Ok, it was all around before Little Richard but he distilled it.
Little Richard/Awopbopaloobop alopbamboom
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Count Boso
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I was surprised to realise, from the news report, that he gained popularity as early as 1955 with Tutti Frutti: in memory he belongs to a slightly later era. Also to hear him say that Pat Boone and Elvis had sold more of Tutti Frutti than he had. Hard to recall, now, how difficult it was for a black artist to gain recogntion and acceptance in the fifties.Last edited by kernelbogey; 10-05-20, 10:06.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostI was surprised to realise, from the news report, that he gained popularity as early as 1955 with Tutti Frutti: in memory he belongs to a slightly later era. Also to hear him say that Pat Boone and Elvis had sold more of Tutti Frutti than he had. Hard to recall, now, how difficult it was for a black artist to gain recogntion and acceptance in the fifties.
You probably thought of him as from a later era because the early Beatles records had many of his tunes
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I was surprised to realise, from the news report, that he gained popularity as early as 1955 with Tutti Frutti: in memory he belongs to a slightly later era. Also to hear him say that Pat Boone and Elvis had sold more of Tutti Frutti than he had. Hard to recall, now, how difficult it was for a black artist to gain recognition and acceptance in the fifties.
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Last edited by johncorrigan; 10-05-20, 15:40.
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Originally posted by johncorrigan View PostI always enjoy reading David Remnick in the New Yorker and here's his tribute to Little Richard.
https://www.newyorker.com/culture/po...-rock-and-roll
Esquerita
Brother Joe May
Roy Brown
Billy Wright
And a picture of Esquerita:
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ha, that's great.
somewhere there is a recording of when Jimi Hendrix played with Little Richard - can't find it though, it's on Vee-Jay records.
Here is Jimi Hendrix with the Little Richard house band (easy to spot - he is the one playing his guitar upside down)
This is a phony, neither Little Richard nor Jimi Hendrix..
This is Hendrix but not Little Richard
At which point I gave up, but here's Little Richard showing how to work a crowd in a masterly way :
the playlist:
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As was said in David Remnick's article which I posted earlier, 'The core of Little Richard’s music career was brief, but his influence was, and is, everywhere' and 'There is more voltage in one of those three-minute performances than there is in a municipal power station.' If you doubt it, have a look at this half-hour Granada TV production from 1964 called 'It's Little Richard', accompanied by the rather excellent Sounds Incorporated and The Shirelles, and an audience that becomes increasingly wild with excitement. And in there a fantastic, energy-infused take on 'Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On' - he really was special.
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