The Kingsmen in Person is the first album by the rock band The Kingsmen, released in 1963. The album featured "Louie Louie", the band's biggest success.
The Kingsmen recorded "Louie Louie" at Northwestern Inc. recording studio on April 6, 1963.[3] After being reissued by Wand, "Louie Louie" debuted in the Billboard Hot 100 at #83 on November 9 and quickly began ascending the charts.[4] Trying to capitalize on the success of the song, the Kingsmen decided to release an entire album, and gigs at the Chase nightclub were booked on November 15 and 16 to record what was to become The Kingsmen in Person.[5]
Jack Ely, the singer of "Louie Louie", and bassist Bob Nordby appeared on no other tracks on the album because they quit before it was recorded.[6] The album liner notes presented an abridged group history with no mention of Ely or Nordby, instead showcasing Lynn Easton as the group’s sole founder and creative force.[7]
After adding an announcer intro and "live audience" overdubbing, Wand quickly released the album to make a dent in the Christmas purchasing season,[8] and it first appeared on the Billboard Top LPs on January 18, 1964, eventually peaking at #20 and remaining on the chart for over two years (131 weeks total) until 1966.
[9]
The January 18, 1964 issue of Cash Box magazine reviewed the album:[10]
The Kingsmen, who achieved national prominence with their smash Wand single of "Louie, Louie," tag this their premiere album after the hit and include eleven other rousing teen-angled dance-able items. The crew really swings up a storm as they dish-up winning renditions of "Money," "Mashed Potatoes" and "Mojo Workout." Disk seems destined to create an immediate stir.
Jack Rabid of AllMusic awarded the album 3.5 stars and said,[1]
From "Mojo Workout" to "Night Train" to "Money" to the instrumental "You Can't Sit Down," the keyboards swirl above the stomp of the rhythm section and guitars, and it still makes people want to get drunk and go nuts. The band is primitive, sure, but boy does the spirit feel like a hot time.
Record Mirror's review described the Kingsmen as "... a group with a lot more imagination and blues orientation than most."[2]
The LP was released in both mono (WDM 657) and stereo (WDS 657) versions. International releases included Canada (Reo 667), Germany (Vogue LDV 17002, different cover, titled The Kingsmen), Mexico (Orfeon/Videovox DML-MI-95), New Zealand (Fontana TL 08763), and United Kingdom (Pye International NPL 28050, different cover). A 1964 French release, En Public - Dansez Le Surf avec The Kingsmen (Disques Vogue LD 655 30), included a mix of tracks from the first two albums.
In 1993 Sundazed and Bear Family reissued the album on CD with bonus tracks "Haunted Castle", "The Krunch", and "(You Got) The Gamma Goochee", and with crowd noise and announcer intro removed. In 2016 the album was reissued in Japan by Old Days Records with bonus tracks "Little Latin Lupe Lu", "Death of an Angel", and "The Jolly Green Giant".
The 8-track tape release (Wand WDX-5657) divided the track list into four programs and altered the track order to 1-10-12, 3-4-6, 8-7-2, 11-9-5. Reel-to-reel, 4-track, and cassette versions were also released.
^Originally released by Henry Strzlecki's group The Four Flickers in 1959. Subsequently covered by Jerry Woodard, Bob Luman, Murry Kellum, the Beach Boys and many others.
^The original 1961 release by the Phil Upchurch Combo credited Clark-Upchurch-Muldrow as songwriters. Phil Upchurch and Cornell Muldrow had previously been members of Dee Clark's touring band. Many sources also credit Kal Mann as a co-writer.