Rock ‘n’ Roll is not just one style of music but it is diverse with many sounds and many different angles, the Country music angle which is Rockabilly, the black angle which is Rhythm ‘n’ Blues, the vocal angle which is Doo-Wop and the piano angle which is Boogie Woogie.....hold on....Boogie Woogie....say more!
Boogie Ma Blues....
Boogie Woogie was a repetitive piano style with roots that date right back in history to the very early years of the 20th century in the turpentine camps and oil boomtowns of Texas and Louisiana, where the Boogie Woogie baseline and pattern was created. By night the workers in such camps drunk themselves into oblivion, they cheated at cards, brawled and murdered each other but each camp had a Barrelhouse and in these houses the Boogie Woogie style was forming. This is why you often hear Boogie Woogie called Barrelhouse Piano.
Possibly the first Boogie Woogie to be recorded was in 1924 and called Chicago Stomps by Jimmy Blyth, by the 1930s and 40s this piano based form of the Blues had it’s hold on America, big time. Boogie Woogie music was so popular and its creators suddenly became famous names; Meade Lux Lewis, Pete Johnson, Jimmy Yancey, Albert Ammons and Pinetop Smith. As music progressed and times changed, things moved on but some folks were still possessed by the spirit and drive of Boogie Woogie.
One name brings a smile to every Rock ‘n’ Roll fans face as they remember the name of Merrill E Moore.....yeah daddy...Merrill E Moore.....
Down The Road a Piece....
The story of Merrill E Moore....
Merrill E Moore was a truly holy man for he performed Boogie Woogie on his piano but his music was a blend of Western Swing and R&B which produced something so special.....Rock ‘n’ Roll.
Merrill E Moore was born on a farm near Algona in Iowa in September of 1923 and by the age of just 7 he had taken to the piano. By 12 he was performing on a radio station in the nearby town of Des Moines and in the evenings when school was through he played his piano in a band on the Midwestern ballroom circuit. By December of 1941 America had entered the 2nd WorldWar so Merrill joined the U.S Navy. After he left the service Merrill tied the knot with his high-school sweetheart and relocated to San Diego.
In the late 1940’s the Hillbilly lead Boogie Woogie sounds of Moon Mullican totally amazed Merrill and some day he wanted to play in the same hypnotic Boogie Woogie style.
By 1950 Merrill began to perform regularly at the Buckaroo Club and with it’s manager Jimmy Kennedy they formed the Saddle, Rock & Rhythm Boys. In 1952 with this band to back him and with Jimmy Kennedy’s help Merrill signed to Capitol Records and in that same year released Big Bug Boogie. Come 1952 Corrine Corrina was released and in 1953 Red Light, Bartender Blues, Bellbottom Boogie and House of Blue Lights. House Of Blue Lights became a national hit but Jimmy had say and he didn’t want the band to tour to promote the record. A 7 year deal had been signed between Merrill and Jimmy, a deal in which Merrill E Moore and the Saddle, Rock & Rhythm Boys appeared at his club 6 nights a week and Jimmy had also helped get Merrill signed to Capitol so Jimmy Kennedy thought he had some kinda say.
Roll on to 1955 and Merrill became a regular musician on Hillbilly entrepreneur Cliffie Stones television and radio show called Hometown Jamboree. Merrill had walked out on his contract with Jimmy Kennedy but he still recorded Boogie Woogie for Capitol Records, Buttermilk Baby and Down The Road A Piece are prime examples of his 1955 recordings. Merrill also became a session musician for Capitol too and played piano for Skeets McDonald, Wanda Jackson, Sonny James, Faron Young and Tommy Sands.
In 1958 Merrill recorded an album of instrumentals but it was not released, at the time. He did not record again for some time and by 1962 Merrill was performing on cruise ships and in hotels.
A European rediscovery of his music began in 1969 and he played in England which lead to the Tree Top Tall album being released, however this didn’t lead to anything big for Merrill he still played clubs in his local area and at times ventured out to Arizona or Nevada. A car crash in 1986 laid Merrill up for a few years but in 1998 he was called back to England to appear at the Hemsby Rock ‘n’ Roll weekender in Great Yarmouth where he was hailed a hero and adored.
Life is strange and cancer set in and in June of 2000 Merrill E Moore died....R.I.P oh hallowed one....
The exceptional recordings that Merrill laid down are truly something so powerful and extraordinary. Lead by his almost frenzied Boogie Woogie piano with his vocals lazy and easy going that are recognisably Rock and Roll.....bless ma soul....
Let Me Introduce Ma Rocket 88....
So many Rock ‘n’ Roll records, recorded before 1956 exist but the Rockin’ ingredient is not always outwardly recognisable, at first. But one recording stands out as a totally 1950s Rock ‘n’ Roll release. It was recorded in 1951 at Sam Phillips studio and it is a 12 bar blues song credited to Jackie Brenston and His Delta Cats called Rocket 88.
This monumental song was put together during rehearsals in the Riverside Hotel in Clarksdale in Mississippi. Rocket 88 is Rhythm ‘n’ Blues music but Ike Turner gave it a rawer sound by adding a strongly distorted guitar, a heavy back beat was added by drums, Jackie sings dirty and slurred vocals which make this song 1950s Rock ‘n’ Roll.
Rocket 88 is an historic and completely important recording; it is about a true mid-fifties Rock ‘n’ Roll subject, the automobile. The Oldsmobile, Rocket 88....
During the time of recording this historic song the name of the Delta Cats did not exist and the song was actually recorded by the flashy Ike Turner with his Kings of Rhythm, Jackie was just the gifted sax player who did not play his saxophone on this song but he still sang the vocals on Rocket 88! 17 year old Raymond Hill played sax with Ike Turner playing piano. Rocket 88 was recorded in March at Sun Records but Sam Phillips sold it to Chess records up in Chicago who released it in April of 1951.
Rocket 88 went on to reach number 1 on the U.S Billboard R&B charts in June and stayed there for over a month but more importantly it was a vital part of something so massive.....Rock and Roll’s history....
Excellent! Nice to see you getting your articles online too!
ReplyDeleteMy mother, born in 1927, was a classically trained pianist (she also played the flute) but she harbored a secret love of the boogie woogie. Secret because her mother never let her play the boogie woogie within hearing distance due to its reputation. Mom said that Grandma also referred to it as "that black music" which was, of course, absolutely verboten in their lily white Wisconsin household! When we were growing up we used to beg Mom to play us some boogie woogie and we'd fling ourselves around, pretending we knew how to dance to it--I'm sure we looked like little idiots, but we certainly had fun. You did an awful lot of research for this post, my good man. Awesome!
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