- This is how much things have changed around here: two years ago the late-summer lull (we used to have such things) of August 23, 2003 produced a grand total of five (yes five) posts on Blogcritics. By way of comparison, today we already have 25 posts at 9 a.m.
Zounds!
One of the posts that day was my tribute to Little Richard: for the two-year period between 1955 and 1957, NO ONE made rock 'n' roll like Little Richard.
In the spring of 1955 Bumps Blackwell was hired as an A&R trainee by owner Art Rupe of the R&B and gospel label Specialty. Rupe liked Blackwell's arranging skills, his ambition and his savoir-faire.
A few weeks after he was hired, Blackwell and Rupe listened to a demo tape by Little Richard and the Upsetters, and both thought they heard a little something in the young singer's voice. Richard was playing in New Orleans and signed to the Peacock label when a demo arrived at Specialty "wrapped in a piece of paper looking as though someone had eaten off it," according to Blackwell in Charles White's The Life and Times of Little Richard.
Rupe allowed Blackwell to buy Richard out of his Peacock contract for $600 and sign him to Specialty. In September, 1955 Rupe sent Blackwell to New Orleans to produce Richard at Cosimo Matassa's primitive J&M studio with the rocking house band (Lee Allen on tenor sax, Red Tyler on baritone sax, Earl Palmer on drums, Edgar Blanchard or Justin Adams on guitar, Huey Piano Smith on piano, and Frank Fields on bass). This band, with some variations, had played on the records of Roy Brown, Fats Domino, Professor Longhair, Shirley and Lee, Lloyd Price and many others.
Neither the band nor Blackwell knew what to make of Little Richard when they first met each other in the studio. "When I walked in, there's this cat in this loud shirt, with hair waved up six inches above his head," recalls Blackwell. "He was talking wild, thinking up stuff just to be different."







Article comments
1 - crooked spine
Little Richard was incredibly influential in the development of rock & roll. But forget about all the musicians he's influenced, just listen to that voice! The way he belts out those lyrics, it'll give ya goosebumps if you let it.
2 - Eric Olsen
totally agree, Spine, thanks - like tapped into a supernal energy source