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Sixty-three years ago today, December 12, 1955,
Bill Haley and His Comets (
link below) recorded, the blockbuster song,
See You Later, Alligator (
link below).
Alligator was the second song I heard by Haley & the comets, the first being, of course,
Rock Around the Clock (
link below).

The song was originally entitled
Later, Alligator and based on a
12-bar blues chord structure (141541), and written by
Louisiana songwriter
Robert Charles Guidry and first recorded by him under his professional name "
Bobby Charles" in 1955 (
link below). His recording was released on
Chess Records under the title
Later, Alligator as 1609 in November 1955 backed with
On Bended Knee. Guidry, a
Cajun musician, adopted a
New Orleans-influenced
blues style for the recording. The melody of the song was borrowed
from
Later for You, Baby, by bluesman Guitar Slim, which was recorded in
1954 (
link below). Guidry also wrote
Walking to New Orleans (
link below), which was recorded by
Fats Domino.
Haley's arrangement of the song is faster-paced than Guidry's original,
and in particular the addition of a two-four beat changed the song from a
rhythm and blues "
shuffle" to
rock and roll. The song also has a more
light-hearted beat than the original, starting out with a high-pitched,
childlike voice (belonging to Haley's lead guitarist,
Franny Beecher) reciting the title of the song. The ending of the song was virtually identical to the conclusion of Haley's earlier hit, "
Shake, Rattle and Roll".
45 rpm record, side 1 label detail
Unlike most of Haley's recordings for Decca, which were created at the
Pythian Temple studio in
New York City,
Alligator and its flip-side,
The Paper Boy (On Main Street U.S.A.), were recorded at the Decca Building in
New York City.

The song was featured in
Rock Around the Clock, a musical film Haley and the Comets began shooting in January 1956.
45 rpm record, side 2 label detail
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