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Shake Rattle And Roll Form

Song showtime recorded by Large Joe Turner in 1954

"Shake, Rattle and Roll"
Shake, Rattle and Roll single cover.jpg
Single by Big Joe Turner
B-side "You Know I Love You lot"
Released April 1954 (1954-04)
Recorded New York City, February fifteen, 1954
Genre
  • Rock and roll[1]
  • rhythm and dejection[2]
Length 2:57
Label Atlantic
Songwriter(southward) Charles F. Calhoun a.k.a. Jesse Stone
Big Joe Turner singles chronology
"Telly Mama"
(1954)
"Milkshake, Rattle and Ringlet"
(1954)
"Well All Right"
(1954)

"Milkshake, Rattle and Ringlet" is a song, written in 1954 past Jesse Stone (ordinarily credited as Charles Calhoun, his songwriting name). The original recording by Big Joe Turner is ranked number 127 on the Rolling Rock magazine'southward list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

Background [edit]

In early 1954, Ahmet Ertegun[3] of Atlantic Records suggested to Jesse Rock that he write an upward-tempo dejection for Large Joe Turner, a blues shouter whose career had begun in Kansas City before World State of war II. Stone played around with various phrases before coming up with "shake, rattle and coil".[4] (Stone used his real proper name for ASCAP songs, while using the pseudonym "Charles Calhoun" for BMI-registered songs, such equally "Shake, Rattle and Roll").

However, the phrase had been used in earlier songs. In 1910, vaudeville performer "Infant" Franklin Seals published "Yous Got to Shake, Rattle and Gyre", a ragtime melody about gambling with dice, in New Orleans;[5] in 1919, Al Bernard recorded a version of the vocal.[vi] [7]

Joe Turner original [edit]

Turner recorded "Milk shake, Rattle and Curl" in New York City on February fifteen, 1954. Jesse Stone, and tape label executives Jerry Wexler and Ahmet Ertegun provided the shouting chorus; other players included guitarist Mickey Baker and drummer Connie Kay.[ citation needed ] Turner's recording was released in April 1954 and reached number one on the U.S. Billboard R&B nautical chart and number 22 on the Billboard singles chart.[viii]

Bill Haley version [edit]

"Shake, Rattle and Coil"
Shake Rattle and Roll Bill Haley Decca 1954.jpg
Single by Bill Haley
B-side "A.B.C. Boogie"
Released August 1954 (1954-08)
Recorded New York City, June vii, 1954
Genre Rock and curl
Length ii:26
Characterization Decca
Songwriter(s) Charles F. Calhoun
Bill Haley singles chronology
"Rock Around the Clock"
(1954)
"Shake, Rattle and Scroll"
(1954)
"Dim, Dim the Lights"
(1954)

Pecker Haley & His Comets recorded a cover version of the song on June 7, 1954,[nine] the same week Turner'due south version first topped the R&B charts. The Comets provided the instrumental accompaniment: Johnny Grande on piano, Billy Williamson on rhythm guitar, Marshall Lytle on bass, and Joey Ambrose on saxophone. Haley'southward version was released in August and reached number seven on the Billboard singles nautical chart, spending a total of twenty-seven weeks in the Top 40.[nine] This version of the song was played during the credits in the 1985 cult flick Inkling.

Elvis Presley versions [edit]

Elvis Presley recorded the vocal twice in a studio setting: a demo recorded at radio station KDAV in Lubbock, Texas in January 1955[10] while under contract with Lord's day Records (this recording was not released until the 1990s) and as a 1956 unmarried for RCA Victor.

Introduced past Cleveland disc jockey Bill Randle, Presley, guitarist Scotty Moore, bassist Bill Blackness, and drummer D. J. Fontana performed the song in medley with the like "Flip, Bomb and Fly" on the January 28, 1956, broadcast of the Dorsey Brothers Stage Prove (Haley'south "kitchen" opening verse was sung).[11] Presley recorded the song with these same musicians.[12]

See as well [edit]

  • Showtime rock and curl record

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Big Joe Turner". Rock & Roll Hall of Fame . Retrieved 30 June 2013.
  2. ^ Campbell, Michael; Brody, James (2007). Rock and Roll: An Introduction. Cengage Learning. p. 77. ISBN0-534-64295-0.
  3. ^ Robert Greenfield, The Last Sultan: The Life and Times of Ahmet Ertegun (Simon & Schuster Nov eight, 2011, ISBN 1416558381) Chapter seven
  4. ^ Nick Tosches, Unsung Heroes of Stone 'north' Roll (2nd ed. 1991), page 12-21.
  5. ^ Lynn Abbott, Doug Seroff, The Original Blues: The Emergence of the Blues in African American Vaudeville, University Printing of Mississippi, 2017, p.127
  6. ^ David Wondrich, Stomp and Swerve: American Music Gets Hot, 1843-1924, Chicago Review Press, 2003, p.138
  7. ^ "Al Bernard's song - audio file". Cylinders.library.ucsb.edu. Retrieved 2011-08-21 .
  8. ^ Dawson, Jim, and Steve Propes, What Was The Outset Rock 'due north' Whorl Record ? (Faber and Faber, 1992, p. 128 and 130) ISBN 0-571-12939-0
  9. ^ a b Dawson, Jim. Rock Effectually the Clock : The Tape that Started the Stone Revolution (Backbeat Books, 2005, pp. 95–96), ISBN 0-87930-829-X.
  10. ^ "Elvis Twenty-four hour period By Day". Randomhouse. Retrieved 2015-10-24 .
  11. ^ Roger Lee Hall, Shake, Rattle and Curl: Electrical Elvis and Neb Randle PineTree Press, 2010, pages 7-9
  12. ^ Elvis Presley DVD 46:26

Shake Rattle And Roll Form,

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shake,_Rattle_and_Roll

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