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- Genres: Rock
- Representative Albums: "The Rainmakers," "Tornado," "Good News & the Bad News"
| Artist: The Rainmakers |
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| Discography: The Rainmakers |
| Wikipedia: The Rainmakers (band) |
| The Rainmakers | |
|---|---|
| Origin | Kansas City, Missouri |
| Genre(s) | Rock |
| Years active | 1986-1997 |
| Label(s) | Polygram |
| Website | www.rainmakers.com |
| Former members | |
| Bob Walkenhorst Steve Phillips Rich Ruth Pat Tomek Michael Bliss |
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The Rainmakers were a Kansas City, Missouri-based original rock band, fronted by Bob Walkenhorst, which had a small string of hits in the late 1980s and early 1990s in the United States and Europe, especially Norway.
The Rainmakers were formed in 1983 as a three-piece bar band called 'Steve, Bob and Rich,' which "quickly became popular throughout the Midwest," according to one Amazon.com review.[1] They released one album, Balls, under this name. The addition of drummer Pat Tomek allowed Walkenhorst to switch to guitar and assume the role of frontman. The band changed their name to The Rainmakers when they were signed to Polygram by A&R man Peter Lubin.
The band's self-titled 1986 debut album received positive reviews in the U.S. entertainment media including Newsweek magazine, which dubbed it "the most auspicious debut album of the year," and reached #87 on the U.S. Billboard album chart. The band made a fan of horror writer Stephen King, who quoted the band's lyrics in his novels The Tommyknockers and Gerald's Game.[2] The album, however, achieved its greatest commercial success overseas. In the United Kingdom, the single "Let My People Go-Go" broke into the Top 20 in the UK Singles Chart.[2][3]
Their follow-up album, 1987's Tornado, peaked at #116 on the U.S. chart.[4] The Rainmakers released one more studio album, 1989's The Good News and The Bad News, and one live album, 1990's Oslo-Wichita Live, which were successful in Europe.
However, Scandinavian interest in their music remained high, so they reformed and released a new album, Flirting with the Universe, in 1994. The album achieved the equivalent of gold record status in Norway in one month.[2] One more album, Skin, followed in 1996 before the band broke up for good.
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The Rainmakers released six studio albums and one live album.
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