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The Hombres

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The Hombres

The Hombres were an American garage rock band from Memphis, Tennessee, known primarily for the 1967 single, "Let It Out (Let It All Hang Out)".

Formed in 1966, The Hombres comprised Jerry Lee Masters (leader and bass player); Gary Wayne McEwen on guitar; B. B. Cunningham, Jr. (died October 14, 2012), on lead vocals and electronic organ; and John Will Hunter (died February 1976) on drums.

Written by Masters, Hunter, McEwen and Cunningham and released on Verve Forecast Records, "Let It Out (Let It All Hang Out)" hit number 12 in 1967, and was revived on the soundtrack of the 2005 Cameron Crowe film, Elizabethtown. On WLS, The Box Tops' "The Letter" (with Bill Cunningham) and The Hombres' "Let It Out" (with Bill Cunningham's brother B.B. Cunningham Jr.) were respectively number one and number two for two weeks in October 1967.

The song's spoken introduction – "A preachment, dear friends, you are about to receive on John Barleycorn, nicotine and the temptations of Eve" – dates to the 1947 novelty recording, "Cigareets, Whuskey and Wild, Wild Women", by Red Ingle and His Natural Seven.

A 1967 version of the song by disc jockey Barney Pip was included on the Pebbles, Volume 7 compilation (1994).

The original "Let It Out" was included in the 1972 compilation album, Nuggets: Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era.

The track has been used in a U.S. advertising campaign for Foster's Lager.

The song was covered by Jonathan King in 1969 and also appears on his 1989 compilation album, The Butterfly That Stamped.

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