Rip It Up from Here's Little Richard
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 18 ต.ค. 2024
- Little Richard’s 1957 debut launched the career of a foundational figure in rock music, and featured some of the artist’s best-loved hits, including “Long Tall Sally,” “Ready Teddy,” “Jenny Jenny” and “Tutti-Frutti,” a song which many consider to mark the birth of rock ’n’ roll. Celebrate the 60th anniversary of this classic record with the deluxe, remastered edition, which includes a slew of demos, outtakes and previously unreleased tracks, as well as new liner notes by GRAMMY®-nominated music editor and journalist Chris Morris.
Order Here’s Little Richard (60th Anniversary Deluxe Edition) on Amazon: found.ee/Little...
Little Richard had been making records for four years before he rolled into Cosimo Matassa's J&M Studio in New Orleans and cut the epochal "Tutti Frutti" in the fall of 1955, but everything else he'd done -- and much of what others had recorded -- faded into insignificance when Richard wailed "A wop bop a loo mop a lomp bomp bomp" and kicked off one of the first great wailers in rock history. In retrospect, Little Richard's style doesn't seem so strikingly innovative as captured in 1956's Here's Little Richard -- his boogie-woogie piano stylings weren't all that different from what Fats Domino had been laying down since 1949, and his band pumped out the New Orleans backbeat that would define the Crescent City's R&B for the next two decades, albeit with precision and plenty of groove. But what set Richard apart was his willingness to ramp up the tempos and turn the outrage meter up to ten; "Tutti Frutti," "Rip It Up," and "Jenny Jenny" still sound outrageous a half-century after they were waxed, and it's difficult but intriguing to imagine how people must have reacted to Little Richard at a time when African-American performers were expected to be polite, and the notion of a gay man venturing out of the closet simply didn't exist (Richard's songs were thoroughly heterosexual on the surface, but the nudge and wink of "Tutti Frutti" and "Baby" is faint but visible, and his bop threads, mile-high process, and eye makeup clearly categorized him as someone "different"). These 12 tunes may not represent the alpha and omega of Little Richard's best music, but every song is a classic and unlike many of his peers, time has refused to render this first album quaint -- Richard's grainy scream remains one of the great sounds in rock & roll history, and the thunder of his piano and the frantic wail of the band is still the glorious call of a Friday night with pay in the pocket and trouble in mind. Brilliant stuff. - All Music - Mark Deming
01 Tutti Frutti
02 True, Fine Mama
03 Can't Believe You Wanna Leave
04 Ready Teddy
05 Baby
06 Slippin' and Slidin'
07 Long Tall Sally
08 Miss Ann
09 Oh Why?
10 Rip It Up
11 Jenny Jenny
12 Baby (Demo)
13 All Night Long (Demo)
The inventor, creator, innovator, legend, pioneer, icon is gone RIP 1932-2020
Arregaço de rockabilly !!
Rest in peace, fantastic singer, pianist and influence to many musicians and myself as well.
One of my all time favorites!... Rest in peace Little Richard...
Thanks for the 50s the best music it's great thanks
His music will Stand the test of time. RIP
Rest in Power...your flamboyant self!
One great silong by a gewat legendbif music RIP tonlittlebrixyard.😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
RIP Thanks for all the good feelings
Love you little Richard
The only real person beside another person who posted before his death. Who actually listen to him not because he was dead but because he was a great artist
@@funkforabetterterm3304 I do. Can't stand these people either.
Good Bless You Richard.
Little Richard e bom demais!!!
The KING👑👑👑
Sing it little Richard ❤️
⚘️⚘️⚘️👍✌️RICARDITO....RIP.
El REY de casi todo: Gospel, Soul, Blues,
Rhythm & Blues, Rock & Roll, Rock, Funky...
Buen viaje genio, visionario, y maestro de maestros.
¡¡Descanse en Power!!
✊🏿😻💘🔥🤘🏿
We lost three giants in the space of four years. Without Fats, Chuck and Richard we'd have nothing.
King of Hip Hop.......✒️
Rip
Ooooowwwwww! U rock!
Written by John Marascalco and Robert “Bumps” Blackwell
Little Richard released Rip It Up in June 1956, it topped the R&B Chart and hit #17 on the pop chart.
Bill Haley & His Comets recorded a version on 12 July 1956 it was released on 6 August 1956, it reached #25 on pop chart.
Elvis Presley recorded Rip It Up on 3 September 1956 and it was released as an Album track on his 2nd Album “Elvis” on 19 October 1956.
They have a tank.
Первый рок на моём магнитофоне Чайка-М,1965г.
WAKE UP!
LA BAMBA LOL
For ten years, prior to "Like a Rolling Stone", "Long Tall Sally was the best rock & roll song ever written, the only song covered by both Elvis and the Beatles, and Elvis had to change the key. Along with Elvis and Chuck Berry, Little Richard was one of the three primary co-inventors of rock & roll. More than Elvis, Richard invented rock & roll singing. If you can't sing "Long Tall Sally" you can't sing rock & roll. That should have disqualified most of the punks, goths, new wavers, & post-modern hipsters that have made college radio unlistenable and rock irrelevant in recent years. Unlike those anemic wannabe badasses, Little Richard didn't need a distorted guitar to sound rock & roll. He was rock & roll acapella. In the late fifties, he recorded 3 classic albums for Prestige. All 3 are essential, especially the first one "Here's Little Richard" (1957) the best rock & roll album of the fifties. Avoid "The Best of Little Richard" (1965) crappy re-recordings of the classics for Vee Jay records that plagued his reputation going forward because they were often mistook for the originals. Recommended viewing: "The Girl Can't Help It" (1957), "Let the Good Times Roll" (1973). www.soundclick.com/GilKaneda
You are such a Bob Dylan fanboy. John Lennon was the man who listened to this, and it touched his life. That was the man who was directly, and obviously influenced by this record to start the greatest rock band in the history of the world. Bob Dylan doesn't touch the rock and roll that The Beatles brought to the world, in clubs around Hamburg and England.
@@fshoaps The Beatles, especially Lennon, were "Dylan fanboys" and it had an enormously positive impact on their songwriting and rock & roll in general. You don't have to be a Dylan fanboy to appreciate the significance of "Like a Rolling Stone" although I would agree that Dylan has been vastly overrated by the hipster critics. But that's not to say he wasn't historically important. Besides, I'm a Ronstadt fanboy. th-cam.com/video/Zq9DDTVTa6g/w-d-xo.html
@@GilQaneida Yeah, but Lennon also had very, very tough words for Dylan. If anyone in the group was a Dylan fanboy it was George, who remained influenced by him, and close friends with him until the end.
F
What happened to music, nobody talks anymore, macy dees, lassy bands and scripts. Language is dying, we will be back to the hunter gather days, uhh, ahh, grr. WAKE UP!