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Little Richard

One of the original rock & roll greats, Little Richard merged the fire of gospel with New Orleans R&B, pounding the piano and wailing with gleeful abandon. While numerous other R&B greats of the early '50s had been moving in a similar direction, none of them matched the sheer electricity of Richard's vocals. With his bullet-speed deliveries, ecstatic trills, and the overjoyed force of personality in his singing, he was crucial in upping the voltage from high-powered R&B into the similar, yet different, guise of rock & roll. Although he was only a hitmaker for a couple of years or so, his influence upon both the soul and British Invasion stars of the 1960s was vast, and his early hits remain core classics of the rock repertoire.

Heavily steeped in gospel music while growing up in Georgia, when Little Richard began recording in the early '50s he played unexceptional jump blues/R&B that owed a lot to his early inspirations Billy Wright and Roy Brown. In 1955, at Lloyd Price's suggestion, Richard sent a demo tape to Specialty Records, who were impressed enough to sign him and arrange a session for him in New Orleans. That session, however, didn't get off the ground until Richard began fooling around with a slightly obscene ditty during a break. With slightly cleaned-up lyrics, "Tutti Frutti" was the record that gave birth to Little Richard as he is now known — the gleeful "woo!"s, the furious piano playing, the sax-driven, pedal-to-the-metal rhythm section. It was also his first hit, although, ridiculous as it now seems, Pat Boone's cover version outdid Richard's on the hit parade.

Boone would also try to cover Richard's next hit, "Long Tall Sally," but by that time it was evident that audiences black and white much preferred the real deal. In 1956 and 1957, Richard reeled off a string of classic hits — "Long Tall Sally," "Slippin' and "Slidin'," "Jenny, Jenny," "Keep a Knockin'," "Good Golly, Miss Molly," "The Girl Can't Help It" — that remain the foundation of his fame. While Richard's inimitable mania was the key to his best records, he also owed a lot of his success to the gutsy playing of ace New Orleans session players like Lee Allen (tenor sax), Alvin Tyler (baritone sax), and especially Earl Palmer (drummer), who usually accompanied the singer in both New Orleans and Los Angeles studios. Richard's unforgettable appearances in early rock & roll movies, especially The Girl Can't Help It, also did a lot to spread the rock & roll gospel to the masses.

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Opinion

Renegade or Retrograde: Questioning Little Richard's Legacy

Read "Renegade or Retrograde: Questioning Little Richard's Legacy" reviewed by Jacob Bloomfield


In the many retrospectives on rock musician Little Richard since his death on 9 May 2020, some major narratives have emerged: he has been alternatingly cast as a queer forefather in the tradition of Oscar Wilde; a transgressive figure who broke racial, gender, and/or sexual boundaries; and a music pioneer largely defined by his influence on subsequent artists such as The Beatles. But in exalting the singer as a boundary breaker, observers have overlooked retrograde elements of Richard's legacy: his ...

11
Profile

Little Richard: 1932 - 2020

Read "Little Richard: 1932 - 2020" reviewed by C. Michael Bailey


It has been often said that popular culture is like a McDonald's cheeseburger: something better consumed than considered. It is a dilemma then, when a pop culture event stirs the roiling cauldron of the 21st Century. It is even greater and more significant when that event signals the end of an era. In his tribute to Johnny Cash on the artist's death in 2003, commentator and VH1 Executive Director Bill Flanagan opined on the CBS program Sunday Morning:

2
Book Review

Rip it Up: The Specialty Records Story by Billy Vera

Read "Rip it Up: The Specialty Records Story by Billy Vera" reviewed by C. Michael Bailey


Rip it Up: The Specialty Records Story Billy Vera RPM Series 177 Pages ISBN: # 978-1947026360 BMG Books 2019 The best music writing makes the reader go listen to music. It is just that simple. Volume 4 of BMG's RPM Series: Rip It Up—The Specialty Records Story is just such music writing. It made this reader search music from two fronts. First, the edition is authored by Billy Vera, who with The ...

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87

Recording

Little Richard's Specialty Hits, Demos and Videos Enhance Concord Reissue

Little Richard's Specialty Hits, Demos and Videos Enhance Concord Reissue

Source: conqueroo

Fifteen-song disc also features a never-before-heard interview with Specialty Records founder Art Rupe about the discovery of the rock 'n' roll legend Original album placed #50 in Rolling Stone's Greatest Albums of All Time. LOS ANGELES, Calif.—Rock 'n' roll may date back to Jackie Brenston's “Rocket 88" in 1951 and perhaps further to blues/swing hybrids of the 1940s. But many would contend that Little Richard's “Tutti Frutti," recorded at Cosimo Matassa's studio in new Orleans in September 1955, was the ...

388

Interview

Interview: Little Richard

Interview: Little Richard

Source: JazzWax by Marc Myers

My conversation with Little Richard in today's Wall Street Journal (go here or pick up a copy) was a mind-opener. This is the guy who started rock 'n' roll as we know it, for goodness sake. With his first hit Tutti Frutti in 1955, Little Richard single-handedly unleashed a new form of music that to this day continues to influence musicians worldwide. Virtually every major rock and rap act since 1955 owes a debt to Little Richard—and all have said ...

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Recording

Little Richard's Warner Bros. Albums Reissued on Collectors' Choice on June 23

Little Richard's Warner Bros. Albums Reissued on Collectors' Choice on June 23

Source: conqueroo

The Rill Thing, King of Rock and Roll and the Bumps Blackwell-produced The Second Coming were evidence of a still-vital artist who combined tradition with newer sounds.

LOS ANGELES, Calif. — Little Richard is well known as one of rock ’n’ roll’s great originators. His run of hits on Specialty Records between 1955-58 brought legendary hits like “Tutti Frutti,” “Long Tall Sally,” “Slippin’ and Slidin’,” “Rip It Up,” “Lucille,” “Jenny Jenny,” “Keep A-Knockin’,” and “Good Golly Miss Molly.” At the ...

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Recording

'The Very Best of Little Richard' Nails the Specialty Records Years

'The Very Best of Little Richard' Nails the Specialty Records Years

Source: conqueroo

25-song compilation contains all the hits along with two previously unissued tracks and liner notes by Billy Vera

When Little Richard recorded “Tutti Frutti" in 1955 at Cosimo's Studio in New Orleans with A&R man Bumps Blackwell, rock 'n' roll was taken to a thrilling new level. The pounding piano, the high voice and trills, and the sexually suggestive lyrics catapulted the former Richard Penniman to the top of the charts and to legendary status.

On July 29, Specialty Records ...

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Festival

Little Richard Joins B.B. King Blues Tour Triple Bill at Paetec Jazz Festival on August 11 -- Replaces Etta James Who Will Not Appear Due to Illness

Little Richard Joins B.B. King Blues Tour Triple Bill at Paetec Jazz Festival on August 11 -- Replaces Etta James Who Will Not Appear Due to Illness

Source: Dalmath Associates Inc.

Baltimore, MD--July 24, 2007--Little Richard - the originator, the emancipator, the architect of rock and roll - will perform in the B.B. King Blues Tour Concert the final night of the PAETEC Jazz Festival Saturday August 11th at Pier Six Concert Pavilion. He will be performing in place of Etta James, who will unfortunately be unable to appear at the festival due to illness. Marc Iacona, Co-producer of the PAETEC Jazz Festival said, “On behalf of everyone at the PAETEC ...

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Music

Recordings: As Leader | As Sideperson

Here's Little Richard

Unknown label
2006

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Operator

Mast Records
1986

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