That’s right and right on time just came home and needed a pick me up and came through like you always do the band backing him up we’re solid musicians especially the sax man number one fan boom digging this sound thanks annie
Thanks for including the sheet music that showed both Richard and Pat Boone on the cover, Annie. For people that weren't alive back then, (I was) I'm sure it's hard to imagine a time when someone like Pat Boone could cover a frantic Little Richard rocker like this and be pretty successful with it!
Would love to see a moving picture of him playing the piano. Also like the vintage juke box with linear arrangement of multi coloured records. Recall seeing such a juke box in the mid 1970's. Quite a space consuming beast & fun to watch its complicated selection mechanism.
Nicely written. And good for you, Paul having diverse musical tastes. It's an aural smörgåsbord that I like to nibble at. Example, have managed to link two folk songs. The second (uploading now), a nice baritone, replaced Alan Arkin when he left the Tarriers for Hollywood. On the channel is Alan solo. After this, a classic bubbling under non-hit. Some of those unrecognized sides are so good it makes you wonder, what happened?
@@AnnieVanAuken Think that smorgasboard thing was down to having a grandmother who sang music hall songs, growing up in a good era for a developing music scene & our first family home being above a junk shop, where my tomboyish aunt bought & fixed her first gramophone, which came with a mix of 78's. I also went to school with an Elvis lookalike/soundalike who was into R&R, R&B & got into trouble for playing such stuff by ear on the school piano. As for what happened, some songs have to be 'plugged' to get them off the ground & radio dj's can be bought off to do so. It was called 'payola' here in the UK.
Boys in Liverpool were listening. I would've been listening & purchasing. All time classic.
That’s right and right on time just came home and needed a pick me up and came through like you always do the band backing him up we’re solid musicians especially the sax man number one fan boom digging this sound thanks annie
We got a genuine eccentric blues shouter next! Tenor saxophonist Lee Allen had a minor 1958 hit, "Walkin' with Mr. Lee".
Thanks for including the sheet music that showed both Richard and Pat Boone on the cover, Annie. For people that weren't alive back then, (I was) I'm sure it's hard to imagine a time when someone like Pat Boone could cover a frantic Little Richard rocker like this and be pretty successful with it!
A classic mid-1950s film clip has Pat Boone finger-poppin' awkwardly
as he sings, "Tutti Fruitti". So square and different from Richard!
Would love to see a moving picture of him playing the piano. Also like the vintage juke box with linear arrangement of multi coloured records. Recall seeing such a juke box in the mid 1970's. Quite a space consuming beast & fun to watch its complicated selection mechanism.
Nicely written. And good for you, Paul having diverse musical tastes. It's an aural smörgåsbord that I like to nibble at.
Example, have managed to link two folk songs. The second (uploading now), a nice baritone, replaced Alan Arkin when he left the Tarriers for Hollywood. On the channel is Alan solo. After this, a classic bubbling under non-hit. Some of those unrecognized sides are so good it makes you wonder, what happened?
@@AnnieVanAuken Think that smorgasboard thing was down to having a grandmother who sang music hall songs, growing up in a good era for a developing music scene & our first family home being above a junk shop, where my tomboyish aunt bought & fixed her first gramophone, which came with a mix of 78's. I also went to school with an Elvis lookalike/soundalike who was into R&R, R&B & got into trouble for playing such stuff by ear on the school piano. As for what happened, some songs have to be 'plugged' to get them off the ground & radio dj's can be bought off to do so. It was called 'payola' here in the UK.