Joe Perkins
Joe Perkins (born December 1, 1935, Nashville, Tennessee, United States)[1] was an American singer whose song, "Little Eeefin' Annie", was a minor hit in 1963, reaching number 76 on the Billboard chart. The song featured eefer Jimmie Riddle. Riddle died in the Cumberland River, which he had previously sang about in a track called "Uncle Eeef".
'Eeef' could possibly relate to 'Eeep', as the native African languages left a distinctive pronunciation pattern upon the English spoken by Americanized Africans. This may have been in part an inspiration to Jerry Garcia to write the song "Eep Hour", and may also have been at least a partial inspiration for The Grateful Dead song, "Cumberland Blues".
References
- "ROOKIES (1) - doo-wop". Doo-wop.blogg.org. Retrieved 7 February 2021.
External links
- Joe Perkins' Little Eeefin' Annie page
- Jimmy Riddle and the lost art of Eefing on npr.org
- Detailed article on Joe's recording career plus discography
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