DOO WOP AND THE DAWN OF ROCK

DOO WOP AND THE DAWN OF ROCK
Event on 2013-04-16 19:30:00
Rock Legends Live! host Bill Shelley presents a thrilling celebration of the legendary singers who changed music forever, and created some of the great songs of the era The 1950s brought a change to American music, as teenagers embraced a new musical form: , taking the four-part vocal harmonies that had been around for a long time in popular music, but giving it a whole new twist. When teenagers discovered rock and roll, it started a musical revolution, and the "street corner" Doo Wop vocal groups were born, along with DA haircuts, poodle skirts, Howdy Doody, Edsels, The Twist, the Frug, The Pony, The Jerk, Mashed Potatoes and host of other new dance styles. See how rock and roll started with these pioneers who changed music forever, and created some of the great songs of the era. This celebration of Doo Wop and the dawn of Rock will include live concerts from the USA and Europe, television appearances, promotional films, and rehearsal out-takes. Among the great artists highlighted are Bill Haley and his Comets with "Rock Around the Clock," Little Richard's "Tutti Frutti," ' "Great Balls of Fire," and 's "Peggy Sue." Other featured performers will include Elvis, The Diamonds, The Ventures, Cliff Richards, The Drifters, Kay Starr, The Flamingos, The Big Bopper, Ritchie Valens, , , , The Platters, Frankie Lymon and The Teenagers, Fabian, Dion and The Belmonts, Frankie Avalon, , Ricky Nelson, The Shangri-las, Connie Francis, Paul Anka, The Toys, Neil Sedaka, Jay and The Americans, and a whole lot more. Come and celebrate the music and the fun of the 1950's and early 1960's in this exciting onenight- only event. Approx: 100 min.

at Adelphi University
1 South Avenue
Garden City,

Tags: , , ,

LIFE Dick Clark and the History of Rock ‘n’ Roll Reviews

LIFE Dick Clark and the History of Rock 'n' Roll

  • Traces his 60-year path along the American music scene.
  • Rarely-seen photos and archival interviews.
  • LIFE Magazine chronicles his history.
  • Hardcover; 80 pages.
Dick Clark, known widely as "America's oldest teenager," single-handedly formed the culture of the day on American Bandstand, and helped give rise to rock 'n' roll. He was a man of many roles: an entrepreneur, producer, game-show host and much more. It didn't feel like New Year's Eve in America if you weren't watching Dick Clark count down the minutes. The statistics are staggering; Bandstand brought in 40 million viewers a day when the country's population wasn't even 200 million and when many people were at work-one might size that up to airing a Super Bowl every day! However, Dick Clark's influence transcended the music. Against dissent, he integrated the dance floor and gave Baby Boomer America a daily vision of what a non-segregated society could be; early guests on his show included Chuck Berry and James Brown, as well as Jerry Lee Lewis and the Everly Brothers. Clark even made television an interactive pastime by reaching out to his viewers and getting them to call in and say what they thought about the couple of the day, or the song. This made Bandstand the progenitor of much of today's TV culture-shows like American Idol, The Voice and Dancing with the Stars. Dick Clark was also a friend of LIFE's; in this book, we bring back an earlier LIFE piece in which he reminiscences about the exciting early days of rock 'n' roll. He was a legend who introduced us to other legends, and for that, he will always be remembered.

List Price: $ 17.95 Price: $ 8.99

Tags: , , , , , ,

Chris Isaak

Chris Isaak
Event on 2012-12-16 20:00:00

Doors: December 16, 2012 7:00 pm
Special Guest: Nick Isaak /
Age: 12 & over (under 16 must be w/adult)

All reserved seating

Official Website                                Facebook PageBeyond the Sun

“I have always wanted to make this record.” - Chris Isaak

Yes, after more than a quarter of a century into his career, Chris Isaak has finally created the album he’s always wanted to make.  Beyond the Sun, Isaak’s first Vanguard Records release out Oct. 18 —is truly a labor of love. As a child spinning his parents 45s in their Stockton, California home, this deeply committed artist has been obsessed with the glory days of Memphis’ Sun Studio and the visionary artists who got their starts there—including , , , Carl Perkins and —all of them discovered and nurtured by the late, great founder . Now, at long last, Isaak has acted on this lifelong obsession, magically recapturing the transformative hepcat brilliance of the classic sides cut by these greats at Sun with Phillips during the mid-’50s, while also getting down to the heart and soul of his own deeply rooted musical identity.  Beyond the Sun will be available in both the 14-song standard set as well as a double album version that includes an additional 11 tracks.

“I did this because I love this music—that’s the entire reason,” Isaak explains, advising, “you gotta listen to the original ones—they’re classics – they’re awesome but you can have fun with them. These guys discovered this music for us and we had to rediscover it. There’s no way to do it exactly like they did it, so you’ve gotta give a little bit of your own take on it.”

Considering how unmistakably Isaak’s own music has been inspired by that of the Sun greats, particularly Presley and Orbison, the obvious question is, what took him so long? “When I started making music, I thought that if I do those songs, where do I go from there?” he says. “I wanted to make sure I found my own sound and established who I was. But I always loved that music and I wrote songs in that spirit. You can go through all my songs and you won’t find one reference to goin’ to the bop. They’re about my life, not about nostalgia for the ’50s.  I came to a point where I felt like the time was right to do this record. I’d met all my heroes and worked with most of them, and I didn’t hear anybody else doing it the way I wanted to do it.”

Isaak knew he had to bring his band to Sun Studio for part of the recording process for his new album. After all, it’s where all his heroes got their start. Besides, Sun Studio was founded by another one of his long time idols, the late great Sam Phillips. Remarked Chris, “I remember getting a copy of Oxford American Magazine about Sam Philips, the guy who pretty much got rock and roll going…without Sam, and Sun Studio, I don’t think we would have rock and roll. He’s a bonafide genius, one of those guys who looks and sees how things are going to be, only he is fifty or a hundred years ahead of his time. He found Elvis. He found Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison and Jerry Lee Lewis…he recorded Howlin’ Wolf and BB King.  To have built the studio in the middle of Memphis way back when, to set up your recorder, and to have found ALL those singers…and get those amazing performances…he was really way out there on his own.”

Isaak is joined on the record by his longtime band—bass player Rowland Salley and drummer Kenney Dale Johnson, who’ve been with him from the start, guitarist Hershel Yatovitz, pianist Scott Plunkett, and percussionist Rafael Padilla—and it turns out every one of these skilled musicians shares Chris’ passion for the Sun sound, along with a rarified feel for playing it.

“There’s just something about my band that was really right for it, because they all love that kind of music” Isaak points out. “I’ll tell you somethin’: everybody thinks early country is easy to play. It’s not easy. It’s just as hard to play as, like, abstract jazz fusion or anything else. It’s got a feel, and if you get the feel wrong, everything’s wrong. And I don’t think you could find a better rhythm section than mine for playing this music anywhere. Kenney is the shuffle king. And on top of that, Scotty, my piano player, just nailed this stuff. I really don’t think there’s anybody who could play it any better.”

Elvis is heavily represented on this handpicked collection, with “Trying to Get to You.” “I Forgot to Remember to Forget”, “Can’t Help Falling in Love”, “How’s the World Treating You”, “It’s Now or Never”, “She’s Not You” and “My Happiness” – the first song Elvis ever recorded.  Isaak opens the set with Cash’s “Ring of Fire”, and later offers his take on “I Walk the Line.” He wails his way through Jerry Lee’s “Great Balls of Fire”, revisits Orbison’s “So Long I’m Gone”, and heats up Perkins’ “Dixie Fried.” The standard set is rounded out by a blistering rendition of “Miss Pearl” by the nearly forgotten Sun artist Jimmy Wages. The second disc, which starts out with the one-two punch of Presley’s “My Baby Left Me” and Orbison’s “Pretty Woman”, also contains the treasure “Everybody’s In The Mood” by Howlin’ Wolf. Clearly, this guy knows the Sun catalog inside out.

To say Chris and his bandmates hit the bull’s-eye on these tunes would be a gross understatement. One of the most stunning moments occurs at the end of “It’s Now or Never”, on which Elvis hit an impossible note with all of his prodigious vocal power. On the new version, Isaak seems to back off from the big moment, but then he pauses for dramatic effect before powering up to the top of his range and tearing the roof off the sucker. “When you do a song like that one, you can’t leave out the guns,” he explains with a wry smile. Fact is, there isn’t a moment on this record that doesn’t feel immediate as well as authentic.

Both before and during the sessions, Isaak was inspired to pen some original tunes in the spirit of these sacred texts. One of them is “Live It Up”, which could easily be mistaken for some just-discovered Rick Nelson gem from 1957, complete with James Burton-style kickass guitar licks. It’s hardly surprising that this wild-haired rocker was chosen as Beyond the Sun’s first single. “When we were doing the record, I kept learning things,” says Chris. “For instance, nothing on those early records has a rock beat—it’s all shuffle and stripper beat. I wrote ‘Live it Up’ to put a rock beat on the record, so that that beat too is represented.” The second disc contains another Isaak composition, “Lovely Loretta”.

In his amusing and informative liner notes, Isaak provides plenty of detail about the project. “After making a lot of records of my own, I finally got to make this album of all the tunes I have been singing and playing at practices and soundchecks and in my house all these years,” he writes “I took the band to Memphis to record at Sun Studio; it’s still a recording studio and it is an AMAZING room! We recorded in the late afternoon and stayed up ‘til way too late and we had a ball! We played, not worked…we really went for the style of recording that was used on those records early on. We were all playing in the room together, nobody had any headphones, we just listened to each other and went for it.  We cut way more music than we intended…we just couldn’t and didn’t want to stop. It’s the most fun I ever had making a record.”

The fun began as soon as they entered the lobby of Sun Studio and came face to face with Roland Janes, who’d played guitar on countless Sun recordings, including Jerry Lee’s. “We almost didn’t get into the studio,” says Chris. “We walked in and Roland Janes was on the phone. Rowland Salley comes up to him and says, ‘Hi, I’m Rowland,’ and Roland Janes says, ‘Just a second; there’s another Rowland here—I’m gonna have to drive him out.’ We thought, oh, man, he’s in a bad mood—he’s not gonna let us in. But we had this little white Maltese terrier with us, and he said, ‘Is this dog yours?’ We go, ‘Yeah,’ and he goes, ‘Come on in, as long as you’re with him.’”

Isaak’s longstanding desire to musically salute his inspirations was intensified when at the end of the very same Oxford American article the interviewer asked Sam what new artists he listened to…His response blew Chris away. “I don’t keep up with the business like I used to,” said Phillips, “but I love to listen to Chris Isaak. He’s very talented, and his music is so damned honest. It’s incredible”. “I fell out of my chair when he said that. I had no idea he even knew who I was,” said Chris. “It just felt like all that music that I had grown up listening to had all come full circle…I think it meant more to me than any gold record or award I ever received because Sam Phillips was really the thread that connected all that music that I had been loving all my life.”

That pretty much sealed the deal for this fervent Sun worshiper. Chris noted, “We called the record Beyond the Sun because the music starts at Sun Studio and just keeps growing and going. I think Mr. Phillips would have understood.”

at The Uptown Theatre
1350 Third Street
Napa, United States

Tags: , , ,

Million Dollar Quartet


Event on 2012-09-29 17:00:00
Relevant Theatricals, , , Inc. at Apollo Theater

MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET is the new smash-hit musical inspired by the 1956 that brought together rock 'n' roll icons, , , Carl Perkins and for the first and only time.
That legendary night is brought to life in this thrilling musical which features a score of hits including ",""Great Balls of Fire,""Walk the Line,""Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On,""Hound Dog" and more! Don't miss your chance to be a fly on the wall of fame… at MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET!

at
2540 N. Lincoln
Chicago,

Tags: , , , , ,

How Jerry Lee Lewis Got a “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On”

In the early 1950s Roy Hall was a struggling songwriter in Nashville; he had cut a few records for small labels and sometimes made extra cash playing piano on sessions for country singers Webb Pierce and Marty Robbins. Hall opened a club called The Hideaway where he played piano; to fill in on nights he was on the road, Hall hired a cocky but unknown piano player for $ 15 a night named .

Because Hall liked to play what he called “a cross between country and rhythm and blues,” he would spend a lot of time in Memphis, where this new sound, called rockabilly, was born at . Lewis would also make his way to Sun, where he played piano on hits by and . But Lewis always knew he wasn’t a sideman, he was a star.

Fast forward to December 1956 and Sun Records is a huge success; that month, the Million Dollar Quartet–Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash and –recorded their famous impromptu jam session. But Sam Phillips also had million dollar problems.

A year earlier, Phillips had sold Elvis’ contract to RCA Records for $ 40,000–a princely sum then but in retrospect a disastrous decision. In March 1956, Carl Perkins suffered a serious car wreck, putting his career in jeopardy. And Jerry Lee Lewis, groomed by Phillips to replace Elvis in fans’ hearts, was still without his first hit record.

In early 1957, Jerry Lee went into the studio with drummer Jimmy Van Eaton and guitarist Roland James to record his new single, “It’ll Be Me,” a tune written by the session’s producer, Jack Clement. After a few takes, it was time to move on to the B-side. Lewis chose one he often performed to great audience response: “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On.” The track was recorded in one take. Lewis knew immediately that it was a hit. Lewis’ “Whole Lotta Shakin’,” which rocketed to number three on the Billboard charts, became a rock and roll classic–but his was not the first recording of the song.

“Whole Lotta Shakin’” was co-written in 1954 by singer Dave “Curlee” Williams and Roy Hall, that struggling songwriter from Nashville. Hall said he and Williams wrote the song together on a trip to Florida. The next year, Hall recorded the song for Decca Records with little success.

The songwriting credits for “Whole Lotta Shakin’” have been a source of controversy, as Hall’s Decca sample pressings listed Williams as the sole writer, as did a version by rhythm and blues great Big Maybelle, recorded six months before Hall’s. Hall later secured co-writing credit under the pseudonym Sonny David. Whether Hall came by his credit honestly or not, he maintained that he didn’t profit from it financially: “To tell the truth, I was trying to get out of paying the IRS any money, so I wrote it under the name of Sonny David. I might as well not have gone to the trouble. An ex-wife collected all of the royalties in a divorce settlement.”

Lee Jensen, author of Rockaeology, unearths the secrets behind the writing, production and recording of the great hits of rock, soul, doo-wop, the British Invasion and Rhythm & Blues. Get the stories behind the songs at Rockaeology.com http://rockaeology.com/

Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Lee_Jensen

Tags: , ,

Million Dollar Quartet


Event on 2012-08-22 14:00:00
Relevant Theatricals, , , Inc. at Apollo Theater

MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET is the new smash-hit musical inspired by the 1956 that brought together rock 'n' roll icons, , , and for the first and only time.
That legendary night is brought to life in this thrilling musical which features a score of hits including "Blue Suede Shoes,""Great Balls of Fire,""Walk the Line,""Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On,""Hound Dog" and more! Don't miss your chance to be a fly on the wall of fame… at MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET!

at
2540 N. Lincoln
Chicago,

Tags: , , , ,

Million Dollar Quartet


Event on 2012-08-19 14:00:00
Relevant Theatricals, , , Inc. at Apollo Theater

MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET is the new smash-hit musical inspired by the 1956 recording session that brought together rock 'n' roll icons, , , and for the first and only time.
That legendary night is brought to life in this thrilling musical which features a score of hits including ",""Great Balls of Fire,""Walk the Line,""Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On,""Hound Dog" and more! Don't miss your chance to be a fly on the wall of fame… at MILLION DOLLAR QUARTET!

at
2540 N. Lincoln
Chicago,

Tags: , ,

Jerry Lee Lewis – Whole Lotta Shakin’ Going On (1957)

As a pianist, “The Killer” Lewis always complained because he had to sit down during his shows. and suggested him to stand up. Jerry Lee accepted their advice. So he started to kick the chairs, to go up on the keyboards and even to burn pianos.

Tags: , ,

JERRY LEWIS CAME IN LYONS (FRANCE)

The friendly actor has celebrated his 80th birthday…
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Tags: , , , , ,

I’ve Got a World That Swings by Jerry Lewis?

Question by Laura: I’ve Got a World That Swings by ?
I was on a fan website for Jerry Lewis, not , & they had the song I’ve Got a World That Swings with Jerry Lewis singing the vocals on their page. I have been looking everywhere for this song & I can not find it anywhere. I have no idea if it was on a record he recorded or what? If you have any idea please let me know as soon as possible!!

Best answer:

Answer by Satnin
I love this song too! Unfortunately, it’s not on any of his records. It’s from “The ” and he -Buddy Love – sings it at the prom with the Les Brown band. The only way you’ll be able to get this song on a CD is to record it from the DVD itself.

Give your answer to this question below!

Tags: , , , ,