Movie "Rio Bravo": „Cindy, Cindy“ by Ricky Nelson - The Rockabilly Studio Version, 1958
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 ธ.ค. 2024
- This Studio Version with Ricky Nelson´s Rockabilly/Rock´n´Roll band along with a great Guitar Solo by James Burton
(in details: Ricky Nelson: vocal/guitar; James Burton: lead guitar, James Kirkland: Bass, Richie Frost: Drums and Gene Garf: Piano)
was recorded September 11, 1958 at Master Recorders, 535 Fairfax Avenue, Hollywood for IMPERIAL Records; produced by Jimmie Haskell.
The well known "Rio Bravo" Movie Version of CINDY (tradit.) was recorded nine days before, Sept 2, 1958 at the same place. Also "My Rifle, my pony and me" was recorded on this day, together with Dean Martin and Walter Brennan...and John Wayne in person in the studio, who speaks the introduction of "My Rifle..." for the promo of "Rio Bravo".
Master Recorders was the home of Ricky Nelson and his band, where they recorded all the records from 1957 just like "Stood up", "Lonesome Town", "It´s late" or Poor Little Fool" till 1961 before Nelson and band and producer Jimmie Haskell used the bigger and new studio "United Recorders" at the Sunset Blvd.
Together with his band crew members of the Stone Canyon Band (Bobby Neal, Patrick Woodward, Rick Intveld, Andy Chapin, Donald Clark) and his finance Helen Blair, Ricky Nelson died in a plane crash in Texas, December 31, 1985, on the way to a New Years Eve Concert. Only the pilots survived by jumping out of cockpit windows of the burning plane.
The plane, they crashed with, was an old DC 3 of WW II. Jerry Lee Lewis was the owner before and Jerry Lee did not think this ole plane was safe enough anymore.
The last song Ricky Nelson sang the night on stage before he died was "Rave on" by Buddy Holly, who also died in a plane crash in 1959, together with Big Bopper and young Richie Valens, we all know. All RIP!
Ricky Nelson, who got over 30 Top 40 Hits in the USA (two No1 Hits with Poor little Fool and Travelin´Man) were inducted in the Rock´n´Roll Hall of Fame and Rockabilly Hall of Fame in 1987, introduced by John Fogerty from CCR and with Sam Phillips from Sun Records in die audience, who exposed his importance for the wide success of Rockabilly and Rock´n´Roll - Music in the USA
between 1957 and the early Sixties. Songs just as "Stood up" (No:2 in the Billboard Charts) or "Believe what you say"(written by the Johnny and Dorsey Burnette for Ricky Nelson) are Milestones of the Rockabilly Sound, Fogerty stated in his speech.