released in 1967, and later popularized by Otis Redding and Carla Thomas on the Stax Label. After T-Bone Walker, he was widely considered to be one of the most important West coast blues artists in the 1940s and 1950s.
MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT:
In February 2020, a group of Tulsa musicians traveled to Leon Russell’s fam...
published: 09 Apr 2021
Lowell Fulson ★ Tramp - HQ
Tramp
You can call me that
I don't wear continental clothes
Stetson hats
But I'm a lover
Mama was
Papa too
I'm the oldest child
Lovin' is all I know to do
Huh
Call me country
Right from the woods
I'll answer when you call me
Huh baby, I mean that if it, ah, makes you feel good
But I'm just a lover
Mama was
Papa too
But I'm the oldest child
Lovin' is all I know to do
Now whatever you call me
Huh, I'll even go for that
'Cause I keep a fat bankroll in my pocket, baby
You know I own three Cadillacs
"Tramp" - Lowell Fulson (1966)
Album: The Tramp Years (1967)
"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use...
"Tramp" - Lowell Fulson (1966)
Album: The Tramp Years (1967)
"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
"Tramp" - Lowell Fulson (1966)
Album: The Tramp Years (1967)
"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
Some debate on who wrote this. Most claim this was written by Jimmy McCracklin and Fulsom had no part in it. Otis Redding and Carla Thomas had a big hit with th...
Some debate on who wrote this. Most claim this was written by Jimmy McCracklin and Fulsom had no part in it. Otis Redding and Carla Thomas had a big hit with this in the same year.
Some debate on who wrote this. Most claim this was written by Jimmy McCracklin and Fulsom had no part in it. Otis Redding and Carla Thomas had a big hit with this in the same year.
Album: Tramp
Year: 1967
Label: Kent
sampled by:
Papa Was Too by Joe Tex (1966)
Country Girl by The Johnny Otis Show feat. Mighty Mouth Evans and Shuggie Oti...
Album: Tramp
Year: 1967
Label: Kent
sampled by:
Papa Was Too by Joe Tex (1966)
Country Girl by The Johnny Otis Show feat. Mighty Mouth Evans and Shuggie Otis (1968)
Get Your Girl in the Mood Quicker by Ice Cube feat. King Tee (1990)
Rampage by EPMD feat. LL Cool J (1990)
Jackin' for Beats by Ice Cube (1990)
Keep on Ya'll by Larry Larr (1991)
2 Skanless by Hi-C (1991)
Let, Let Me In by De La Soul (1991)
How I Could Just Kill a Man by Cypress Hill (1991)
Ca You Get Wreck by M.C. Evil (1992)
Back Off by Fu-Schnickens (1992)
There It Is by Black A.G. (1992)
Dope Charge by Underground Mafia (1992)
7 by Prince (1992)
Time 4 Sum Aksion by Redman (1992)
King Tee's Beer Stand by King Tee feat. Ice Cube (1993)
Girls N' Guns by Just-Ice (1993)
Lyrical Assassin by T-Bone (1993)
Six Million Ways to Die by Funkmaster Flex feat. Nine (1993)
Track 3 by DJ Q-Bert (1994)
thanks www.whosampled.com
Album: Tramp
Year: 1967
Label: Kent
sampled by:
Papa Was Too by Joe Tex (1966)
Country Girl by The Johnny Otis Show feat. Mighty Mouth Evans and Shuggie Otis (1968)
Get Your Girl in the Mood Quicker by Ice Cube feat. King Tee (1990)
Rampage by EPMD feat. LL Cool J (1990)
Jackin' for Beats by Ice Cube (1990)
Keep on Ya'll by Larry Larr (1991)
2 Skanless by Hi-C (1991)
Let, Let Me In by De La Soul (1991)
How I Could Just Kill a Man by Cypress Hill (1991)
Ca You Get Wreck by M.C. Evil (1992)
Back Off by Fu-Schnickens (1992)
There It Is by Black A.G. (1992)
Dope Charge by Underground Mafia (1992)
7 by Prince (1992)
Time 4 Sum Aksion by Redman (1992)
King Tee's Beer Stand by King Tee feat. Ice Cube (1993)
Girls N' Guns by Just-Ice (1993)
Lyrical Assassin by T-Bone (1993)
Six Million Ways to Die by Funkmaster Flex feat. Nine (1993)
Track 3 by DJ Q-Bert (1994)
thanks www.whosampled.com
Here’s the original version of “Tramp” by the veteran blues performer, co-written with Jimmy McCracklin. It was successfully covered later in the year by Otis R...
Here’s the original version of “Tramp” by the veteran blues performer, co-written with Jimmy McCracklin. It was successfully covered later in the year by Otis Redding & Carla Thomas ( https://youtu.be/WRGU-868Gco ) and it also inspired Joe Tex to write and record “Papa Was Too” ( https://youtu.be/IOsp2sBtDqQ ).
Pop Chart Peaks: Record World 30, Cash Box 31, Billboard 52 - R&B Peak: 5
Transferred from mono 45 single Kent 456 - Tramp (McCracklin-Fulsom) by Lowell Fulsom
THE 1967 HITS ARCHIVE - Here in one place, a comprehensive collection of ‘pop’ best-sellers and songs which made an impact that were either released or enjoyed a major chunk of their popularity within the calendar year 1967 (some were recorded in 1966)
Here’s the original version of “Tramp” by the veteran blues performer, co-written with Jimmy McCracklin. It was successfully covered later in the year by Otis Redding & Carla Thomas ( https://youtu.be/WRGU-868Gco ) and it also inspired Joe Tex to write and record “Papa Was Too” ( https://youtu.be/IOsp2sBtDqQ ).
Pop Chart Peaks: Record World 30, Cash Box 31, Billboard 52 - R&B Peak: 5
Transferred from mono 45 single Kent 456 - Tramp (McCracklin-Fulsom) by Lowell Fulsom
THE 1967 HITS ARCHIVE - Here in one place, a comprehensive collection of ‘pop’ best-sellers and songs which made an impact that were either released or enjoyed a major chunk of their popularity within the calendar year 1967 (some were recorded in 1966)
BRANJAE - "Tramp (Lowell Fulson)" - Official Video from the album Back To Paradise: A Tulsa Tribute to Okie Music. Released 08.28.20 on Horton Records. Bran...
BRANJAE - "Tramp (Lowell Fulson)" - Official Video from the album Back To Paradise: A Tulsa Tribute to Okie Music. Released 08.28.20 on Horton Records. Branjae - vocals, Paul Benjaman - guitar, Jesse Aycock - guitar, Paddy Ryan - drums, Aaron Boehler - bass, John Fullbright - keys, Andy McCormick - sax, Austin Stunkard - trumpet. Video by FireThief Productions.
ORDER HERE: https://hortonrecords.bandcamp.com/al...
This song was written by Lowell Fulson. It was released in 1967, and later popularized by Otis Redding and Carla Thomas on the Stax Label. After T-Bone Walker, he was widely considered to be one of the most important West coast blues artists in the 1940s and 1950s.
MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT:
In February 2020, a group of Tulsa musicians traveled to Leon Russell’s famed Paradise Studio at Grand Lake to record the first album tracked there since 1978. Tulsan Rick Huskey has spent the last 30 years preserving and restoring the space, honoring its history while preparing for a new chapter. The narrow, winding road one must travel to reach the compound provided time for reflection. Some of the biggest names in the history of music traveled the same path years before. That realization was both inspiring and daunting. Entering the studio for the first time, the musicians were awestruck. Decades later, the vibe is still alive. Seventeen tracks were recorded over the course of four days – mostly live, with very few overdubs. While there was a core group of players throughout the session, a grand total of 20 Tulsa musicians participated in the recording. The Oklahoma songs chosen for the album represent the famous to the obscure, and everything in-between. This recording honors those who came before and made it possible for Tulsa musicians to have an identity and a music scene today. Thank you to Leon for blazing a trail and building this lake palace. Thank you to all of the Oklahoma musicians over the years who have been role models through their authenticity and spirit of community. This record is dedicated to them. Back To Paradise: A Tulsa Tribute to Okie Music.
Produced by Jason Weinheimer and Them Tulsa Boys
Recorded at Paradise Studio at Grand Lake
Engineered by Jason Weinheimer and Zachariah Reeves
Mixed by Jason Weinheimer
All tracks mastered by Ryan Foster at Foster Mastering
Illustration by Paddy Ryan
Design and layout by Steve Hammons
Photos by Phil Clarkin, Greg Bollinger, and Jesse Aycock
BRANJAE - "Tramp (Lowell Fulson)" - Official Video from the album Back To Paradise: A Tulsa Tribute to Okie Music. Released 08.28.20 on Horton Records. Branjae - vocals, Paul Benjaman - guitar, Jesse Aycock - guitar, Paddy Ryan - drums, Aaron Boehler - bass, John Fullbright - keys, Andy McCormick - sax, Austin Stunkard - trumpet. Video by FireThief Productions.
ORDER HERE: https://hortonrecords.bandcamp.com/al...
This song was written by Lowell Fulson. It was released in 1967, and later popularized by Otis Redding and Carla Thomas on the Stax Label. After T-Bone Walker, he was widely considered to be one of the most important West coast blues artists in the 1940s and 1950s.
MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT:
In February 2020, a group of Tulsa musicians traveled to Leon Russell’s famed Paradise Studio at Grand Lake to record the first album tracked there since 1978. Tulsan Rick Huskey has spent the last 30 years preserving and restoring the space, honoring its history while preparing for a new chapter. The narrow, winding road one must travel to reach the compound provided time for reflection. Some of the biggest names in the history of music traveled the same path years before. That realization was both inspiring and daunting. Entering the studio for the first time, the musicians were awestruck. Decades later, the vibe is still alive. Seventeen tracks were recorded over the course of four days – mostly live, with very few overdubs. While there was a core group of players throughout the session, a grand total of 20 Tulsa musicians participated in the recording. The Oklahoma songs chosen for the album represent the famous to the obscure, and everything in-between. This recording honors those who came before and made it possible for Tulsa musicians to have an identity and a music scene today. Thank you to Leon for blazing a trail and building this lake palace. Thank you to all of the Oklahoma musicians over the years who have been role models through their authenticity and spirit of community. This record is dedicated to them. Back To Paradise: A Tulsa Tribute to Okie Music.
Produced by Jason Weinheimer and Them Tulsa Boys
Recorded at Paradise Studio at Grand Lake
Engineered by Jason Weinheimer and Zachariah Reeves
Mixed by Jason Weinheimer
All tracks mastered by Ryan Foster at Foster Mastering
Illustration by Paddy Ryan
Design and layout by Steve Hammons
Photos by Phil Clarkin, Greg Bollinger, and Jesse Aycock
Tramp
You can call me that
I don't wear continental clothes
Stetson hats
But I'm a lover
Mama was
Papa too
I'm the oldest child
Lovin' is all I know to do
Huh...
Tramp
You can call me that
I don't wear continental clothes
Stetson hats
But I'm a lover
Mama was
Papa too
I'm the oldest child
Lovin' is all I know to do
Huh
Call me country
Right from the woods
I'll answer when you call me
Huh baby, I mean that if it, ah, makes you feel good
But I'm just a lover
Mama was
Papa too
But I'm the oldest child
Lovin' is all I know to do
Now whatever you call me
Huh, I'll even go for that
'Cause I keep a fat bankroll in my pocket, baby
You know I own three Cadillacs
Tramp
You can call me that
I don't wear continental clothes
Stetson hats
But I'm a lover
Mama was
Papa too
I'm the oldest child
Lovin' is all I know to do
Huh
Call me country
Right from the woods
I'll answer when you call me
Huh baby, I mean that if it, ah, makes you feel good
But I'm just a lover
Mama was
Papa too
But I'm the oldest child
Lovin' is all I know to do
Now whatever you call me
Huh, I'll even go for that
'Cause I keep a fat bankroll in my pocket, baby
You know I own three Cadillacs
"Tramp" - Lowell Fulson (1966)
Album: The Tramp Years (1967)
"Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
Some debate on who wrote this. Most claim this was written by Jimmy McCracklin and Fulsom had no part in it. Otis Redding and Carla Thomas had a big hit with this in the same year.
Album: Tramp
Year: 1967
Label: Kent
sampled by:
Papa Was Too by Joe Tex (1966)
Country Girl by The Johnny Otis Show feat. Mighty Mouth Evans and Shuggie Otis (1968)
Get Your Girl in the Mood Quicker by Ice Cube feat. King Tee (1990)
Rampage by EPMD feat. LL Cool J (1990)
Jackin' for Beats by Ice Cube (1990)
Keep on Ya'll by Larry Larr (1991)
2 Skanless by Hi-C (1991)
Let, Let Me In by De La Soul (1991)
How I Could Just Kill a Man by Cypress Hill (1991)
Ca You Get Wreck by M.C. Evil (1992)
Back Off by Fu-Schnickens (1992)
There It Is by Black A.G. (1992)
Dope Charge by Underground Mafia (1992)
7 by Prince (1992)
Time 4 Sum Aksion by Redman (1992)
King Tee's Beer Stand by King Tee feat. Ice Cube (1993)
Girls N' Guns by Just-Ice (1993)
Lyrical Assassin by T-Bone (1993)
Six Million Ways to Die by Funkmaster Flex feat. Nine (1993)
Track 3 by DJ Q-Bert (1994)
thanks www.whosampled.com
Here’s the original version of “Tramp” by the veteran blues performer, co-written with Jimmy McCracklin. It was successfully covered later in the year by Otis Redding & Carla Thomas ( https://youtu.be/WRGU-868Gco ) and it also inspired Joe Tex to write and record “Papa Was Too” ( https://youtu.be/IOsp2sBtDqQ ).
Pop Chart Peaks: Record World 30, Cash Box 31, Billboard 52 - R&B Peak: 5
Transferred from mono 45 single Kent 456 - Tramp (McCracklin-Fulsom) by Lowell Fulsom
THE 1967 HITS ARCHIVE - Here in one place, a comprehensive collection of ‘pop’ best-sellers and songs which made an impact that were either released or enjoyed a major chunk of their popularity within the calendar year 1967 (some were recorded in 1966)
BRANJAE - "Tramp (Lowell Fulson)" - Official Video from the album Back To Paradise: A Tulsa Tribute to Okie Music. Released 08.28.20 on Horton Records. Branjae - vocals, Paul Benjaman - guitar, Jesse Aycock - guitar, Paddy Ryan - drums, Aaron Boehler - bass, John Fullbright - keys, Andy McCormick - sax, Austin Stunkard - trumpet. Video by FireThief Productions.
ORDER HERE: https://hortonrecords.bandcamp.com/al...
This song was written by Lowell Fulson. It was released in 1967, and later popularized by Otis Redding and Carla Thomas on the Stax Label. After T-Bone Walker, he was widely considered to be one of the most important West coast blues artists in the 1940s and 1950s.
MORE ABOUT THIS PROJECT:
In February 2020, a group of Tulsa musicians traveled to Leon Russell’s famed Paradise Studio at Grand Lake to record the first album tracked there since 1978. Tulsan Rick Huskey has spent the last 30 years preserving and restoring the space, honoring its history while preparing for a new chapter. The narrow, winding road one must travel to reach the compound provided time for reflection. Some of the biggest names in the history of music traveled the same path years before. That realization was both inspiring and daunting. Entering the studio for the first time, the musicians were awestruck. Decades later, the vibe is still alive. Seventeen tracks were recorded over the course of four days – mostly live, with very few overdubs. While there was a core group of players throughout the session, a grand total of 20 Tulsa musicians participated in the recording. The Oklahoma songs chosen for the album represent the famous to the obscure, and everything in-between. This recording honors those who came before and made it possible for Tulsa musicians to have an identity and a music scene today. Thank you to Leon for blazing a trail and building this lake palace. Thank you to all of the Oklahoma musicians over the years who have been role models through their authenticity and spirit of community. This record is dedicated to them. Back To Paradise: A Tulsa Tribute to Okie Music.
Produced by Jason Weinheimer and Them Tulsa Boys
Recorded at Paradise Studio at Grand Lake
Engineered by Jason Weinheimer and Zachariah Reeves
Mixed by Jason Weinheimer
All tracks mastered by Ryan Foster at Foster Mastering
Illustration by Paddy Ryan
Design and layout by Steve Hammons
Photos by Phil Clarkin, Greg Bollinger, and Jesse Aycock
Tramp
You can call me that
I don't wear continental clothes
Stetson hats
But I'm a lover
Mama was
Papa too
I'm the oldest child
Lovin' is all I know to do
Huh
Call me country
Right from the woods
I'll answer when you call me
Huh baby, I mean that if it, ah, makes you feel good
But I'm just a lover
Mama was
Papa too
But I'm the oldest child
Lovin' is all I know to do
Now whatever you call me
Huh, I'll even go for that
'Cause I keep a fat bankroll in my pocket, baby
You know I own three Cadillacs
Tramp were a Britishblues band, active during the late 1960s and early 1970s on an intermittent basis. This on/off activity and the loose, transient nature of the band's line-up were reflected in the group's name.
The line-up centred on the brother-sister pairing of Dave Kelly and Jo Ann Kelly, and included various members of Fleetwood Mac, plus various session musicians. The band released two albums; Tramp in 1969, and Put A Record On in 1974. All members participated in many other projects before, after and even during their time with Tramp.