• Re: ROOTS ROCK RADIO: Sept. 29th

    From Roger@21:1/5 to Dean on Mon Sep 30 08:31:13 2024
    On Sun, 29 Sep 2024 22:56:23 +0000, Dean wrote:

    The latest ROOTS ROCK RADIO is archived until October 13th at the link
    below. Here's the playlist:

    1. HAND CLAPPIN’, Red Prysock

    My favorite Prysock instrumental used several times as the opening theme
    on Alan Freed's Saturday night Radio Luxembourg show

    Here's how it sits in my all time fave instrumentals list

    1. Green Onions Booker T. & The MG’s - 1962
    2. Honky Tonk-Part 2 Bill Doggett - 1956
    3. Raunchy Bill Justis - 1957
    4. Hideaway Freddy King - 1961
    5. Last Night Mar-Keys - 1961
    6. Hand Clappin' Red Prysock - 1955
    7. Juke Little Walter - 1952
    8. Night Train Jimmy Forest – 1952
    9. Peter Gunn Duane Eddy - 1959
    10 Jam Up Tommy Ridgley - 1954

    2. AT THE HOP, Danny & The Juniors

    Originally recorded as "Do The Bop" by Johnny Madara & The Juvenaires

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZKpKkyUu13g

    5. THAT IS ROCK ‘N’ ROLL, The Coasters

    MUCH the better side of the hit "Along Came Jones" single

    7. I NEED A MAN, Barbara Pittman

    Best ever female performance on the Sun label

    8. RUBBER BISCUIT, The Chips

    Used to great effect in one of my Scorcese faves "Mean Streets"

    10. THE HAPPY ORGAN, Dave “Baby” Cortez

    Sadly a huge instrumental hit everywhere except in my house.

    I never warmed to it tho I really liked his later "Rinky Dink"

    12. BLUEBERRY HILL, Fats Domino

    Famous for the factory "glitch" on the UK London label single pressing
    where everything slows down to near zero for that one split second

    15. KANSAS CITY, Wilbert Harrison

    I recall on my one and only visit to Kansas City in the 70's discovering
    that there is no real "Twelfth street and Vine" - just a sign
    commemorating where said corner once was

    21. AGAIN, The Four Epics

    An old standard (originally by our own Dame Vera Lynn) that has been a
    fave with me ever since the Doris Day version and done best by a vocal
    group IMO in the wonderful 1957 Universals version

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4yzT6mL1kAk

    Sorry but I don't care for the Four Epics reading

    25. WHO’S SORRY NOW, Connie Francis

    Famously hurriedly cut in a spare few minutes at the end of what was
    planned as the last MGM session for the then-hitless Concetta before the
    label dropped her.

    And then........

    28. DOWN ON THE FARM, Big Al Downing

    One of my best ever finds--for pennies---on a Sunday morning London
    market stall was a 45rpm mint White Rock label copy of this pounder

    31. BLACK CADILLAC, Joyce Green

    Here's how Joycie sits in my 1959 Top Femmes list

    1. Don't Mess With My Man Irma Thomas
    2. Dedicated To The One I Love Shirelles
    3. Broken Hearted Melody Sarah Vaughan
    4. What A Diff'rence A Day Makes Dinah Washington
    5. Let's Jump The Broomstick Brenda Lee
    6. Black Cadillac Joyce Green
    7. Sweet Nothins Brenda Lee
    8. The Big Hurt Toni Fisher
    9. Don’t Worry ‘Bout Me Billie Holiday
    10. Unforgettable Dinah Washington

    34. PINK PEDAL PUSHERS, Carl Perkins

    One side of his debut Columbia single in 1958 but Carl famously cut a
    couple of demos of the song for Sam Phillips at Sun a year earlier

    38. BOPPIN’ HIGH SCHOOL BABY, Don Willis

    This was the #1 want on the lists of countless rockabilly fans over here
    before it was heavily booted in the early 70's. Amazingly it was white rockabilly on the Satellite label in Memphis (that eventually became the
    very black Stax label)

    39. CASTIN’ MY SPELL, The Johnny Otis Show

    Here's the original version from 1959

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PwOfRQed9aQ

    46. SAVE THE LAST DANCE FOR ME, The Drifters

    The Drifters first big hit on this side of the Atlantic spending no less
    than SEVEN weeks at #2 in late 1960---kept off the #1 spot for the first
    six weeks by Elvis and "It's Now Or Never" and then by Johnny Tillotson
    and "Poetry In Motion"

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  • From Bruce@21:1/5 to Dean on Tue Oct 1 03:49:09 2024
    On Tue, 1 Oct 2024 3:27:58 +0000, Dean wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Sep 2024 8:31:13 +0000, Roger wrote:

    10. THE HAPPY ORGAN, Dave “Baby” Cortez

    Sadly a huge instrumental hit everywhere except in my house.

    Ironically, my favorite part of "The Happy Organ" is the guitar break!

    I never warmed to it tho I really liked his later "Rinky Dink"

    Seriously? "The Happy Organ" rocks quite a bit harder!

    Not to me. "The Happy Organ" does not even sound like rock and roll to
    me. It sounds more like the guy playing the organ at the roller rink.
    Just because the tempo is faster does not mean that it "rocks harder."

    I have "The Happy Organ" as a 5 (pretty good) and "Rinky Dink" as a 7
    (very good).

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  • From Roger@21:1/5 to Bruce on Tue Oct 1 11:15:07 2024
    On Tue, 1 Oct 2024 3:49:09 +0000, Bruce wrote:

    On Tue, 1 Oct 2024 3:27:58 +0000, Dean wrote:

    On Mon, 30 Sep 2024 8:31:13 +0000, Roger wrote:

    10. THE HAPPY ORGAN, Dave “Baby” Cortez

    Sadly a huge instrumental hit everywhere except in my house.

    Ironically, my favorite part of "The Happy Organ" is the guitar break!

    I never warmed to it tho I really liked his later "Rinky Dink"

    Seriously? "The Happy Organ" rocks quite a bit harder!

    Not to me. "The Happy Organ" does not even sound like rock and roll to
    me. It sounds more like the guy playing the organ at the roller rink.
    Just because the tempo is faster does not mean that it "rocks harder."

    I have "The Happy Organ" as a 5 (pretty good) and "Rinky Dink" as a 7
    (very good).

    I think we'd be about the same here

    I don't list "The Happy Organ" on my 1959 list but if I did it'd be a 5
    I guess. OTOH "Rinky Dink" rates a good 7 in 1962

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