After Bachman-Turner Overdrive, and one solo album, Randy Bachman's next band was called Ironhorse. Ironhorse released an eponymous album in early 1979; it was moderately successful in a year when musical tastes were rapidly evolving, and it had one charting single, "Sweet Lui-Louise", a song that I, at least, find rather catchy, possibly due to its use of similar vocal stylings to those used in BTO's Bachman-penned hit "You Ain't Seen Nothin' Yet".
(Ironhorse peaked at #153 on Billboard's Hot LPs and Tape chart. Album ℗1979 Scotti Bros. Records. Photo courtesy Amazon.com.)
"Sweet Lui-Louise" entered Billboard's Hot 100 the week ending March 17, 1979. It managed to enter the top 40 the week ending April 21 and peaked two weeks later at #36 before falling out of the top 40 the very next week. In total it spent ten weeks on the Hot 100.
Afterward, Ironhorse released a follow-up album, Everything is Grey, which also featured one charting hit, "What's Your Hurry Darlin'", although that song only made it to #89. After that, the band evolved into a group called Union and released one more album; it didn't chart.
I have only ever heard "Sweet Lui-Louise" on the radio during an episode of "American Top 40: The 70s", but perhaps there might be good news on that front: Randy Bachman has acquired the rights to both Ironhorse albums (source*) and hopes to reissue them in the future.
*Note: some information on this blog comes from the always-reliable Wikipedia; as such, its veracity may be questionable.
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