Garnet Mimms & The Enchanters

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Cry Baby 03:28 Tools
As Long As I Have You 00:00 Tools
A Quiet Place 00:00 Tools
Tell Me Baby 00:00 Tools
For Your Precious Love 00:00 Tools
I'll Take Good Care Of You 00:00 Tools
Prove It To Me 00:00 Tools
Baby Don't You Weep 00:00 Tools
My Baby 00:00 Tools
For Your Precious Love - Original Hit Version 00:00 Tools
Look Away 00:00 Tools
Don't Change Your Heart 00:00 Tools
One Girl 00:00 Tools
A Little Bit Of Soap 00:00 Tools
Until You Were Gone 00:00 Tools
The Truth Hurts 00:00 Tools
I Keep Wanting You 00:00 Tools
IT'S BEEN SUCH A LONG WAY HOME 00:00 Tools
Thinkin' 00:00 Tools
Keep On Smilin' 00:00 Tools
Every Time 00:00 Tools
I'll Make It Up To You 00:00 Tools
Welcome Home 00:00 Tools
It Was Easier To Hurt Her 00:00 Tools
It's Just A Matter Of Time 00:00 Tools
Looking For You 00:00 Tools
For Your Precious Love (Original Hit Version) 00:00 Tools
That Goes To Show You 00:00 Tools
More Than A Miracle 00:00 Tools
One Woman Man 00:00 Tools
A Quiet Place - 1992 Digital Remaster 00:00 Tools
Any Time You Need Me 00:00 Tools
anytime you want me 00:00 Tools
Cry Baby (Garnet Mimms+The Enchanters) 00:00 Tools
Cry To Me 00:00 Tools
So Close 00:00 Tools
Mambo Santa Mambo 00:00 Tools
Nobody But You 00:00 Tools
Quiet Place 00:00 Tools
A Quiet Place (1992 Digital Remaster) 00:00 Tools
Cry Baby [1963] 00:00 Tools
Detroit Cobras Covered - Northern, As Long As I Have You 00:00 Tools
Wanting You 00:00 Tools
15 - Cry Baby 00:00 Tools
There Goes My Baby 00:00 Tools
Cry Baby - 1963 00:00 Tools
A Quiet Place - Remastered 1992 00:00 Tools
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Garnet Mimms (born Garrett Mimms on November 16, 1933 in Ashland, West Virginia) is an American singer, influential in soul music and rhythm and blues. He is best known for the hit "Cry Baby" (later recorded by Janis Joplin) and "A Quiet Place," a popular song in the Carolina Beach Music community. Mimms grew up in Philadelphia, where he sang in gospel music groups such as the Evening Stars, the Harmonizing Four, and the group with which he would record his first record in 1953, the Norfolk Four. He returned to Philadelphia after serving in the military and formed doo-wop group, the Gainors in 1958. In 1961, Mimms and Sam Bell from the Gainors left to form a new group, Garnet Mimms and the Enchanters, with Zola Pearnell and Charles Boyer. The group moved to New York and began to work with the songwriter and record producer, Bert Berns. Berns signed them to the United Artists label and wrote the hit, "Cry Baby" for them with songwriting partner Jerry Ragovoy. The song topped the R&B chart and went to #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1963. It sold over one million copies, and was awarded a gold disc. Mimms and the group had a follow-up double sided hit, "For Your Precious Love" and "Baby Don't You Weep", both tracks entering the Billboard Top 30, before he went solo in 1964. In 1966, Berns and Ragavoy produced another big hit for Mimms, "I'll Take Good Care Of You", which climbed to #15 in the R&B chart and #30 in the Hot 100. He worked with Jimi Hendrix in the UK the following year. He did some recording on the MGM and Verve labels. In 1969, Led Zeppelin performed an extended version of Mimms' "As Long As I have You" at various stops on their U.S tour. In the 1970s, he released a few funk songs as Garnet Mimms and the Truckin' Co. He had his only hit in the United Kingdom at this time, when "What It Is" reached number 44 for one week on the UK Singles Chart in June 1977. Mimms was given a Pioneer Award in 1999 by the Rhythm and Blues Foundation. In the 1980s, Garnet found his calling ministering to lost souls in prison, but in 2007, returned to recording and a year later, released a new gospel album Is Anybody Out There? on the Evidence label, produced and (primarily) written by Jon Tiven. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.