Marvin Rainwater (1925-2013) was born in Wichita, Kansas and made his name as a country headliner in the late 1950s, after struggling for years as a hillbilly artist in various regional venues. Rainwater broke through after winning the Arthur Godfrey talent contest in 1955 and recorded his signature song, "Gonna Find Me a Bluebird," two years later, scoring a major pop-country crossover hit. Rainwater enjoyed several years as a top artist until problems with his voice sidelined his career in the early '60s, though he remained popular in Europe and in later years he was rediscovered and celebrated by their rockabilly-retro scene. Here's a quick look at his music...
Marvin Rainwater "Songs By Marvin Rainwater" (MGM Records, 1957) (LP)
Marvin Rainwater "Sings With A Heart -- With A Beat" (MGM Records, 1958) (LP)
Marvin Rainwater "Sing For You" (Audio Lab Records, 1960) (LP)
Marvin Rainwater "Gonna Find Me A Bluebird" (MGM Records, 1962) (LP)
Marvin Rainwater "Marvin Rainwater" (Crown Records, 1963) (LP)
Marvin Rainwater "The Country's Favorite Country Singer" (Mount Vernon Records, 1963) (LP)
Marvin Rainwater "Gets Country Fever" (Philips Records, 1972) (LP)
(Produced by Gordon Smith)
Marvin Rainwater "Whatever Happened To Marvin Rainwater?" (Mark IV Records, 1981) (LP)
(Produced by Bruce Albertine & Marvin Rainwater)
Marvin Rainwater & Mike Cowdery "Country Music Is Alive And Well North Of The Mason Dixon Line" (Hoky Records, 1981) (LP)
A curious album with songs mostly written by Minnesotan Mike Cowdery, though half the album is sung by Marvin Rainwater, after career was revived in the '70s by the European rockabilly scene... Many of the songs are about places in or near the Great Lakes region... Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Manitoba, Ontario and the Dakotas... There are also a couple of oldies written by Rainwater, including a new version of his big hit, "Gonna Find Me A Bluebird." Anyone know more about this Cowdery fella? Apparently he came from Lakeview, Minnesota...?
Marvin Rainwater "A Whole Lotta Marvin" (Jasmine Records, 2015)
This is a swell single-disc collection that gathers all of Marvin Rainwater's early charting singles from 1957-61, with country and pop hits on the MGM and Warwick labels, plus a bunch of B-side songs to sweeten the mix. Includes his duets with Connie Francis and various Indian -- er, Native American -- themed songs such as "Half Breed" and "Pale Faced Indian." It's the lesser-known tracks that might be most rewarding here... A nice introduction to a less well-remembered country star of bygone years.
Marvin Rainwater "Classic Recordings" (Bear Family Records, 1994)
This 4-CD set covers all of Rainwater's recorded material from his mid-'50s debut up through 1970, spanning pop, country and rockabilly material, and many of his duets with the likes of Connie Francis and rockabilly guitarist Link Wray. It's probably too much material for any but the most devoted Rainwater fan to digest, but for a look at this obscure (but fondly remembered) artist, this set is pretty hard to beat.
Marvin Rainwater "Whole Lotta Woman" (Bear Family Records, 1995)
Rainwater's most rockin' tracks, all on a tasty single-disc set... This is probably the best way to check him out, that is, unless you're a true, diehard fan... For the average country/rockabilly listener, though, this should do the trick.
Marvin Rainwater "Rock Me: The Westwood Recordings" (Bear Family Records, 2001)
A sad companion to Bear Family's other Rainwater collections. Here, a greatly diminished Rainwater recorded several somewhat limp recordings for a tiny British indie label in the 1970s. I guess it's great that Bear Family is there to track down and keep tabs on this kind of lost country lore, but if the truth be known, this is not really that engaging. Mostly the trouble is Rainwater's voice, which just ain't what it used to be. I suppose this material is interesting in a nostalgic-for-the-old-guy's-glory-days kinda way... But since Bear Family has already put out far superior collections of Rainwater's old, classic material, these third-tier later recordings seem pretty superfluous.
Marvin Rainwater "Tennessee Houn' Dog Yodel" (BACM, 2005)
(Available through the British Archive of Country Music website.)