The House of Blue Lights (song)
| "The House of Blue Lights" | |
|---|---|
| Single by Freddie Slack with Ella Mae Morse | |
| B-side | "Hey Mr. Postman" |
| Released | May 1946 |
| Genre | Boogie woogie |
| Length | 2:51 |
| Label | Capitol |
| Songwriter(s) | Don Raye, Freddie Slack |
"The House of Blue Lights" is a boogie woogie-style popular song written by Don Raye and Freddie Slack. Published in 1946, it was first recorded by Slack with singer Ella Mae Morse and Raye.
The song's intro includes a "hipster"-style spoken exchange:
- "Well, whatcha say, baby? You look ready as Mr. Freddy this black. How 'bout you and me goin' spinnin' at the track?"
- "What's that, homie? If you think I'm goin' dancin' on a dime, your clock is tickin' on the wrong time."
- "Well, what's your pleasure, treasure? You call the plays, I'll dig the ways."
- "Hey daddy-o, I'm not so crude as to drop my mood on a square from way back ..."
A single review in Billboard magazine included similar hipster parlance:
For back-room boogie with a mellow eight-to-the-bar kick, la [sic] Moore teams her tobacco pipes to the Black rhythm wing, giving big-time treatment to a small-time tune. Riding a solid rail, chirp chants it out with a contagious lilt. Dialog patter between Miss Moore and the tune's cleffer, Don Raye, is clever but takes up too much surface. "Postman" is typical B-side stuff.
The single reached number eight on the Hot 100 singles chart.