Your free collectors guide to the essential and recommended music to have in your collection - vintage rock ,rock and roll, rockabilly, jazz, blues, country, soul, classic sixties, contemporary rock and roots music. With FREE music download samples
Tracklist 1 –Lonnie Brooks & Koko Taylor If The Price Is Right 6:11 2 –Wynonie Harris & Joe Turner* Battle Of The Blues 2:50 3 –Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf & Bo Diddley Spoonful 4:12 4 –Buddy Guy & Junior Wells High Heel Sneakers 2:58 5 –Louis Jordan & Ella Fitzgerald Ain't Nobody's Business But My Own 3:12 6 –Bessie Smith & Clara Smith My Man Blues 3:29 7 –Big Mama Thornton & Johnny Ace Yes Baby 2:52 8 –John Cephas & Phil Wiggins The Blues Will Do Your Heart Good 3:08 9 –Butterbeans & Susie I Want A Hot Dog For My Roll 3:28 10 –Rufus Thomas & Carla Thomas 'Cause I Love You 2:45 11 –Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee Red River Blues 3:20 12 –Bobby Bland & Little Junior Parker Love My Baby 2:59 13 –Shirley & Lee* Let The Good Times Roll 1:55 14 –Charles Brown & Amos Milburn I Wanna Go Home 2:30 15 –Victoria Spivey & Lonnie Johnson I Got Men All Over This Town 5:03
Tracklist 1 –Ricky Nelson My Bucket's Got A Hole In It 2:01 2 –Bob Luman Red Cadillac And A Black Moustache 2:18 3 –Dennis Herrold Make With The Lovin' 1:57 4 –Johnny Burnette Sweet Baby Doll 2:31 5 –Eddie Cochran Nervous Breakdown 2:18 6 –Sammy Gowans Rockin' By Myself 1:49 7 –Laura Lee Perkins Oh La Baby 1:56 8 –Johnny Garner Kiss Me Sweet 2:18 9 –The Strikes Rockin' 2:15 10 –Ricky Nelson Boppin' The Blues 1:54 11 –Buddy Knox Party Doll 2:12 12 –Bob Luman Your Love (Version No. 2) 2:44 13 –Eddie Cochran Mean When I'm Mad 1:51 14 –Lew Williams Abracadabra 1:55 15 –Merle Kilgore Ernie 1:43 16 –Al Jones Loretta 1:56 17 –Gene Henslee Rockin' Baby 1:59 18 –The Strikes I Don't Want To Cry Over You 2:01 19 –Bill Lawrence Hey Baby 2:10 20 –Johnny Burnette Love Kept A-rollin' 2:26 21 –Eddie Cochran Guybo 1:45 22 –Bob Luman Make Up Your Mind Baby 2:27 23 –Ricky Nelson Don't Leave Me 2:26 24 –Dennis Herrold Hip Hip Baby 2:01 25 –Laura Lee Perkins Kiss Me Baby 1:51 26 –Dorsey Burnette I Only Came Here To Dance 1:59 27 –Ronnie Smith Long Time No Love 2:19 28 –Jimmy Craig Oh Little Girl 2:07 29 –Ricky Nelson One Of These Mornings 2:12 30 –Eddie Cochran Long Tall Sally 1:45 31 –Laura Lee Perkins Gonna Rock My Baby Tonight 2:07
The Fireballs, sometimes billed as Jimmy Gilmer and the Fireballs, were an American rock and roll group, particularly popular at the end of the 1950s and in the early 1960s. The original line-up consisted of George Tomsco (lead guitar), Chuck Tharp (vocals), Stan Lark (bass), Eric Budd (drums), and Dan Trammell (rhythm guitar).
The Fireballs were formed in Raton, New Mexico, in 1957, and got their start as an instrumental group featuring the distinctive lead guitar of George Tomsco. They recorded at Norman Petty's studio in Clovis, New Mexico. According to group founders Tomsco and Lark, they took their name after their standing ovation performance of Jerry Lee Lewis's "Great Balls of Fire" at the Raton High School PTA talent contest in New Mexico, USA. They reached the top 40 with the singles "Torquay" (1959), "Bulldog" (1960), and "Quite a Party" (1961). "Quite a Party" peaked at No. 29 in the UK Singles Chart in August 1961. Tharp, Budd, and Trammell left the group in the early 1960s, but the Fireballs added Doug Roberts on drums, plus Petty Studio singer/pianist Jimmy Gilmer to the group.
Besides their own recordings, the Fireballs were studio musicians for other recording artist projects. Among many, folk singer Carolyn Hester and Arthur Alexander. Norman Petty had been Buddy Holly's main recording producer; after Holly's death, he obtained the rights to Holly's early rehearsal and home demo recordings. From May 1962 until August 1968, Petty had the Fireballs overdub the Holly material, making them the band he never knew he had, though the band had met Holly at Petty's studio in 1957. The overdubs were originally released on four albums of "new" Holly material throughout the 1960s with four of the efforts, released as singles, charting. In 1964, they recorded and released an album (solely under Jimmy Gilmer's name) of a dozen Holly covers called Buddy's Buddy, likely inspired by the posthumous collaborations.
All of the Fireballs' material has been reissued on Ace Records (UK) and Sundazed record labels. The Fireballs continued performing with original members George Tomsco, Stan Lark, and Chuck Tharp until 2006, when Tharp died of cancer. Gilmer returned as lead vocalist in 2007. Lark retired from the group in 2016. Tomsco has continued to release CD's of new material using the Fireballs name and continues to do the occasional show as a "solo Fireball", and also along with Gilmer.
Tracklist 1 –Ricky Nelson Believe What You Say 2 –Bob Luman Red Hot 3 –Weldon Rogers So Long, Good Luck And Goodbye 4 –Bill Mack Play My Boogie 5 –Johnny & Dorsey Burnette Do Baby Do 6 –Billy Eldridge Let's Go 7 –Lew Williams Bop Bop Ba Doo Bop 8 –The Strikes If You Can't Rock Me 9 –Eddie Cochran Cradle Baby 10 –Merle Kilgore Everybody Needs A Little Lovin' 11 –Bob Luman Blue Days, Black Nights 12 –Ricky Nelson You Tear Me Up 13 –Buddy Knox Rock Your Little Baby To Sleep 14 –Bill Allen Please Give Me Something 15 –Roy Brown Hip Shakin' Baby 16 –Johnny & Dorsey Burnette Warm Love 17 –Laura Lee Perkins Don't Wait Up 18 –Johnny Garner Didi Didi 19 –Johnny Burnette Me And The Bear 20 –Bob Luman Bring Along Your Lovin' (take 3) 21 –Ricky Nelson Stood Up 22 –Eddie Cochran Little Lou 23 –Lew Williams Centipede 24 –Warren Miller Everybody's Got A Baby But Me 25 –Johnny & Dorsey Burnette Boppin' Rosalie 26 –Bobby Lonero Little Bit 27 –Laura Lee Perkins I Just Don't Like This Kind Of Livin' 28 –Johnny & Dorsey Burnette That's All I Care 29 –Eddie Cochran Sweetie Pie 30 –Roy Brown We're Goin' Rockin' Tonight
1 –Wynonie Harris Good Rockin' Tonight 2 –Louis Jordan And His Tympany Five Choo-Choo-Ch' Boogie 3 –Helen Humes Be-Baba-Leba 4 –William "Wild Bill" Moore We're Gonna Rock, We're Gonna Roll 5 –The Ravens Ol' Man River 6 –Joe Liggins The Honeydripper 7 –Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup So Glad You're Mine 8 –Cecil Gant Hit That Jive, Jack 9 –Julia Lee & Her Boy Friends Gotta Gimme What'Cha Got 10 –Roy Milton R M Blues 11 –Sister Rosetta Tharpe That's All 12 –Jimmy Witherspoon Ain't Nobody's Business If I Do (pt. 1) 13 –Lionel Hampton Hey! Ba-Ba-Be-Bop 14 –Amos Milburn Chicken Shack Boogie 15 –Nellie Lutcher And Her Rhythm Fine Brown Frame 16 –Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson When My Baby Left Me 17 –Charles Brown Drifting Blues 18 –Camille Howard X-Temporaneous Boogie 19 –Paul Williams Sextette Thirty-Five, Thirty 20 –Slim Gaillard Slim Gaillard's Boogie 21 –Dinah Washington A Slick Chick 22 –Erskine Hawkins And His Orchestra After Hours
John Michael O'Keefe (19 January 1935 – 6 October 1978) was an Australianrock and roll singer whose career began in the 1950s. Some of his hits include "Wild One" (1958), "Shout!" and "She's My Baby". In his twenty-year career, O'Keefe released over fifty singles, 50 EPs and 100 albums. O'Keefe was also a radio and television entertainer and presenter.
Often referred to by his initials "J.O.K." or by his nickname "The Wild One", O'Keefe was the first Australian rock'n'roll performer to tour the United States, and the first Australian artist to make the local Top 40 charts. He had twenty-nine Top 40 hits in Australia between 1958 and 1973.
In September 1956 O'Keefe and his friend Dave Owen (an American-born tenor sax player) formed Australia's first rock'n'roll band, The Dee Jays. O'Keefe's 'trademark' was his flamboyant stage attire, which included gold lame jackets and brightly coloured suits trimmed with fake fur. Many of these outfits were made for him by Sydney 'showbiz' costumier Len Taylor, although one famous red suit trimmed with leopard-print velvet cuffs and lapels.
O'Keefe and the Dee Jays' first major break was a support spot on Lee Gordon's first "Big Show" rock'n'roll tour, which starred Little Richard, Gene Vincent, and Eddie Cochran. When Gene Vincent and his band were stranded in Honolulu on their way to Australia, Gordon contacted O'Keefe and asked him to fill in for Vincent for the first night of the tour in Wollongong. This was followed by another support spot on the second all-star Big Show, which included The Crickets (with lead singer Buddy Holly on his first and only Australian tour), Jerry Lee Lewis and Paul Anka.
"Wild One" was also recorded by Jerry Allison with Buddy Holly backing on guitar in 1958 under the alias "Ivan" (his middle name) after hearing Johnny perform it on tour; it reached #68 on the American Billboard singles chart and was revived in 1986 and recorded by Iggy Pop as Real Wild Child. A cover by Christopher Ocasek was used on the soundtrack for the movie Pretty Woman starring Julia Roberts and Richard Gere. It was also recorded by Jerry Lee Lewis, Everlife, Joan Jett & The Blackhearts, Glamour Camp, Marshall Crenshaw, Brian Setzer, and Wakefield and Jet.
Duane Eddy (born April 26, 1938) is an American rock and roll/rockabilly/country/surf guitarist. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, he had a string of hit records produced by Lee Hazlewood, which were noted for their characteristically "twangy" sound, including "Rebel-'Rouser", "Peter Gunn", and "Because They're Young". He had sold 12 million records by 1963. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1994 and the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum in 2008.
Born in Corning, New York, he began playing the guitar at the age of five. At the age of 16, he obtained a Chet Atkins model Gretsch guitar and formed a duo, Jimmy and Duane, with his friend Jimmy Delbridge. While performing at local radio station KCKY, they met disc jockey Lee Hazlewood, who produced the duo's single, "Soda Fountain Girl", recorded and released in 1955 in Phoenix. Hazlewood then produced Sanford Clark's 1956 hit, "The Fool", featuring guitarist Al Casey, while Eddy and Delbridge performed and appeared on radio stations in Phoenix before joining Buddy Long's Western Melody Boys, playing country music in and around the city.
Eddy devised a technique of playing lead on his guitar's bass strings to produce a low, reverberant "twangy" sound. In November 1957, Eddy recorded an instrumental, "Movin' n' Groovin'", co-written by Eddy and Hazlewood. As the Phoenix studio had no echo chamber, Hazlewood bought a 2,000-gallon (7570-litre) water storage tank that he used as an echo chamber to accentuate the "twangy" guitar sound.
Brumbeat, which originated in the British manufacturing capitol of Birmingham, was never remotely as well-known or recognized (at least, outside of Birmngham) as the Liverpool sound called Merseybeat or, for that matter, as familiar as the so-called "Tottenham Sound" embodied by the Dave Clark Five. Brumbeat, such as it was -- the term derived from the local slang term for Birmingham -- was also never as unified a sound as Merseybeat, possibly because it followed in its wake, and also because Birmingham was a bigger city with more hands involved in making music, from more different angles; and there was no one managerial figure, such as Brian Epstein, who dominated the field with his taste and perceptions in quite the same way in the early years; by the time "Brumbeat" was perceived -- though it could be argued that the term was really a creation of the music press looking for a story circa 1964-1965 -- British rock and roll music was already being perceived as a goldmine on an international scale.
This compilation set is essential listening for fans of 60's British rock'n'roll, and will contain at least a modest revelation or two for even the most sophisticated listener, based on its thoroughness and depth.
Tracklist 1-1 –Spencer Davis Group* Dimples 1-2 –Nicky James My Colour Is Blue 1-3 –Jimmy Powell & The Five Dimensions* That's Alright 1-4 –The Wolves Journey Into Dreams 1-5 –The Rockin' Berries You'd Better Come Home 1-6 –Carl Wayne & The Vikings Your Loving Ways 1-7 –The Rockin' Berries He's In Town 1-8 –The Hellions Daydreaming Of You 1-9 –The Moody Blues Go Now 1-10 –The Brand I'm A Lover Not A Fighter 1-11 –Jimmy Powell & The Dimensions* Sugar Babe 1-12 –Johnny Neal & The Starliners* Walk Baby Walk 1-13 –Carl Wayne & The Vikings You Could Be Fun (At The End Of The Party) 1-14 –Keith Powell People Get Ready 1-15 –The Hellions Dream Child 1-16 –The Ugly's Wake Up My Mind 1-17 –Mike Sheridan's Lot Take My Hand 1-18 –The Montanas* All That Is Mine Can Be Yours 1-19 –Carl Wayne & The Vikings My Girl 1-20 –Peter London Baby I Like The Look Of You 1-21 –The Wolves At The Club 1-22 –The Revolution Shades Of Blue 1-23 –The Ugly's The Quiet Explosion 1-24 –The Settlers Early Morning Rain 1-25 –The Montanas* That's When Happiness Began Disc Two 2-1 –The Move Night Of Fear 2-2 –The 'N Betweens* You Better Run 2-3 –Keith Powell It Keeps Rainin' 2-4 –The Bobcats Can't See For Looking 2-5 –The Montanas* Ciao Baby 2-6 –The Exceptions* The Eagle Flies On Friday 2-7 –The Ugly's Real Good Girl 2-8 –The Montanas* Difference Of Opinion 2-9 –The Rockin' Berries Dawn (Go Away) 2-10 –Young Blood Don't Leave Me In The Dark 2-11 –The Lemon Tree William Chalker's Time Machine 2-13 –Gary Aston His Lordship 2-13 –The Rockin' Berries Pain 2-14 –Ian Campbell Group* Doctor Junk 2-15 –Velvett Fogg Wizard Of Gobsolod 2-16 –The Ugly's I've Seen The Light 2-17 –Paradox Mary Colinto 2-18 –Cinnamon Quill Take It Or Leave It 2-19 –Young Blood The Continuing Story Of Bungalow Bill 2-20 –Jefferson The Colour Of My Love 2-21 –The Ace Kefford Stand For Your Love (Demo) 2-22 –Idle Race* Days Of Broken Arrows 2-23 –Copperfield I'm No Good For Her 2-24 –Sight And Sound Jackie 2-25 –Jimmy Powell Slow Down
Short-lived it may have been, but for a brief, explosive period, Liverpool was the unlikely epicentre of a worldwide music scene. This 50-track compilation explores the phenomenon of Merseybeat with a welter of hit recordings, cult classics and intriguing rarities. Incorporating the rockers, girl groups, balladeers and beat merchants, this is the ultimate primer of the movement which effectively kick started modern British music.
Tracklist 1-1 –Billy Fury My Advice (Demo) 1-2 –The Three Bells Steady Date 1-3 –The Beatles Ain't She Sweet 1-4 –Gerry & The Pacemakers How Do You Do It? 1-5 –The Big Three Some Other Guy 1-6 –The Searchers Sweets For My Sweet 1-7 –Johnny Sandon And The Remo Four Lies 1-8 –The Searchers Love Potion No.9 1-9 –The Chants I Don't Care 1-10 –The Undertakers Money (That's What I Want) 1-11 –Jeannie & The Big Guys Boys 1-12 –Tommy Quickly, The Remo Four Kiss Me Now 1-13 –The Breakaways Here She Comes 1-14 –The Swinging Blue Jeans Hippy Hippy Shake 1-15 –The Trends All My Loving 1-16 –The Searchers Needles And Pins 1-17 –The Undertakers Just A Little Bit 1-18 –Jeannie & The Big Guys I Want You 1-19 –The Breakaways He Doesn't Love Me 1-20 –The Chants Then I'll Be Home 1-21 –The Trends The Way You Do The Things You Do 1-22 –The Remo Four Sally Go Round The Roses 1-23 –Johnny Sandon And The Remo Four Some Kinda Wonderful 1-24 –The Wackers Love Or Money 1-25 –Tony Jackson & The Vibrations Bye Bye Baby
2-1 –The 'Takers* If You Don't Come Back 2-2 –The Searchers When You Walk In The Room 2-3 –Tommy Quickly, The Remo Four Wild Side Of Life 2-4 –Mark Peters & The Silhouettes Don't Cry For Me 2-5 –Tony Jackson & The Vibrations Fortune Teller 2-6 –Greta Ann Sadness Hides The Sun 2-7 –Tony Jackson Stage Door 2-8 –Paddy, Klaus & Gibson I Wanna Know 2-9 –The Masterminds She Belongs To Me 2-10 –Jimmy Tarbuck Wastin' Time 2-11 –The Searchers Take Me For What I'm Worth 2-12 –The Koobas Take Me For A Little While 2-13 –Jason Eddie And The Centremen What'cha Gonna Do Baby 2-14 –Paddy, Klaus & Gibson No Good Without You Baby 2-15 –The Cryin' Shames Please Stay 2-16 –The Merseys Sorrow 2-17 –The Koobas A Place I Know 2-18 –The Searchers Take It Or Leave It 2-19 –Paddy, Klaus & Gibson Quick Before They Catch Us 2-20 –Jason Eddie And The Centremen Singing The Blues 2-21 –Chris Curtis Aggravation 2-22 –5 AM Event Hungry 2-23 –Eddie Cave & The Fyx It's Almost Good 2-24 –The Kirkbys It's A Crime 2-25 –The Cryin' Shames Nobody Waved Goodbye
Ellas McDaniel (born Ellas Otha Bates; December 30, 1928 – June 2, 2008), known as Bo Diddley, was an American singer, guitarist, songwriter and music producer who played a key role in the transition from the blues to rock and roll. He influenced many artists, including Buddy Holly, Elvis Presley, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, the Animals, and the Clash.
His use of African rhythms and a signature beat, a simple five-accent hambone rhythm, is a cornerstone of hip hop, rock, and pop music. In recognition of his achievements, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987, the Blues Hall of Fame in 2003, and the Rhythm and Blues Music Hall of Fame in 2017. He received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Rhythm and Blues Foundation and the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award. Diddley is also recognized for his technical innovations, including his distinctive rectangular guitar, with its unique booming, resonant, shimmering tones.
Ruth Alston Brown (née Weston, January 12, 1928 – November 17, 2006) was an American singer-songwriter and actress, sometimes known as the "Queen of R'n'B". She was noted for bringing a pop music style to R'n'B music in a series of hit songs for Atlantic Records in the 1950s, such as "So Long", "Teardrops from My Eyes" and "(Mama) He Treats Your Daughter Mean". For these contributions, Atlantic became known as "the house that Ruth built" (alluding to the popular nickname for the old Yankee Stadium). Brown was a 1993 inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Following a resurgence that began in the mid-1970s and peaked in the 1980s, Brown used her influence to press for musicians' rights regarding royalties and contracts; these efforts led to the founding of the Rhythm and Blues Foundation. Her performances in the Broadway musical Black and Blue earned Brown a Tony Award, and the original cast recording won a Grammy Award. Brown was a recipient of the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2016. In 2017, Brown was inducted into National Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame. She is also the aunt to legendary hip hop MC Rakim.
Delores LaVern Baker (November 11, 1929 – March 10, 1997) was an American R'n'B singer who had several hit records on the pop chart in the 1950s and early 1960s. Her most successful records were "Tweedle Dee" (1955), "Jim Dandy" (1956), and "I Cried a Tear" (1958).
Baker began singing in Chicago clubs such as the Club DeLisa around 1946, often billed as Little Miss Sharecropper, and first recorded under that name in 1949. She changed her name briefly to Bea Baker when recording for Okeh Records in 1951 and then was billed as LaVern Baker when she sang with Todd Rhodes and his band in 1952.
In 1953 she signed with Atlantic Records as a solo artist, her first release being "Soul on Fire". Her first hit came in early 1955, with the Latin-tempo "Tweedle Dee", which reached number 4 on the R&B chart and number 14 on the national US pop chart. Georgia Gibbs recorded a note-for-note cover of the song, which reached number 1; subsequently Baker made an unsuccessful attempt to sue her and petitioned Congress to consider such covers copyright violations.
Baker had a succession of hits on the R'n'B charts over the next couple of years with her backing group, the Gliders, including "Bop-Ting-a-Ling" (number 3 R&B), "Play It Fair" (number 2 R&B), and "Still" (number 4 R&B). At the end of 1956 she had another hit with "Jim Dandy" (number 1 R&B, number 17 pop), which sold over one million copies and was certified as a gold disc. Further hits followed for Atlantic, including the follow-up "Jim Dandy Got Married" (number 7 R&B), "I Cried a Tear" (number 2 R&B, number 6 pop in 1958, with sax by King Curtis), "I Waited Too Long" (number 5 R&B, number 3 pop, written by Neil Sedaka), "Saved" (number 17 R&B, written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller), and "See See Rider" (number 9 R&B in 1963). In addition to singing, she did some work with Ed Sullivan and Alan Freed on TV and in films, including Rock, Rock, Rock and Mr. Rock & Roll. In 1964, she recorded a Bessie Smith tribute album. She then left Atlantic for Brunswick Records, for which she recorded the album Let Me Belong to You.
In 1990 Baker was among the first eight recipients of the Pioneer Award from the Rhythm and Blues Foundation. In 1991, she became the second female solo artist inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, following Aretha Franklin in 1987. Her song "Jim Dandy" was named one of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll and was ranked number 343 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
Gene Summers, born David Eugene Summers (January 3, 1939 – February 17, 2021), was an American rock'n'roll/rockabilly singer. His recordings include "School of Rock 'n Roll", "Straight Skirt", "Nervous", "Gotta Lotta That", "Twixteen", "Alabama Shake", "Fancy Dan" and his biggest-selling single "Big Blue Diamonds". Summers was inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame in 1997 and The Southern Legends Entertainment & Performing Arts Hall of Fame in 2005. He still performed worldwide and celebrated his 50th anniversary as a recording artist in 2008 with the release of Reminisce Cafe.
1 School Of Rock & Roll 2:04 2 Nervous 2:22 3 Straight Skirts 1:56 4 Gotta Lotta That 2:05 5 I'll Never Be Lonely 2:14 6 Twixteen 1:51 7 Someone Somewhere 2:36 8 Alabama Shake 1:53 9 Almost Persuaded 1:58 10 You Said You Love Me 2:06 11 Dance Dance Dance 1:53 12 If You Don't Come Home 1:49 13 Just Because 2:01 14 Fancy Dan 1:58 15 Big Blue Diamonds 2:23 16 Someone Somewhere 2:43 17 Almost 12 O'Clock 1:44 18 The Push 2:04 19 The Great Pretender 2:05 20 Broken Dreams 2:29 21 Alabama Shake 1:44 22 The Clown 2:04 23 World Of Illusion 2:25 24 Cloudy Day 2:18 25 Who Stole The Marker (From The Grave Of Bonnie Parker)? 2:36 26 Goodbye Priscilla (Bye Bye Baby Blue) 2:22 27 Suzie Q 2:28 28 Baby Are You Kiddin' 1:32 29 Twixteen 2:12 30 Nervous 2:24 31 Rockaboogie Shake 1:34 32 Gotta Lotta That 2:13
Tracklist 1-1 –The Tornados Telstar 1-2 –The Hunters The Storm 1-3 –The Shadows The Savage 1-4 –The Fentones The Breeze And I 1-5 –Bert Weedon Guitar Boogie Shuffle 1-6 –The John Barry Seven Walk Don't Run 1-7 –The Vampires Clap Trap 1-8 –Arthur Greenslade & The Gee-Men Rockin' Susannah 1-9 –The Dave Clark Five Chaquita 1-10 –The Vigilantes Man In Space 1-11 –The Krew Kats Trambone 1-12 –Joe Brown Pop Corn 1-13 –The Outlaws Swingin' Low 1-14 –The Volcanos Theme From Tightrope 1-15 –Wee Willie Harris Got A Match 1-16 –The Cannons I Didn't Know The Gun Was Loaded 1-17 –The Eagles Special Agent 1-18 –Nero & The Gladiators Entry Of The Gladiators 1-19 –The Packabeats Gypsy Beat 1-20 –The Drifters Jet Black
2-1 –The Shadows F.B.I. 2-2 –Nero & The Gladiators In The Hall Of The Mountain King 2-3 –The John Barry Seven And Orchestra The James Bond Theme (From The Film 'Dr. No') 2-4 –Rhet Stoller Chariot 2-5 –The Fentones The Mexican 2-6 –Lord Rockingham's XI Hoots Mon! 2-7 –The Scorpions (Ghost) Riders In The Sky 2-8 –Frank Weir & His Werewolves Manhunt 2-9 –The Hunters Teen Scene 2-10 –Joe Brown The Switch 2-11 –The Sneaky Petes The Savage, Pt. 2 2-12 –The Jetstreams Bongo Rock 2-13 –The Moontrekkers Night Of The Vampire 2-14 –Sounds Inc. Sounds Like Locomotion 2-15 –The Outlaws Valley Of The Sioux 2-16 –The Ravens Rock Group The Ghoul Friend 2-17 –The Chaps Poppin' Part 1 2-18 –The Checkmates Yep! 2-19 –Johnny 'The Gash' Gray With Ken Jones & His Orchestra Tequila 2-20 –The Fabulous Flee-Rekkers Green Jeans
3-1 –The John Barry Seven Hit And Miss 3-2 –Bud Ashton Trio Nut Rocker 3-3 –Jet Harris The Man With The Golden Arm 3-4 –The Tornados Love And Fury 3-5 –The Barons Samurai 3-6 –George Chisholm Honky Tonk 3-7 –Bert Weedon Apache 3-8 –Tommy Steele & Joe Brown Drunken Guitar 3-9 –The Moontrekkers There's Something At The Bottom Of The Well 3-10 –The Krew Kats Peak Hour 3-11 –The Stacattos Main Line 3-12 –Peter Jay & The Jaywalkers Can Can '62 3-13 –The Flee-Rekkers Lone Rider 3-14 –The Scorpions Scorpio 3-15 –The Outlaws Ambush 3-16 –The Firestones Party Twist 3-17 –The Sleepwalkers Sleepwalk 3-18 –The Red Price Comb Theme From Danger Man 3-19 –The Shadows Dance On! 3-20 –Brian Fahey & His Orchestra At The Sign Of the Swingin' Cymbal (From 'Pick Of The Pops')
Tracklist 1-1 –Chuck Berry Maybellene 1-2 –Jackie Brenston Rocket 88 1-3 –Gene Vincent Race With The Devil 1-4 –Lightnin' Hopkins Automobile Blues 1-5 –Johnny Guitar Watson Motor Head Baby 1-6 –Vernon Green And The Medallions Buick '59 1-7 –Billy"The Kid"Emerson Every Woman I Know (Crazy 'Bout Automobiles) 1-8 –Nervous Norvus Transfusion 1-9 –Chuck Berry No Money Down 1-10 –Bob Luman Red Cadillac & A Black Moustache 1-11 –Rusty Draper Pink Cadillac 1-12 –Carl Perkins Pop, Let Me Have The Car 1-13 –The Del-Vikings* Flat Tire 1-14 –Joyce Green Black Cadillac 1-15 –Mike Fern And The Del Royals* Brave Jake 1-16 –Jimmy Flaherty's Caravan* This Old Bomb Of Mine 1-17 –The Sabres Hot Rod Kelly 1-18 –Richie Deran and The New Tones Girl And A Hot Rod 1-19 –Johnny Bond Hot Rod Jalopy 1-20 –The Aquatones Wanted (A Solid Gold Cadillac)
2-1 –Gene Vincent Pink Thunderbird 2-2 –Chuck Berry You Can't Catch Me 2-3 –Eddie Cochran Somethin' Else 2-4 –The Beach Boys 409 2-5 –Woody Guthrie The Car Song 2-6 –The Treniers Convertable Cadillac 2-7 –Howlin' Wolf Mr. Highwayman 2-8 –George Stogner Hard Top Race 2-9 –Bob Wills Cadillac In Model "A" 2-10 –Baker Knight Bring My Cadillac Back 2-11 –Doug Harden Dig That Ford 2-12 –Patsy Cline I Love You, Honey 2-13 –Roy Tann Hot Rod Queen 2-14 –Slick Slavin Speed Crazy 2-15 –Jimmy Carroll Big Green Car 2-16 –Vernon Green And The Medallions 59 Volvo 2-17 –The Delicates Black And White Thunderbird 2-18 –Charlie Ryan And The Timberline Riders Hot Rod Lincoln 2-19 –Leon Smith Little Forty Ford 2-20 –Eddie Ringo Full Racing Cam
3-1 –Vince Taylor Brand New Cadillac 3-2 –Chuck Berry Jaguar And The Thunderbird 3-3 –Bo Diddley Cadillac 3-4 –Roy Brown* Cadillac Baby 3-5 –Tillman Franks & His Rainbow Boys* Hot Rod Shotgun Boogie #2 3-6 –Red Foley Hot Rod Race 3-7 –Luke McDaniel The Automobile Song 3-8 –Ricky Riddle Drivin' Down The Wrong Side Of The Road 3-9 –Hal Willis My Pink Cadillac 3-10 –Gene Vincent And His Blue Caps Why Don't People Learn How To Drive? 3-11 –Hoyt Stevens 55 Chevy 3-12 –Lightnin' Hopkins Black Cadillac 3-13 –Chuck Miller Bright Red Convertible 3-14 –Wally Hughes Convertible Car 3-15 –Howard Brady* Hot Rod Boogie 3-16 –Bert Keyes Stop Jivin' Start Drivin' 3-17 –Don Pearly Drag Race 3-18 –Rocky Davis And The Sky Rockets* Hot Rod Baby 3-19 –Jimmy Gallagher* Ford And Shaker 3-20 –Ray Burden Hot Rodder's Dream
24 track compilation from Festival/SPIN Records, Australia, with an eclectic collection of pop, rock'n'roll and country tunes from the 60's and 70's, featuring popular artists and some rarities.
Tracklist 1 –Ol' 55 (I Want A) Rockin' Christmas 4:22 2 –Johnny O'Keefe Pretty Paper 2:34 3 –The Joy Boys Christmas Guitar 1:55 4 –Col Joye Jingle Bells 2:10 5 –Ray Melton Sleigh Ride 2:19 6 –Noeleen Batley Silent Night, Holy Night 2:28 7 –Col Joye I'll Be Home For Christmas 2:33 8 –Jimmy Little Christmas Roses 2:25 9 –Reg Lindsay Ting A Ling A Jingle 2:11 10 –Rolf Harris Happy Birthday Father Christmas 2:28 11 –Mike Preston Christmas Alphabet 1:58 12 –The Aussie Singers Merry Christmas Land 2:29 13 –Dale's Gang* Grandma Got Run Over By A Reindeer 3:26 14 –The Love Machine The Lonely Hearts Christmas Club Christmas Party 15 –Ol' 55 Little Saint Nick 3:10 16 –Jo Jo Zep And His Little Helpers Run Rudolph Run 3:23 17 –Red Hot Rockin' Santas Another Rock "N" Roll Christmas 3:47 18 –Shirley* Christmas Time In The Neighbourhood 2:26 19 –Incredible Penguins Happy Xmas (War Is Over) 3:51 20 –Riff Raff* Reindeers On The Rooftop 3:02 21 –Shirley* Christmas Children 3:41 22 –Dalvanius & The Fascinations Mary's Boy Child 4:18 23 –Yu-En Little Drummer Boy 4:37 24 –Mick Hamilton Merry Christmas Mary 3:04
Boyd Byron Bennett (December 7, 1924 – June 2, 2002) was an American rockabilly/rock'n'roll songwriter and singer. His two biggest hit singles, both written with John F Young and performed by him (Boyd) were "Seventeen" with his band, the Rockets (U.S. No. 5), (U.S. Rn'B No.7), as well as No.16 on the UK Singles Chart, and "My Boy, Flat Top" (U.S. No.39). He later became a disc jockey in Kentucky. He also worked with Francis Craig and Moon Mullican.
In 1955, Boyd Bennett and His Rockets recorded "Seventeen". Bennett aimed the song directly at the teenage audience, but producer Syd Nathan dismissed the effort and claimed that teenagers had no money to buy records. Bennett shrewdly waited until Nathan left for a two-week vacation, and prevailed upon Nathan's assistant Henry Glover to release the record.
It reached the Billboard chart on July 9, 1955, and went to the number five by September. Boyd and the Rockets traveled across the nation. The Boyd Bennett disc of "Seventeen" "changed record-producing/buying and marketing forever," wrote musicologist Robert Reynolds: "As Boyd Bennett had predicted, teenagers bought 'Seventeen' in droves and other record companies soon began producing songs aimed specifically at the teen market. The record hung around the Top Ten for five weeks. When all was said and done, [Bennett's] 'Seventeen' had sold three million copies."
Boyd Bennett and his band followed "Seventeen" with "My Boy Flat Top" (almost identical, melodically) which reached the Top 40 for a number of months, although a lesser seller than their earlier effort. Boyd also worked as a disc jockey in 1955 in Louisville, Kentucky. In March 1956, Boyd's group released their cover version of "Blue Suede Shoes".
In 1959, Bennett left King Records and commenced a subsequent brief recording career with Mercury. Noting that he was drifting away from a teenage audience, he left the music industry and built up his business interests, which included owning nightclubs and an air-conditioning parts manufacturer. In the 1970s and 1980s, Bennett had health issues with both lymphoma and pulmonary fibrosis. He retired in Dallas, although he made infrequent concert appearances, often with Ray Price. He also recorded for Dallas-based Christian record label Rainbow, including the 1980s album "Step Into The Sunshine".
Bennett was inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame for his contribution to the genre.
Excellent 4 disc compilation of Chuck Berry's early albums including After School Session (1957), One Dozen Berry's (1958), Chuck Berry On Top (1959), At the Hops (1960) and New Juke Box Hits (1961). Plus alternate versions, single releases and rare tracks. A must for any Chuck Berry and rock and roll fan.
Delmar Allen "Dale" Hawkins (August 22, 1936 – February 13, 2010) was a pioneer American rock singer, songwriter, and rhythm guitarist who was often called the architect of swamp rock boogie. Ronnie Hawkins was his cousin.
He began recording in 1956. In 1957, Hawkins was playing at Shreveport, Louisiana clubs, and although his music was influenced by the new rock and roll style of Elvis Presley and the guitar sounds of Scotty Moore, Hawkins blended that with the uniquely heavy blues sound of black Louisiana artists for his recording of his swamp-rock classic, "Susie Q." Fellow Louisiana guitarist and future Rock and Roll Hall of Famer James Burton provided the signature riff and solo.
The song was chosen as one of The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll. An accompanying album, Oh! Suzy Q, was released in 1958. Creedence Clearwater Revival's version of the song on their 1968 debut album helped launch their career and today it is probably the best-known version.
In 1958 Hawkins recorded a single of Willie Dixon's "My Babe" at the Chess Records studio in Chicago, featuring Telecaster guitarist Roy Buchanan. He went on to a long and successful career. He recorded more songs for Chess into the early 1960's. However, his career was not limited to recording or performing. He hosted a teen dance party, The Dale Hawkins Show, on WCAU-TV in Philadelphia. He then became a record producer, and found success with The Uniques' "Not Too Long Ago," the Five Americans' "Western Union," and Bruce Channel's "Hey! Baby". In 1998, Ace Records issued a compilation album, Dale Hawkins, Rock 'n' Roll Tornado, which contained a collection of his early works and previously unreleased material. Other recordings included his 1969 country rock album, L.A., Memphis & Tyler, Texas; and a 1999 release, Wildcat Tamer, of all-new recordings that garnered Hawkins a 4-star review in Rolling Stone.
He was executive vice president of Abnak Records; Vice President, Southwest Division, Bell Records (here he produced Bruce Channel, Ronnie Self, James Bell, the Festivals, the Dolls, and the Gentrys); and A&R director, RCA West Coast Rock Division, working with Michael Nesmith and Harry Nilsson. In the 1990's, he produced "Goin Back to Mississippi" by R. L. Burnside's slide guitarist, Kenny Brown.
Hawkins' pioneering contributions have been recognized by the Rockabilly Hall of Fame.