Showing posts with label Dave Edmunds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dave Edmunds. Show all posts

December 19, 2022

45 RPMs 72: Carl Perkins ~ Blue Suede Shoes

  ~ 
Carl Perkins ~ Blue Suede Shoes
     45 RPM record label, side 1


    
Seventy-two years ago today, on December 19, 1955, Carl Perkins recorded Blue Suede Shoes for Sam Phillips at Sun Records in Memphis, Tennesee.                

I was heavy into rhythm 'n blues and was intrigued by this "new" sound and went crazy over the song. When Elvis Presley later released a cover of it on August 31, 1956, I hated his version and wouldn't buy it. It is the only Presley song from his early period I don't have on 45.         

This was the only Top 40 hit for Perkins on the pop charts but his influence reaches much further. He was extremely influential to other artists, including Presley, The Beatles and Johnny Cash. Perkins was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987. This was the first song to hit the US Pop, Country, and R&B charts at the same time. Released on January 1, 1956, the song made a slow climb up the charts, appearing on all three in May, which is when it reached its peak of #2 on the Pop charts.       

Blue suede shoes were a luxury item in the South, a stylish footwear for a night out. Perkins never owned a pair, but Johnny Cash told him a story about someone who did.                   

The lyrics describe things Perkins would prefer over getting his shoes scuffed, and the list includes derelict behavior: stepping on his face, stealing his car, burning down his house and drinking his liquor. Some in the Sinatra-loving older generation were horrified, and used the song to back their case that rock 'n' roll was the Devil's music.         
 
 
Well, it's one for the money two for the show
Three to get ready now go, cat, go

But don't you step on my blue suede shoes
Well you can do anything but
Lay off of my blue suede shoes

Well, you can knock me down, step in my face
Slander my name all over the place
Do anything that you want to do
But uh-uh honey, lay off of my shoes

Don't you step on my blue suede shoes
You can do anything but lay off of my blue suede shoes
Now let's go cats (oh walk the dogs)

You can burn my house, steal my car
Drink my liquor from an old fruit-jar
Do anything that you want to do
But uh-uh baby, lay off of my shoes

Don't you step on my blue suede shoes
You can do anything but lay off of my blue suede shoes
Rock it

Well, it's one for the money, two for the show
Three to get ready now go, cat, go

But don't you step on my blue suede shoes
Well you can do anything but lay off of my blue suede shoes
Go cat uh

Blue, blue suede shoes oh baby
Blue, blue suede shoes uh ha
Blue, blue suede shoes oh baby
Blue, blue suede shoes
You do anything but lay off of my blue suede shoes

Songwriter: Carl Perkins


Perkins wrote Blue Suede Shoes on a 1953 Gibson Les Paul, a solid body electric guitar; he also used it on all of this Sun recordings. The guitar was originally a Gold Top when Perkins bought it new in 1953 and after his hit Blue Suede Shoes he had it painted Blue.       


1953 Gibson Les Paul

 
One of Perkins last appearances was with Dave Edmunds performing Blue Suede Shoes on The Jay Leno Show in 1997 (Perkins died the next year).         

        
Tracklist:

Side 1:

A Blue Suede Shoes - 2:14

Side 2:

B Honey, Don't! - 2:48

Companies, etc.

     Published By Hi-Lo Music

    Written by Perkins*
 
Credits:
 
A & B: Hi Lo Music (BMI)
 
Notes:

Runouts are etched.

Barcode and Other Identifiers
        
        
    Rights Society: BMI
    Matrix / Runout (A side label): U 176
    Matrix / Runout (B side label): U 177
    Matrix / Runout (Side A runout): U-176-45
    Matrix / Runout (Side B runout): U-177-45
 
Label: Sun – 234
Format:    Vinyl, 7", 45 RPM, Single
Country: US
Released: Jan 1, 1956
Genre: Rock
Style: Rockabilly
        
        
        
        
Viewfinder links:       
         
Johnny Cash       
Dave Edmonds         
Carl Perkins         
Elvis Presley          
     
Net links:       
         
         
         
Songfacts ~ Blue Suede Shoes        
     
YouTube links:      
        
Carl Perkins ~ Blue Suede Shoes         
Elvis Presley ~ Blue Suede Shoes                   
        
        
         

Blue Suede Shoes sheet music
         
        
        

Styrous® ~ Monday, December 19, 2022  






      

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

July 5, 2022

Smiley Lewis & Dave Bartholomew ~ 109 years later

   ~      
Smiley Lewis     
date & photographer unknown 
 
Today is the birthday of New Orleans rhythm and blues singer and guitarist, Overton Amos Lemons, better known as Smiley Lewis, born on July 5, 1913, in DeQuincy, LA. He played clubs in the French Quarter there, often with pianist Tuts Washington (and was sometimes billed as "Smiling" Lewis).   
 
Dave Bartholomew, grew up in the same neighborhood as Lewis and was then beginning a career as a producer with Imperial Records, this led to a recording session for the trio in March 1950, at which they recorded the song Tee Nah Nah. Lewis had his first national hit song with The Bells Are Ringing in 1952.   



Lewis was the first to record Bartholomew's song Blue Monday, in 1954; the Fats Domino recording of the song was a hit two years later. In 1955 Lewis achieved his biggest sales with I Hear You Knocking, the first recording of the song (written by Bartholomew and Pearl King), with Huey "Piano" Smith on piano.        
 
None of Lewis's Imperial singles sold more than 100,000 copies, but cover versions of his songs were commercially successful for other artists.     
 

 Dave Bartholomew Band 
date & photographer unknown
 
The Elvis Presley cover of the Lewis song One Night (which altered one risque lyric) was number 4 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart and number 1 on UK Singles Chart. I love this song with its klink-klink-klink piano beat that makes the song smoothly glide along, in spite of the bouncy rhythm, while Presley does what he does best.    
 
Lewis's recording of I Hear You Knocking was released when U.S. radio was still mostly marketed to exclusively white or exclusively black listeners. A version of Knocking, his first solo hit, reached number one in the UK and number four in the United States; it was recorded by Dave Edmunds in 1970, in this version, Lewis is mentioned in the lyrics, along with Chuck Berry, Fats Domino and Huey "Piano" Smith. The Gale Storm pop version of I Hear You Knocking reached the top five on the charts (link below).            

Lewis's recording of Shame, Shame, Shame was used in the soundtrack of the film Baby Doll in 1956. The song failed to enter the R&B chart. It was covered by the Merseybeats for their EP On Stage in 1964 and Aerosmith included it on their blues album, Honkin' on Bobo, released in 2004. The song also provided the title of the fifth episode of the HBO television series Treme, which included a rewritten version of the song with lyrics critical of the government's response to Hurricane Katrina.     

A short clip from I Hear You Knocking is included on the Bill Buchanan and Dickie Goodman novelty hit, The Flying Saucer (link below), in which, in an ironic nod to his original stage name, Lewis is referred to as "Laughing Lewis." Like everyone else whose music was appropriated for the record, Lewis was never paid.     

In 1975, Sylvia Robinson wrote a song with the same title performed by Shirley & Company, however, it was noting like the Lewis song. It is disco at it's best with a fantastic sax played by Seldon Powell! It was at the beginning of the disco era, so, what more can be said about that?
 
Lewis was hospitalized in 1965 with a diagnosis of ulcer; surgery revealed that he had stomach cancer. Bartholomew organized a benefit for him at La Ray's on Dryades Street. On October 7, 1966, three days before the benefit, Lewis died, in the arms of his second wife, Dorothy Ester Lemons, whom he had married six months before.         
 
Lewis was inducted into the Cleveland, Ohio, Rock & Roll Hall of Fame by Charles & Art Neville of The Neville Brothers in 1991.        
      
     
      
     
     
     
Viewfinder links:       
         
Aerosmith       
Dave Bartholomew         
Chuck Berry          
Buchanan & Goodman ~ The Flying Saucer          
Fats Domino        
Coleman Hawkins         
Smiley Lewis        
Elvis Presley        
Gale Storm ~ I Hear You Knocking         
Tuts Washington             
Tennessee Williams          
     
YouTube links:       
        
Buchanan & Goodman ~ The Flying Saucer        
Fats Domino ~ I Hear You Knocking               
Smiley Lewis ~        
       I Hear You Knockin'      
       Shame, Shame, Shame       
Elvis Presley - One Night        
Gale Storm ~ I Hear You Knocking        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Tuesday, July 5, 2022