From the mid-1970s through the 1980s, Eddie Rabbitt enjoyed amazing success on the Billboard country chart, releasing 17 singles that reached No. 1 on the tally. By the late 1970s, the singer-songwriter also began scoring Top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100.
Among these crossover hits were the title song to the Clint Eastwood film Every Which Way But Loose (No. 30, 1979), โSuspicionsโ (No. 13, 1979), and โDrivinโ My Life Awayโ (No. 5, 1980).
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โDrivinโ My Life Awayโ was the lead single from Rabbittโs sixth studio album, Horizon. Eddie followed it with โI Love A Rainy Night,โ an upbeat ode to stormy evenings.
On January 17, 1981, the song became Rabbittโs eighth No. 1 hit on Billboardโs Hot Country Singles chart (โDrivinโ My Life Awayโ was his seventh). โI Love A Rainy Nightโ knocked Merle Haggardโs โI Think Iโll Just Stay Here And Drinkโ from the top spot. It was dethroned a week later by Dolly Partonโs own country crossover classic โ9 To 5.โ
A few weeks later, on February 28, 1981, โI Love A Rainy Nightโ became Rabbitโs first and only single to top the Billboard Hot 100. The song that it toppled from No. 1 on the pop-singles tally was none other than โ9 To 5.โ โI Love A Rainy Nightโ enjoyed a two-week stay atop the Hot 100 before โ9 To 5โ leapfrogged back to No. 1.
โI Love A Rainy Nightโ also was a No. 1 hit on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart for three weeks in January 1981.
More About โI Love A Rainy Nightโ
Rabbitt co-wrote โI Love A Rainy Nightโ with his frequent songwriting partners Even Stevens and David Malloy.
Rabbitt had come up with the initial idea for the song in the late 1960s, when heโd spoken the title phrase into a tape recorder as he watched a storm one evening. Eddie rediscovered the tape some years later as he rummaged through some old cassettes in his basement.
In a 2014 interview with Nashville newspaper The Tennessean, Stevens recalled that Rabbitt mentioned the idea for the tune during numerous writing sessions with him and Malloy. It apparently took quite a while, though, before they were able to put the song together.
โWhen weโd get together to write, heโd always bring up this song title,โ said Stevens. โHe really didnโt have the melody, but he had this little idea. And he says, โI just thought, one night, I wasnโt depressed during a rainstorm. I was really happy, and I put this little thing down. We ought to write that.โ So heโd bring it up, and Iโd go, ‘Eh, I donโt know what to do with it.’ โฆ And then one night, it just clicked.โ
More About Rabbitt
Before enjoying success as a solo performer, Rabbitt wrote some hit songs for other renowned artists. He co-wrote โKentucky Rain,โ which was a Top-20 hit on the Hot 100 for Elvis Presley in 1970. Eddie also penned โPure Love,โ a country chart-topper for Ronnie Milsp in 1974.
Rabbitt died of lung cancer in May 1998. He was 56.
(Photo by Paul Natkin/Getty Images)
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