Showing posts with label Rufus Thomas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rufus Thomas. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

ROCK Sex: "Last Child" - The Meters > Aerosmith > Rufus Thomas > Wu-Tang



ROCK Sex is 'just a punk in the streets'.

Creative culture is relay and response.

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Creativity is an ongoing jam.

Hand it to next, see what they bring to it.


The Meters specialized in Cajun gumbo Funk with a tough strut on it.

THE METERS -"Fire On the Bayou" (1975)



After listening to The Meters, guitarist Brad Whitford of Aerosmith was inspired with the riff for their song, "Last Child".

(Since Brad was responding to the general spirit of the band's sound, I picked "Fire On the Bayou" as a stylistic parallel.)

AEROSMITH -"Last Child" (1976)



Stax Records' king of dance tunes, Rufus Thomas, emphasized the Funk slant of the Aerosmith song in his own.

RUFUS THOMAS -"Fried Chicken" (1978)



And Wu-Tang sampled Rufus Thomas.

WU-TANG CLAN -"Put the Hammer Down" (1998)



Everyone puts their own angle on something, and it's all valid.



© Tym Stevens



See Also:

"TRAIN KEPT A-ROLLIN" - Tiny Bradshaw > Johnny Burnette Trio > The Yardbirds > T.Rex > Aerosmith

SHAKE AND FINGER POP! Soul Music and the Interior Truth, with Music Player!



The Real History of Rock and Soul!: The Music Player Checklist


Monday, January 25, 2010

LADIES FIRST: "Hound Dog" - Big Mama Thornton > Elvis > Jimi Hendrix



LADIES FIRST brings you another classic that 'she did first'.

Today it's the monster classic "Hound Dog".

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"Hound Dog" was written and produced by the budding talents Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller, and first recorded by the irrepressible Big Mama Thornton. Along with her blues-belting style, Mama also retooled some of the lyrics, did flavorful ad libs, and hard accents in the phrasing that gave the song its fierce identity.

BIG MAMA THORNTON -"Hound Dog" (1952)



Thornton's version was recorded in 1952, but released in the spring of 1953. Within a month there were a handful of Country artists who did their take on it, like Jack Turner and His Granger County Gang, Billy Starr, and Cleve Jackson and His Hound Dogs.

One of the most unsung is this one by Betsy Gay:

BETSY GAY -"Hound Dog" (1953)



Here's a Country answer record forecasting Rockabilly.

CHARLES GORE And LOUIS INNES -"(You Ain't Nothin' but a Female) Hound Dog" (1953)



Memphis radio DJ Rufus Thomas did an answer record to it, taking mock affront to his nickname as 'hound dog'. It was too similar and Sun Records' first hit got in a lot of legal trouble. Later, Rufus and his daughter Carla Thomas recorded classics for Stax Records.

RUFUS THOMAS -"Bear Cat" (1953)



A burlesque group called Freddie Bell And The Bellboys did a campy, striptease-style take on it. Freddie smoothed over some of the lyrics, adding such pivotal lines as "cryin' all the time" and "You ain't never caught a rabbit, and you ain't no friend of mine." They performed it regularly in Las Vegas.

FREDDIE BELL AND THE BELLBOYS -"Hound Dog" (1956)




The young and barely-known Elvis Presley saw their show and put it in his rep for fun. When he appeared on the huge TV hit, "The Milton Berle Show", Milton urged him to leave his rhythm guitar and stand out front. The song's strippery rhythm and Elvis' startlingly sexual gyrations (and air of threatening menace) caused a storm of shocked controversy and made him a national star overnight.

This may have done as much to inject Rock'n'Roll into world awareness as any other event.

ELVIS PRESLEY -"Hound Dog" (1956)



Rock'n'Roll was written off as dumb Pop for juvie kids by the robot mainstream of the times. They probably thought it was cute to trot out little Brenda Lee like Shirley Temple in the family parlor. But it backfired, because you can still hear all the raw Blues anger and cocky swagger in Brenda's great voice.

BRENDA LEE -"Hound Dog" (1956?)



Cliff Johnson's answer song aims to make Elvis high-tail it.

CLIFF JOHNSON -"Go Away Hound Dog" (1957)



Betty Everett ("You're No Good") brings some Soul swing go it.

BETTY EVERETT -"Hound Dog" (1964)



Jimi Hendrix loved Elvis and also all the Blues greats like Big Mama Thornton, who was on the bill at many of the same Blues and Rock festivals reclaiming her song (with her cool penchant for wearing mens' clothing). Here he is jotting off genius like it was a gesture.

JIMI HENDRIX -"Hound Dog (acoustic)" (1968)



And chasing this tail 'round to its front again, here's Blues powerhouse Koko Taylor...

KOKO TAYLOR -"Hound Dog" (1993)




© Tym Stevens



See Also:

Revolution 1950s: The Big Damn Bang of Rock'n'Roll!

WOMEN OF ROCK: The 1950s, with 2 Music Players!


LADIES FIRST: "When the Levee Breaks!" - Memphis Minnie > Led Zeppelin

LADIES FIRST: "Fujiyama Mama" - Annisteen Allen > Wanda Jackson > Pearl Harbor

LADIES FIRST: "See See Rider" - Ma Rainey > Janis Joplin > Mitch Ryder


Bill Monroe > Elvis Presley > The Marcels

"Mystery Train" - Carter Family > Jr. Parker > Elvis Presley > Jim Jarmusch

"Jailhouse Rock" - Elvis Presley > Dean Carter


The Real History of Rock and Soul!: A Music Player Checklist


Sunday, July 12, 2009

ROCK Sex: "Mystery Train" - Carter Family > Jr. Parker > Elvis Presley > Jim Jarmusch



ROCK Sex is going round, round the bend.

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The Carter Family are universally known as 'The First Family of Country Music'. Led by guitarist Mother Maybelle, they had an incalculable impact on Country, Bluegrass, and Blues artists for decades.

In their famous standard, "Worried Man Blues" (1930) you hear these lines:

"The train arrived sixteen coaches long/
The train arrived sixteen coaches long/
The girl I love is on that train and gone."


Here's son-in-law Johnny Cash having a family rave-up on his TV show (1969-1971):

THE CARTER FAMILY -"Worried Man Blues" (live)



These lines inspired Memphis Blues artist Junior Parker and his producer, Sam Phillips, to co-write this classic:

JUNIOR PARKER -"Mystery Train" (1953)



Shortly afterward Sam Phillips asked another label mate to try his hand on the throttle. Here's Elvis Presley with one of his signature songs:

ELVIS PRESLEY -"Mystery Train" (1955)



John Fogerty used the train as a metaphor for the impact of Elvis in this tribute.

JOHN FOGERTY -"Big Train From Memphis" (1985)



Indie auteur Jim Jarmusch box-carred Memphis, its deep musical history, and the ghost of Elvis into his great film, MYSTERY TRAIN (1989). The cast included Screaming Jay Hawkins, Joe Strummer (The Clash), Rufus Thomas, Steve Buscemi, Elizabeth Bracco (The Sopranos), Nicoletta Braschi, Masatoshi Nagase, and the voice of Tom Waits. Essential viewing for Rock'n'Roll film fans:

MYSTERY TRAIN trailer (1989)




© Tym Stevens



See Also:

SHAKE AND FINGER POP! Soul Music and the Interior Truth, with Music Player!


"I Thank You" - Sam And Dave > ZZ Top

"Time Is Tight!" - Booker T > The Clash > Elvis Costello > Squeeze

"Take Me To the River" - Al Green > Bryan Ferry > Talking Heads

-1950s Rock, C: The 80s disciples‏



The Real History of Rock and Soul!: The Music Player Checklist