Category Archives: Allgemein
Freddy Cannon ~ Way Down Yonder In New Orleans Stereo
FREDDY CANNON – PALISADES PARK
“Palisades Park” is a song written by Chuck Barris and recorded by Freddy Cannon.
Barris composed a melody about a carnival and it was proposed he utilize the name of an event congregation as the title. One night he was in Manhattan when he looked toward the New Jersey Palisades Cliffs, on which the carnival sat. That was when motivation hit and the title was included. A long time later the Palisades Amusement Park shut, on September 12, 1971. An accolade for New Jersey’s Palisades Amusement Park, it is an up-beat rowdy tune drove by a particular organ part. The track additionally consolidates entertainment mecca audio cues, remembering the hints of shouting riders for the exciting rides, and the citing of a more slow form of “Passage of the Gladiators”, played on an organ mimicking a hurdy-gurdy or calliope. In the tune, the vocalist goes for a stroll after dim and finds Palisades Park, where he meets and begins to look all starry eyed at a young lady. Among the rundown of rides and attractions recorded in the melody are: Shoot the Chute, Rocket Ship, Roller Coaster, Loop the Loop, Merry Go Round, Tunnel of Love, and the Ferris Wheel.
Johnny Otis And His Orchestra – Greatest Hits (FULL ALBUM – BEST OF R&B)
Johnny Otis (conceived Ioannis Alexandres Veliotes; December 28, 1921 – January 17, 2012) was an American artist, artist, writer, arranger, bandleader, headhunter, plate racer, record maker, network show have,
craftsman, writer, columnist, pastor, and manager. He was a fundamental effect on American R&B and rock and roll. He found various specialists from the get-go in their vocations who proceeded to turn out to be profoundly effective in their own right, including Little Esther Phillips, Etta James, Big Mama Thornton, Johnny Ace, Jackie Wilson, Little Willie John, Hank Ballard, and The Robins (who in the end changed their name to The Coasters), among numerous others. Otis has gotten generally inseparable from being known as the first “Ruler of Rock and Roll” and the “Guardian of Rhythm and Blues”
The Johnny Otis Show – Monterey Jazz Festival, 1970 – FULL CONCERT
Musik in diesem Video
The Johnny Otis Show – WILLIE AND THE HANDJIVE
He got a cool little chick named Rockin’ Billie
Do you walk and stroll with Susie Q
And do that crazy hand jive too?
Papa told Willie “you’ll ruin my home
You and that hand jive has got to go”
Willie said “papa, don’t put me down
Been doin’ that hand jive all over town”
Hand jive, hand jive
Hand jive, doin’ that crazy hand jive
Mama, mama, look at uncle Joe, look at him
He’s doin’ that hand jive with sister Flo
Even gave baby sister a dime, hey, hey
Said “do that hand jive one more time”
Well, a doctor and a lawyer and a indian chief
They all dig that crazy beat
Way-Out Willie gave them all a treat, yeah
When he did the hand jive with his feet
Hand jive, hand jive
Hand jive, doin’ that crazy hand jive, hey, hey
Come on, sugar, yeah!
Well, Willie and Billie got married last fall
They had a little Willie Junior and that ain’t all
You know that baby got greatness and it’s plain to see, hey, hey
Doin’ that hand jive on T.V., come on
Hand jive, hand jive
(Why don’t you) hand jive, doin’ that crazy hand jive
Hey, hey, well
Yeah, yeah
“Willie and the Hand Jive” is a melody composed by Johnny Otis and initially delivered as a solitary in 1958 by Johnny Otis, coming to #9 on the Billboard Hot 100 outline and #5 on the Billboard R&B chart. The tune has a Bo Diddley beat and was mostly motivated by the music sung by a bunch of prisoners Otis heard while he was visiting. The verses are about a man who got celebrated for doing a hit the dance floor with his hands, yet the melody has been blamed for extolling masturbation, however Otis has consistently denied it.
It has since been covered by various stars, including The Strangeloves, Eric Clapton, Cliff Richard, Kim Carnes, George Thorogood and The Grateful Dead. Clapton’s 1974 adaptation was likewise delivered as a solitary and furthermore arrived at the Billboard Top 40, topping at #26. Thorogood’s 1985 adaptation came to #25 on the Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks diagram.
The Johnny Otis unique rendition of the melody created by Tom Morgan has an irresistible Bo Diddley beat, notwithstanding take after unequivocally to the hit “Bo Diddley” of Bo Diddley quite a bit of it gave by drummer Earl Palmer. Johnny Otis biographer George Lipsitz portrays Jimmy Nolen’s guitar riff on the tune as “unforgettable”. The music depended on a tune Otis had heard a group of convicts singing while at the same time visiting, joined with work Otis did as an adolescent when he was performing with Count Otis Matthews and the West Oakland House Stompers.
The verses recount a man named Willie who got acclaimed for doing a hand jive dance. It could be said, the story is like that of Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode”, which recounts somebody who got popular for playing the guitar and was delivered two months before “Willie and the Hand Jive”. The birthplace of the melody came when one of Otis’ directors, Hal Ziegler, discovered that rock’n’roll show settings in England didn’t allow the young people to stand up and move in the passageways, so they rather hit the dance floor with their hands while staying in their seats.
At Otis’ shows, entertainers would exhibit Willie’s “hand jive” move to the crowd, so the crowd could move along. The move comprised of applauding two clench hands together one on head of the other, trailed by rolling the arms around each other.
Regardless of the tune’s references to moving, and in spite of the exhibits of the move during exhibitions, would-be edits accepted that the tune celebrated masturbation, as of late as 1992, a questioner for NPR asked Otis “Is ‘Hand Jive’ truly about masturbation?” Otis was baffled by this misinterpretation.
The Johnny Otis Show on KTLA-TV 5 – Los Angeles, CA – 1959
Johnny Otis (1921-2012) was one of the key figures in the development of rhythm & blues and rock’n’roll music. He excelled as a singer, songwriter, musician, arranger, talent scout, disc jockey, producer, author, minister and assemblyman. He hosted a half-hour television program on Los Angeles’ KTLA Channel 5 sponsored by Metropolitan Ford. This 1959 videotape, although not ideal in video and audio quality, features Johnny Otis with special guests Lionel Hampton, The Three Tons of Joy featuring Marie Adams, Mel Williams, the Eligibles, Marti Barris and the Johnny Otis Orchestra.
Johnny Otis Show full concert at the North Sea Jazz Festival • 14-07-1985 • World of Jazz
Johnny Otis (original name Ioannis Alexandres Veliotes; December 28, 1921 – January 17, 2012) was an American musician, singer, musician, composer, arranger, bandleader, disc jockey, television host, record producer, journalist, and impresario. He was well known as songwriter of the song “Willie and the Hand Jive” that was recorded by many artists. Eric Clapton had a big hit with it. He was also a talent scout and discovered numerous artists early in their careers who went on to become highly successful including Little Esther Phillips, Etta James, Big Mama Thornton, Johnny Ace, Jackie Wilson, Little Willie John, Hank Ballard, and The Robins (who eventually changed their name to The Coasters), among many others. Otis became widely known as the original “King of Rock and Roll” and the “Godfather of Rhythm and Blues. He toured with his band and played at various festivals around the world with his Johnny Otis Show featuring a mini history of African American music in a variety of well known R&B songs. This great concert features a mix of many jazz, R&B, blues and rock ‘n roll standards that brought the entire audience to their feet. The concert included two encores. It was recorded by AVRO TV at he North Sea Jazz Festival, The Hague, The Netherland on 14 July, 1985 Personnel (a.o.) Johnny Otis, vibraphone, piano James Clark, guitar Nat Abraham, bass Nicky Otis, drums Miles Evans, vocals Barbara Morrison, vocals Johnny Walker, vocals Michael Turis, saxophone Preston Love, saxophone Renny Clark, saxophone Laura Bryan , trumpet Bob Frasier, trumpet Songs played a.o.: ‘Willie And The Hand Jive’ (Johnny Otis) ‘It Don’t mean A Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing) (Duke Ellington) ‘At Last’ (Etta James) ‘I’m Crazy ‘bout My Baby’ (Louis Armstrong) ‘Bony Moronie’ (Lawrence Eugene Williams) ‘What I’d Say’ (Ray Charles)
Big Joe Turner -The BOSS of THE BLUES & BOOGIE WOOGIE

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.”
JOHNNY RAY – THE GODFATHER OF ROCKN’ ROLL
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.

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