Big Joe Turner -The BOSS of THE BLUES & BOOGIE WOOGIE

This is part of a series of live performance for the short lived 1950’s variety series Show Time at The Apollo which were later re-cut into the theatrical releases Rhythm and Blues Revue, Basin Street Revue and Rock ‘n’ Roll Revue. This one features Big Joe Turner with the Paul Williams Orchestra doing his famous track Shake, Rattle & Roll.

Joseph Vernon “Big Joe” Turner Jr. (May 18, 1911 – November 24, 1985) was an American blues shouter from Kansas City, Missouri. According to songwriter Doc Pomus, “Rock and roll would have never happened without him.” His greatest fame was due to his rock-and-roll recordings in the 1950s, particularly “Shake, Rattle and Roll”, but his career as a performer endured from the 1920s into the 1980s.

Turner was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987, with the Hall lauding him as “the brawny voiced ‘Boss of the Blues'”.

Turner was born May 18, 1911 in Kansas City, Missouri, United States. His father was killed in a train accident when Turner was four years old. He sang in his church, and on street corners for money. He left school at age fourteen to work in Kansas City’s nightclubs, first as a cook and later as a singing bartender. He became known as “The Singing Barman”, and worked in such venues as the Kingfish Club and the Sunset, where he and his partner, the boogie-woogie pianist Pete Johnson, became resident performers. The Sunset was managed by Piney Brown. It featured “separate but equal” facilities for white patrons. Turner wrote “Piney Brown Blues” in his honor and sang it throughout his career.

At that time Kansas City nightclubs were subject to frequent raids by the police; Turner said, “The Boss man would have his bondsmen down at the police station before we got there. We’d walk in, sign our names and walk right out. Then we would cabaret until morning.”

His partnership with Johnson proved fruitful.Together they went to New York City in 1936, where they appeared on a playbill with Benny Goodman, but as Turner recounted, “After our show with Goodman, we auditioned at several places, but New York wasn’t ready for us yet, so we headed back to K.C.”Eventually they were seen by the talent scout John Hammond in 1938, who invited them back to New York to appear in one of his From Spirituals to Swing concerts at Carnegie Hall, which were instrumental in introducing jazz and blues to a wider American audience.

In part because of their appearance at Carnegie Hall, Turner and Johnson had a major success with the song “Roll ‘Em Pete”. The track was basically a collection of traditional blues lyrics. It was a song that Turner recorded many times, with various musicians, over the ensuing years.

In 1939, along with the boogie-woogie pianists Albert Ammons and Meade Lux Lewis, they began a residency at Café Society, a nightclub in New York City, where they appeared on the same playbill as Billie Holiday and Frankie Newton’s band.Besides “Roll ‘Em, Pete”, Turner’s best-known recordings from this period are probably “Cherry Red”, “I Want a Little Girl” and “Wee Baby Blues”. “Cherry Red” was recorded in 1939 for the Vocalion label, with Hot Lips Page on trumpet and a full band in attendance.During the next year Turner contracted with Decca and recorded “Piney Brown Blues” with Johnson on piano.

In 1941, he went to Los Angeles and performed in Duke Ellington’s revue Jump for Joy in Hollywood. He appeared as a singing policeman in a comedy sketch, “He’s on the Beat”. Los Angeles was his home for a time, and during 1944 he worked in Meade Lux Lewis’s Soundies musical movies. He sang on the soundtrack recordings but was not present for filming, and his vocals were mouthed by the comedian Dudley Dickerson for the camera. In 1945 Turner and Pete Johnson established the Blue Moon Club, a bar in Los Angeles.

In 1945, he also signed a recording contract with National Records, for which he recorded under the supervision of Herb Abramson. His first hit single was a cover of Saunders King’s “S.K. Blues” (1945). He recorded the songs “My Gal’s a Jockey” and the risqué “Around the Clock” the same year, and Aladdin Records released “Battle of the Blues”, a duet with Wynonie Harris.Turner stayed with National until 1947, but none of his recordings were big sellers. In 1950, he recorded the song “Still in the Dark”, released by Freedom Records. Joe Turner also played at the Cavalcades of Jazz concert held at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles which was produced by Leon Hefflin Sr. on September 23, 1945 to a crowd of 15,000. Count Basie, the Honeydrippers, The Peters Sisters, Slim and Bam and Valaida Snow were also featured artists. Turner also performed in 1948 alongside Dizzy Gillespie at the fourth famed annual Cavalcade of Jazz concert held at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles which on September 12. Also on the program that day were Frankie Laine, The Sweethearts of Rhythm, The Honeydrippers, Little Miss Cornshucks, Jimmy Witherspoon, The Blenders, and The Sensations.

Turner made many albums with Johnson, Art Tatum, Sammy Price, and other jazz groups.He recorded for several record companies. He also performed with the Count Basie Orchestra. During his career, Turner was part of the transition from big bands to jump blues to rhythm and blues to rock and roll. He was a master of traditional blues verses, and at Kansas City jam sessions he could swap choruses with instrumental soloists for hours.

In 1951, while performing with the Count Basie Orchestra at Harlem’s Apollo Theater as a replacement for Jimmy Rushing, he was spotted by Ahmet and Nesuhi Ertegun, who contracted him to their new recording company, Atlantic Records. Turner recorded a number of successes for them, including the blues standards, “Chains of Love” and “Sweet Sixteen”. Many of his vocals are punctuated with shouts to the band members, as in “Boogie Woogie Country Girl” (“That’s a good rockin’ band!”, “Go ahead, man! Ow! That’s just what I need!” ) and “Honey Hush” (he repeatedly sings, “Hi-yo, Silver!”, probably with reference to the phrase sung by the Treniers in their Lone Ranger parody, “Ride, Red, Ride”). Turner’s records reached the top of the rhythm-and-blues charts. Some of his songs were so risqué that some radio stations refused to play them, but they received much play on jukeboxes and records.

Turner had great success during 1954 with “Shake, Rattle and Roll”, which significantly boosted his career, turning him into a teenage favorite, and also helped to transform popular music. During the song, Turner yells at his woman to “get outta that bed, wash yo’ face an’ hands” and comments that she’s “wearin’ those dresses, the sun comes shinin’ through! I can’t believe my eyes, all that mess belongs to you.” He sang it on film for the 1955 theatrical feature Rhythm and Blues Revue.

Although the cover version of the song by Bill Haley & His Comets, with the risqué lyrics partially omitted, was a greater sales success, many listeners sought out Turner’s version and were introduced thereby to rhythm and blues. Elvis Presley’s version of “Shake, Rattle and Roll” combined Turner’s lyrics with Haley’s arrangement, but was not a successful single.

“The Chicken and the Hawk”, “Flip, Flop and Fly”,[14] “Hide and Seek”, “Morning, Noon and Night”, and “Well All Right” were successful recordings from this period. He performed on the television program Showtime at the Apollo and in the movie Shake Rattle & Rock! (1956).

The song “Corrine, Corrina” was another great seller during 1956.[6] In addition to the rock music songs, he released Boss of the Blues album in 1956. “(I’m Gonna) Jump for Joy”, his last hit, reached the US R&B record chart on May 26, 1958.

He toured Australia in 1957 with Lee Gordon’s Big Show sharing the bill with Bill Haley and the Comets, LaVern Baker and Freddie Bell and the Bellboys.

After a number of successes in this vein, Turner quit popular music and resumed singing with small jazz combos, recording numerous albums in that style during the 1960s and 1970s. In 1966, Bill Haley helped revive Turner’s career by lending him the Comets for a series of popular recordings for the Orfeón label in Mexico. In 1977 he recorded a cover version of Guitar Slim’s song, “The Things That I Used to Do”.

During the 1960s and 1970s he resumed performing jazz and blues music, performing at many music festivals and recording for Norman Granz’s Pablo Records. He also worked with Axel Zwingenberger. Turner also participated in a “Battle of the Blues” with Wynonie Harris and T-Bone Walker.

In 1965, he toured in England with the trumpeter Buck Clayton and the trombonist Vic Dickenson, accompanied by Humphrey Lyttelton and his band. Part of a studio concert was televised by the BBC and later issued on DVD. A sound recording of a club appearance made during this tour is not thought of sufficient sound quality to justify commercial issue. He also toured Europe with Count Basie and his orchestra.

He won the Esquire magazine award for male vocalist in 1945, the Melody Maker award for best “new” vocalist of 1956, and the British Jazz Journal award as top male singer of 1965. In 1977, Turner recorded “I’m Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter” for Spivey Records, with Lloyd Glenn on piano. Turner’s career endured from the barrooms of Kansas City in the 1920s (when at the age of twelve he performed with a pencilled moustache and his father’s hat) to European jazz festivals of the 1980s.

In 1983, two years before his death, Turner was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame. That same year, the album Blues Train was released by Mute Records; the album featured Turner with the band Roomful of Blues. Turner received top billing with Count Basie in the Kansas City jazz reunion movie The Last of the Blue Devils (1979), featuring Jay McShann, Jimmy Forrest, and other players from the city.

Turner died of heart failure in November 1985, at the age of 74, in Inglewood, California, having suffered from effects of arthritis, a stroke and diabetes. He was buried at Roosevelt Memorial Park in Gardena, California.

He was posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987.

The New York Times music critic Robert Palmer wrote of “his voice, pushing like a Count Basie solo, rich and grainy as a section of saxophones, which dominated the room with the sheer sumptuousness of its sound.” In announcing Turner’s death, the British music magazine NME, in its December 1985 issue, described him as “the grandfather of rock and roll.”]

Dave Alvin wrote a song about an evening he spent with Turner, entitled “Boss of the Blues”, for his 2009 album, Dave Alvin and the Guilty Women. Alvin discussed the song in issue 59 of the Blasters Newsletter.

Dave Alvin later collaborated with his brother and former Blaster Phil Alvin on a second reunion album, Lost Time, released in 2015, containing four covers of songs by Turner, including “Cherry Red”, “Wee Baby Blues” and “Hide and Seek”. The brothers met Turner in Los Angeles, where he was playing in clubs on Central Avenue and living in the Adams district between tours in the 1960s. Phil Alvin opened for Turner a few times with his first band, Delta Pacific. Turner continued mentoring the Alvin brothers until his death in 1985. He is pictured on the back cover of Lost Time.

The biographical film The Buddy Holly Story refers to Turner and his contemporaries Little Richard and Fats Domino as major influences on Holly, who is portrayed collecting their vinyl recordings.

Mississippi John Hurt wrote and recorded various versions of a song called “Joe Turner Blues.”

Humphrey Lyttelton:- Buck Clayton, trumpet; Vic Dickenson, trombone; Big Joe Turner, vocal; accompanied by Humphrey Lyttelton and his Orchestra: Humphrey Lyttelton, trumpet; Tony Coe, tenor sax; Joe Temperley, baritone sax; Eddie Harvey, piano, trombone; Johnny Parker, piano; Dave Green, acoustic double bass; Johnny Butts, drums.

JOHNNY RAY – THE GODFATHER OF ROCKN’ ROLL

Johnny Ray – Cry

John Alvin Ray (January 10, 1927 – February 24, 1990) was an American vocalist, lyricist, and piano player. Exceptionally famous for the greater part of the 1950s, Ray has been refered to by pundits as a significant forerunner to what exactly became awesome, for his jazz and blues-impacted music, and his vivified stage personality. Tony Bennett considered Ray the “father of rock and roll,” and history specialists have noted him as a spearheading figure in the advancement of the genre.

Brought up in Dallas, Oregon, Ray, who was incompletely hard of hearing, started singing expertly at age fifteen on Portland radio broadcasts. He increased a nearby after singing at little, overwhelmingly African-American dance club in Detroit, where he was found in 1951 and in this manner marked to Okeh Records, an auxiliary of Columbia Records. He rose rapidly from haziness in the United States with the arrival of his introduction collection Johnnie Ray (1952), just as with a 78 rpm single, both of whose sides arrived at the Billboard magazine’s Top Hot 100 graph, “Cry” and “The Little White Cloud That Cried”.

In 1954 Ray made his solitary significant movie, There’s No Business Like Show Business as a major aspect of a gathering cast that included Ethel Merman and Marilyn Monroe. His vocation in his local United States started to decrease in 1957, and his American record mark dropped him in 1960. He never recaptured a solid after there and seldom showed up on American TV after 1973. His fanbases in the United Kingdom and Australia, notwithstanding, stayed solid until his demise in 1990 of confusions from liver failure.

English Hit Singles and Albums noticed that Ray was “a sensation during the 1950s; the awful vocal conveyance of ‘Cry’ … affected numerous demonstrations including Elvis, and was the ideal objective for high schooler mania in the pre-Presley days.” Ray’s emotional stage exhibitions and melancholic tunes have been acknowledged by music students of history as prior to later entertainers going from Leonard Cohen to Morrissey.

ROCKN’ ROLL – THE EARLY DAYS

A hard to find documentary on the early days of rock and roll. It features many of the early rock and roll legends.

U.S. narrative docu on significant and powerful 1950s rock and rollers. Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry, Carl Perkins, Gene Vincent, Eddie Cochran, Bill Haley, Little Richard, the Everly Brothers, Fats Domino, Buddy Holly, Alan Freed and numerous others. Cool recorded film and photographs. Awesome the Early Days!

Video – Gene Vincent – Be-Bop-A-Lula

Vincent Eugene Craddock (May 26, 1935 – October 12, 1971), known as Gene Vincent, was an American artist who spearheaded the styles of awesome and rockabilly. His 1956 top ten hit with his Blue Caps, “Be-Bop-a-Lula”, is viewed as a noteworthy early case of rockabilly.[2] He was enlisted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the Rockabilly Hall of Fame.

Craddock was conceived May 26, 1935, in Norfolk, Virginia, United States, to Mary Louise and Ezekiah Jackson Craddock. His melodic impacts included nation, cadence and blues and gospel music. His preferred sythesis was Beethoven’s Egmont suggestion. He indicated his first genuine enthusiasm for music while his family lived in Munden Point (presently Virginia Beach), in Princess Anne County, Virginia, close to the North Carolina line, where they ran a nation store. He got his first guitar at twelve years old as a blessing from a companion.

Vincent’s dad elected to serve in the U.S. Coast Guard and watched American waterfront waters to secure Allied transportation against German U-vessels during World War II. Vincent’s mom kept up the overall store in Munden Point. His folks moved the family to Norfolk, the home of a huge maritime base, and opened an overall store and mariners’ fitting shop.

Vincent dropped out of school in 1952, at seventeen years old, and enrolled in the United States Navy. As he was under the period of enrollment, his folks marked the structures permitting him to enter. He finished training camp and joined the armada as a crew member on board the armada oiler USS Chukawan, with a fourteen day preparing period in the fix transport USS Amphion, before coming back to the Chukawan. He never observed battle yet finished a Korean War sending. He cruised home from Korean waters on board the war vessel USS Wisconsin however was not part of the boat’s organization.

Craddock arranged a profession in the Navy and, in 1955, utilized his $612 re-enrollment reward to purchase another Triumph bike. In July 1955, while he was in Norfolk, his left leg was broken in a car collision. He wouldn’t permit the leg to be cut off, and the leg was spared, yet the injury left him with a limp and torment. He wore a steel sheath around the leg[3] for an amazing remainder. Most records relate the mishap as the issue of an alcoholic driver who struck him, yet some case Craddock had been riding smashed. A long time later in a portion of his music life stories, there is no notice of a mishap, however it was guaranteed that his physical issue was because of an injury brought about in battle in Korea.[4] He invested energy in the Portsmouth Naval Hospital and was medicinally released from the Navy presently thereafter.

Craddock got engaged with the nearby music scene in Norfolk. He changed his name to Gene Vincent and framed a rockabilly band, Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps (a term utilized regarding enrolled mariners in the U.S. Navy). The band included Willie Williams on cadence guitar (supplanted in late 1956 by Paul Peek), Jack Neal on upstanding bass, Dickie Harrell on drums, and Cliff Gallup on lead guitar. He likewise worked together with another rising performer, Jay Chevalier of Rapides Parish, Louisiana. Vincent and His Blue Caps before long increased a notoriety playing in different nation bars in Norfolk. There they won an ability challenge sorted out by a nearby radio DJ, “Sheriff Tex” Davis, who turned into Vincent’s manager.

In 1956 he expressed “Be-Bop-a-Lula”, which attracted correlations with Elvis Presley and which Rolling Stone magazine later recorded as number 103 on its “500 Greatest Songs of All Time”. Local radio DJ “Sheriff Tex” Davis orchestrated a demo of the tune to be made, and this made sure about Vincent an agreement with Capitol Records. He marked a distributing contract with Bill Lowery of the Lowery Group of music distributers in Atlanta, Georgia. “Be-Bop-a-Lula” was not on Vincent’s first collection and was picked by Capitol maker Ken Nelson as the B-side of his first single, “Lady Love”. Preceding the arrival of the single, Lowery squeezed special duplicates of “Be-Bop-a-Lula” and sent them to radio broadcasts all through the nation. When Capitol delivered the single, “Be-Bop-A-Lula” had just picked up consideration from the general population and radio DJs. The melody was gotten and played by different U.S. radio broadcasts (darkening the first A-side tune) and turned into a hit, topping at number 5 and going through 20 weeks on the Billboard pop outline and arriving at number 5 and going through 17 weeks on the Cash Box diagram, and propelling Vincent’s vocation as an awesome star.

After “Be-Bop-a-Lula” turned into a hit, Vincent and His Blue Caps couldn’t line it up with a similar degree of business achievement, in spite of the fact that they delivered widely praised melodies like “Race with the Devil” (number 96 on the Billboard diagram and number 50 on the Cash Box graph) and “Bluejean Bop” (number 49 on the Billboard outline and another million-selling disc).

Precipice Gallup left the band in 1956, and Russell Williford joined as the new guitarist for the Blue Caps. Williford played and visited Canada with Vincent in late 1956 yet left the gathering in mid 1957. Gallup returned to do the following collection and afterward left once more. Williford returned and left again before Johnny Meeks joined the band. The gathering had another hit in 1957 with “Lotta Lovin'” (most noteworthy position number 13 and going through 19 weeks on the Billboard diagram and number 17 and 17 weeks on the Cashbox graph). Vincent was granted gold records for 2,000,000 deals of “Be-Bop-A-Lula” and 1.5 million deals of “Lotta Lovin'”. The equivalent year he visited the east shore of Australia with Little Richard and Eddie Cochran, attracting crowds adding up to 72,000 to their Sydney Stadium shows. Vincent likewise showed up in the film The Girl Can’t Help It, with Jayne Mansfield, performing “Be-Bop-A-Lula” with the Blue Caps in a practice room. “Move to the Bop” was delivered by Capitol Records on October 28, 1957. On November 17, 1957, Vincent and His Blue Caps played out the tune on the broadly communicated TV program The Ed Sullivan Show. The melody went through nine weeks on the Billboard outline and topped at number 23 on January 23, 1958 and arrived at number 36 and went through about two months on the Cashbox graph. It was Vincent’s last American hit single. The melody was utilized in the film Hot Rod Gang for a move practice scene including artists doing the West Coast Swing.

Vincent and His Blue Caps likewise seemed a few times on Town Hall Party, California’s biggest blue grass music horse shelter move, held at the Town Hall in Compton, California. City center Party attracted abundance of 2,800 paid confirmations every Friday and Saturday, with space for 1,200 artists. The show was likewise communicated from 8:30 to 9:30 pm on the NBC Radio system. It was additionally appeared on KTTV, channel 11, from 10 pm to 1 am on Saturday nights. Vincent and His Blue Caps showed up on October 25, 1958, and July 25 and November 7, 1959. They performed “Be-Bop-A-Lula”, “Hypertension”, “Tear It Up”, “Move to the Bop”, “You Win Again”, “For Your Precious Love”, “Rough Road Blues”, “Truly Pearly”, “Secondary School Confidential”, “Over the Rainbow”, “Turn Over Beethoven” and “She Little Sheila”.

A debate with the US charge specialists and the American Musicians’ Union over installments to his band and his having offered the band’s hardware to take care of an assessment tab drove Vincent to leave the United States for Europe.[citation needed]

On December 15, 1959, Vincent showed up on Jack Good’s TV show, Boy Meets Girl, his first appearance in England. He wore dark calfskin, gloves, and an emblem, and remained in a slouched posture. Good is credited with the change of Vincent’s image. After the TV appearance he visited France, the Netherlands, Germany and the UK acting in his US stage clothes.

On April 16, 1960, while on visit in the UK, Vincent, Eddie Cochran and the musician Sharon Sheeley were associated with a rapid auto collision in a private-enlist taxi in Chippenham, Wiltshire. Vincent broke his ribs and collarbone and further harmed his debilitated leg. Sheeley endured a messed up pelvis. Cochran, who had been tossed from the vehicle, endured genuine mind wounds and kicked the bucket the following day. Vincent came back to the United States after the accident.[citation needed]

Advertiser Don Arden had Vincent come back to the UK in 1961 to do a broad visit in theaters and ballrooms, with Chris Wayne and the Echoes. After the staggering achievement of the visit, Vincent moved to Britain in 1963. His going with band, Sounds Incorporated, a six-piece outfit with three saxophones, guitar, bass and drums, proceeded to play with the Beatles at their Shea Stadium show. Vincent visited the UK again in 1963 with the Outlaws, highlighting future Deep Purple guitar player Ritchie Blackmore, as a support band. Vincent’s liquor issues damaged the visit, bringing about issues both in front of an audience and with the band and management.

Vincent’s endeavors to restore his American vocation in people rock and nation rock demonstrated fruitless; he is recollected today for accounts of the 1950s and mid 1960s delivered by Capitol Records. In the mid 1960s, he likewise put out tracks on EMI’s Columbia mark, including a front of Arthur Alexander’s “The place Have You Been All My Life?” A support band called the Shouts went along with him.

In 1966 and 1967, in the United States, he recorded for Challenge Records, supported by ex-individuals from the Champs and Glen Campbell. Challenge delivered three singles in the US, and the UK London mark delivered two singles and gathered chronicles on to a LP, Gene Vincent, on the UK London name in 1967. Albeit generally welcomed, none sold well. In 1968 of every a lodging in Germany, Vincent attempted to shoot Gary Glitter. He discharged a few shots however missed and a terrified Glitter left the nation the following day.

In 1969, he recorded the collection I’m Back and I’m Proud for long-lasting fan John Peel’s Dandelion Records, delivered by Kim Fowley with courses of action by Skip Battin (of the Byrds), and support vocals by Linda Ronstadt. He recorded two different collections for Kama Sutra Records, reissued on one CD by Rev-Ola in March 2008. On his 1969 visit through the UK he was supported by the Wild Angels, a British band that had performed at the Royal Albert Hall with Bill Haley and His Comets and Duane Eddy. Due to pressure from his ex, the Inland Revenue and advertiser Don Arden, Vincent came back to the US.[citation needed]

His last US chronicles were four tracks for Rockin’ Ronny Weiser’s Rolling Rock mark, half a month prior to his demise. These were delivered on an arrangement collection of accolade tunes, including “State Mama”, by his little girl, Melody Jean Vincent, joined by Johnny Meeks (of Blue Caps and Merle Haggard’s The Strangers) on guitar. He later recorded four tracks (delivered years after the fact as The Last Session) in Britain in October 1971 as a major aspect of his last visit. He was upheld by Richard Cole and Kansas Hook (Dave Bailey, Bob Moore, Richard Cole and bass player Charlie Harrison from Poco and Roger McGuinn’s Thunderbyrd). They recorded five tracks at the BBC studios in Maida Vale, London, for Johnnie Walker’s radio show. He oversaw one show at the Garrick Night Club in Leigh, Lancashire, and two shows at the Wookey Hollow Club in Liverpool on October 3 and 4. Vincent then came back to the US and kicked the bucket a couple of days after the fact. Four of these tracks were later delivered on the BBC’s own mark prefix BEEB001 called The Last Session; this incorporates a rendition of “State Mama”. The four tracks are presently on Vincent’s collection White Lightning.

Vincent kicked the bucket at 36 years old on October 12, 1971, from a cracked stomach ulcer, while visiting his dad in Saugus, California. He is buried at Eternal Valley Memorial Park, in Newhall, California.

Ian Dury paid recognition with the 1976 melody “Sweet Gene Vincent”.

French stone n’ roller Eddy Mitchell gave proper respect with the 1979 melody “Farewell Gene Vincent”.

The rockabilly band Stray Cats likewise gave proper respect to Vincent, close by Eddie Cochran, in their single “Quality and Eddie”.

Vincent was the primary inductee into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame upon its arrangement in 1997. The next year he was accepted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Vincent has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 1749 North Vine Street. In 2012, his band, the Blue Caps, were retroactively enlisted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame by a unique advisory group, nearby Vincent. On Tuesday, September 23, 2003, Vincent was respected with a Norfolk’s Legends of Music Walk of Fame bronze star inserted in the Granby Street sidewalk.[citation needed]

Composing for AllMusic, Ritchie Unterberger called Vincent ‘an American rockabilly legend who characterized the oily haired, cowhide jacketed, speedsters ‘n’ darlings sparkle of rock and roll’. Village Voice pundit Robert Christgau was less intrigued by the performer’s profession, saying ‘Vincent was never a titan — his couple of seconds of rockabilly enormity were advertised up refining processes of slavering desire from a delicate little person who was similarly as OK with “Over the Rainbow” in his ordinary attitude’. In any case, said pundit incorporated Vincent’s accumulation collection, The Bop That Just Won’t Stop (1974), in his ‘essential record library’, distributed in Christgau’s Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies