A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 20: “Rock Around the Clock” by Bill Haley and the Comets
Episode Date: February 18, 2019Welcome to episode twenty of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs. Today we’re looking at “Rock Around the Clock” by Bill Haley and the Comets. Click the full post to read l...iner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. (more…)
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A history of rock music in 500 songs by Andrew Hick.
Episode 20
Rock Around the Clock by Bill Haley in the Comets.
A quick content note for this one.
It contains non-explicit mention of infant death, alcoholism and brain tumours,
as well as a quote which uses a word which,
not a slur is now no longer accepted as a polite term for black people in the way that it was at the
time of the quote. Sometimes, the very worst thing that can happen to a musician is for them to have
a big hit. A musician who has been doing fine, getting moderate-sized hit, and making a decent
living suddenly finds themselves selling tens of millions of records. It's what everyone wants,
and it's what they've been working up to for their whole career. But what happens then?
Is it a fluke? Are they ever going to have another hit as big as the first? How do they top that?
These problems can be bad enough if your big hit is just a normal big hit. Now, imagine that your
big hit becomes a marker for a whole generation, that it inspires a musical trend that lasts
decades, that it causes actual rioting. Imagine that it's a record that literally everyone in
the Western Hemisphere knows that 65 years and counting after its release is still instantly
recognizable. When your big hit is that big, where do you go from there? What can you do next?
For a while, before leaving Essex Records, Bill Haley had wanted to record a song called Rock Around the Clock.
It had been passed to him by Jimmy Myers, one of the song's two credited writers, but for some reason, Dave Miller, Hayley's producer, didn't want Hayley to record it.
to the extent that Haley claimed that a couple of times he'd brought the sheet music into the studio,
and Miller had ripped it up rather than let him record the song.
According to John Swenson's biography of Haley,
Miller and Myers knew each other and didn't get on, which might be the case.
But it might also just be as simple as rock around a clock being very derivative.
In particular, the lyrics owed,
more than a little to Wynoni Harris' Around the Clock Blues.
And indeed, even the title Rock Around the Clock
had already been used four years earlier by Hal Singer.
Let's rock.
Let's rock. Let's rock.
We're going to rock.
Let's rock.
Rock round the clock.
Let's rock.
Let's rock.
Let's rock.
Let's rock.
So, Rock Around the Clock was an absolutely generic song for its time.
And whatever Dave Miller's reasons for not allowing Hayley to record it,
it wasn't like he was missing out on anything special, was it?
After Rock the Joint and Crazy Man Crazy, Bill Haley was in a position to make a real breakthrough
into massive commercial success.
But, nothing happened.
He released a bunch more singles on Essex,
but for some reason they weren't following up
on the clear direction he'd set with those singles.
Instead, he seemed to be flailing around,
recording cover versions of recent country hits
or remakes of older songs like Chattanooga Choochoochooch.
None of his follow-ups to Crazy Man Crazy
did anything at all in the charts,
and it looked for a while like he was going to be a one-hit wonder
and getting to number 15 in the charts was going to be his highest achievement.
But then something happened.
Bill Haley quit Essex Records,
the label that had led him to become a rockabilly performer in the first place,
and signed with Decker.
And there, his producer was Milt Gabler.
Decker was in an interesting position in 1954,
one which listeners to this podcast may not quite appreciate.
You might remember that we've mentioned Decker quite a few times over the first few months of this podcast.
That's because, in the 1940s, Decker was the only major label to sign any of the proto-rock artists we've talked about.
In the late 40s, Decker had Lucky Millinder, Lionel Hampton, Louis Jordan, The Inksbutt, Ella Fitzgerald, Rosetta Tharp, Marie Knight, and the Mills Brothers,
all on its roster. It also had a number of country artists who contributed a lot to the
hillbilly boogie sound. People like Ernest Tubb, Red Foley and more. But Decker was the only one of
the major labels to sign up acts like this. The major labels were, as we've discussed,
going mostly for a white middle class market that wanted Doris Day and Tony Bennett. Not that
there's anything wrong with Doris Day or Tony Bennett. And indeed, Decker had plenty of its own
acts like that too, and mostly dealt in that sort of music. But any artists working in the
pre-rock styles that wasn't signed to Decker had to sign to tiny independent labels. And those
independent labels set up their own distribution networks, which went to shops that
specialised in the black or hillbilly markets.
And so those speciality shops eventually just started buying from the indie distributors
and didn't buy from the major labels at all, since Decker was the only one they'd been buying
from anyway before the Indies came along.
And this caused problems for a lot of Decker's artists.
The reason that Louis Jordan say was so big was that he'd been selling both to the R&B market,
since he was, after all, an R&B artist, one of the best,
and to the pop market, because he was on a major label.
You sell to both those markets, and you'd sell to a lot of people.
The casual record buyer market was much larger than the market for speciality genres,
while the speciality genre audience was loyal and would buy everything in the styles it liked.
but if you were only selling to the Doris Day buyers
and not the people who liked honking saxophones
and went out of their way to buy them,
then your honking saxophone records
were not going to do wonderfully in sales.
This change in the distribution model of records
is one of the two reasons
that all the artists we talked about
in the first few episodes
had a catastrophic drop in their sales in the early 50s.
We already talked about the other ones.
the reason in the episode on Crazy Man Crazy, but as a reminder, when the radio stations switched
to playing 45s, they threw out their old 78s. That meant that if you are one of those
Decker artists, you simultaneously lost all the radio play for your old singles, because the radio
stations had chucked out their copies, and stopped having new hits, because the distribution
model had changed under your feet, and so pretty much all Decker's roster of rhythm and blues or
country hitmakers had lost their hit potential, all at the same time. But Decker still had
Milt Gables. We talked about Milt Gableer right back at the start of this series. He was the one who
produced Lionel Hampton's version of Flying Home, the one with the Illinois Jeket Sax solo,
and who produced strange fruit, and most of Louis Jordan's records, and the Inkspots hits.
He'd been the one who put Sister Rosetta Tharp together with pianist Sammy Price.
He was largely, almost solely, responsible for the difference between Decker's roster and that of the other major labels,
and he still wanted to carry on making records in the styles he loved.
But to do that, he had to find a way to sell them.
to the pop audience. And Bill Haley seemed like someone who could appeal to that audience.
Indeed, Haley already had appealed to that audience once, with Crazy Man Crazy,
and if he could do it once, he could do it again. Bill Haley's style was not very like
most of the music Milt Gables had been making. Gables was, after all, a serious jazz fanatic.
But over recent months, Hayley's style,
had been drifting closer and closer to the sort of thing Gablea was doing.
In fact, Gablea saw a way to make him even more successful
by pushing the similarity to Louis Jordan,
which had already been apparent in some of Haley's earlier records.
And so the group were in the studio
to record what was intended to be Bill Haley and the Comets's latest hit,
13 women and only one man in town.
We had the only man on the ground
There was a 13 women
And only one man in town
Only one man in town
And as funny as it may be
The one and only man in town
Was me
We're 13 women
We haven't talked enough
About how much nuclear paranoia
Was fuelling the popular culture
Of the early 1950s
Remember
When this record was made
the first atomic bombs had only been dropped eight and a half years earlier,
and it had been five years since the Russians had revealed that they too had an atom bomb.
At the time, everyone was absolutely convinced
that a nuclear war between America and Russia was not only likely but inevitable.
Yet at the same time, the development of nuclear weapons was also something to be proud of.
a great American technological innovation,
something that was out of a science fiction film.
Both of these things were true, more or less,
as far as the American popular imagination went,
and this led to a very odd sort of cognitive dissonance.
And while it's not a good idea
to put too much weight on the lyrics of 13 women,
which is, after all,
just an attempt at having a novelty hit
with the Louis Jordan style song
about having 13 women to oneself,
it is notable that it does reflect that ambiguity.
The dream the singer has
is that the hydrogen bomb has been dropped
and left only 14 people alive in the whole town,
13 women plus himself.
Now, one might normally think
that that was a devastating horrific thought
and that it was a prelude to some sort of
thread-esque story of post-apocalyptic terror.
In this case, however, it merely becomes an excuse for a bit of casual sexism,
as the 13 women become Haley's harem and servant, each with their own specified task.
Obviously, I'm being a little facetious here.
For what it is, a comedy hilly boogie that plays on Haley's genial likability,
13 women is perfectly pleasant, if a little, of its time.
It's very obviously influenced by Louis Jordan,
but that makes sense, given that Gabler was Jordan's producer.
Indeed, Gabler was also the one who introduced the H-bomb theme.
The original version of the song, by the blues guitarist Dickie Thompson,
makes no mention of the bomb or the dream,
just treats it as something that's happened to him.
And frankly, Thompson's version is much, much better than Haley's,
and has some truly great guitar playing.
There was a 13 women and only one man in town.
There was a 13 of women and only one man in town.
And as funny as it may be,
the one and only man in town was me.
With 13 women and only one man in time.
But Thompson's record is absolutely a blues record
in the same style as people like,
guitar Slim or Johnny Guitar Watson. Haley's record is very different and while Thompson sounds better
to modern ears, or at least to my ears, Haley's was in a style that was massively popular for the
time, but it would probably make an unlikely massive hit, and you certainly wouldn't expect its B-side
to become that massive hit. For the B-side, Haley decided to cut that rock around the
clock song that he'd been offered a year earlier. It might have come back into his mind
because two weeks earlier another group had released their version of it. Sunny Day and his
nights were a band from Virginia who had never made a record before and who never would
again, but who had a regular radio spot. Rock around the clock was their only recorded
legacy and it might have had a chance at being a hit by them with some proper promotion.
Or maybe not, given the experimental nature of the intro?
7 o'clock, 8 o'clock, 9, 10, 11 o'clock, 12 o'clock, rock.
Rock around the clock tonight, put you clack rag songs.
So the single did very little, and now Sunny Day and his nights are a footnote.
But their release may have reminded Haley of the song, and he recorded his new version in two takes.
But the interesting thing is that Haley didn't record the song as it was written, or as the night's recorded it.
Listen again to the melody that Sunny Day is singing.
Now let's put your black rags on join me home
We'll have a totally different melody
What's a totally different melody
for that. Hank Williams's very first big hit, remember, was a comedy western swing song called
Move It On Over. That song has almost exactly the same melody that Haley is singing for the verse
of Rock Around the Clock. She's changed the lock on our front door and by door he don't fit no more,
so get it on over. We know that Haley knew the song, because he later cut his own version of it,
so it's reasonable to assume that this was a very deliberate decision.
What Haley and the Comets have done is take the utterly generic song,
rock around the clock, and they've used it as an excuse to hang every bit of every other song
that they know could be a hit on, to create an arrangement that could encapsulate everything
about successful music. They kept the basic arrangement and structure they'd worked out for Rock the Joint,
write down to Danny Sidrone playing the same solo note for note.
Compare Rock the Joint Solo.
With Rock Around the Clocks.
For the beginning, they came up with a stop-start intro
that emphasized the word rock.
One, two, three o'clock, four o'clock rock.
Five, six, seven o'clock, eight o'clock, rock.
Nine, ten, eleven o'clock, twelve o'clock, rock, we're going to rock.
Around, fourth o'clock tonight.
And then, at the end,
They used a variant of the riff ending you'd often get in swing songs like Flying Home,
which one strongly suspects was Gabler's idea.
The Knights did something similar, but only for a couple of bars in their badly thought-out solo section.
With the Comets, it's a far more prominent feature of the arrangement.
Again, compare Flying Home.
And rock around the clock.
This was wildly experimental.
They were trying this stuff, not with any thought to listenability, but to see what worked.
It didn't matter. No one was going to hear it.
It was something they knocked out in two takes,
and the finished version had to be edited together from both of them,
because they didn't have time in the studio to get a decent takedown.
This was not a record that was destined to have any great success.
And indeed it didn't.
Rock around the clock made almost no impact on the record.
its original release. It charted, but only in the lower reaches of the chart, and didn't
really register on the public's consciousness. But Haley and his band continued making records
in that style, and their next one, a cover of Big Joe Turner's Shake Rattle and Roll,
did rather better, and started rising up the charts quite well. Their version of Shake
Rattle and Roll, a song which we talked about a bit in episode two, if you want to go back
and refresh your memory, was nowhere near as powerful as Turner's had been. It cleaned up parts of
the lyric, though notably not the filthiest lines, presumably because the innuendo in them
completely passed both Haley and Gable Abbey, and imposed a much more conventional structure on it.
But while it was a watered-down version of the original song, it was still potent enough
that for those who hadn't heard the original, it was working some sort of magic.
Get out in that kitchen and ride of those parts and pans.
Haley was a real fan, and indeed the two men became close friends in later years,
and the Comets were Turner's backing band on 160's album.
But he doesn't have the power or gravitas in his vocals that Turner did.
and the result is rather lightweight.
Haley's cover was recorded the same week that Turner's version reached number one on the R&B charts,
and it's easy to think of this as another Shiboom situation,
with a white man making a more radio-friendly version of a black musician's hit.
But Haley's version is not just a straight copy,
and not just because of the changes to remove some of the more obviously filthy lines.
It's structured differently and has a whole different feel to it.
This feels to me more like Haley recasting things into his own style
than him trying to jump on someone else's bandwagon,
though it's a more ambiguous case than some.
Shake, Rattle and Roll became Bill Haley's biggest hit so far,
going top ten in the pop charts,
and both Haley's version and Turner's sold a million copies.
It looked like Haley was on his way to a reasonable career.
Not perhaps a massive stardom, but selling a lot of records and doing well in shows.
But then everything changed, for Bill Haley and for the world.
It was only when a film, the Blackboard Jungle, was being made nearly a year after Rock Around the Clock was recorded, that that track became important.
Blackboard Jungle was absolutely not a rock and roll film.
It was a film about teenagers and rebellion and so on, yes,
but in a pivotal scene when a teacher brings his old jazz records in,
in order to bond with the kids, and they smash them and play their own.
It's not rock and roll they're playing but modern jazz.
Stan Kenton is the soundtrack to their rebellion.
Not anything more rock.
But in order to make the film up to the minute,
the producers of the film borrowed some records from the record collection of Peter Fli.
the teenage son of the film star.
They wanted to find out what kind of records teenagers were listening to,
and he happened to have a copy of the Bill Haley single.
They made the decision that this was to be the theme tuned to the film,
and all of a sudden everything changed.
Everything.
Because the Blackboard Jungle was a sensation.
Probably the best explanation of what it did,
and of what Rock Around the Clock did as its theme saw.
is in this quote from Frank Zappa from 1971.
In my days of flaming youth,
I was extremely suspect of any rock music played by white people.
The sincerity and emotional intensity of their performances
when they sang about boyfriends and girlfriends and breaking up etc.
was nowhere when I compared it to my high school Negro R&B heroes
like Johnny Otis, Howling Wolf and Willie May Thornton.
Again, when Zapper said this,
that word was the accepted polite term for black people.
Language has evolved since.
The quote continues.
But then I remember going to see Blackboard Jungle.
When the titles flashed up there on the screen,
Bill Haley and his comets started blurching
one, two, three o'clock, four o'clock rock.
It was the loudest rock sound kids had ever heard at the time.
I remember being inspired with awe.
In cruddy little teenage rooms across America,
kids had been huddling around old radios and cheap record players
listening to the dirty music of their lifestyle.
Go in your room if you want to listen to that crap
and turn the volume all the way down.
But in the theatre watching Blackboard Jungle,
they couldn't tell you to turn it down.
I didn't care if Bill Haley was white or sincere.
He was playing the teenage national anthem
and it was so loud I was jumping up and down.
There were reports of riots
in the cinemas, with people slicing up seats with knives in a frenzy as the music played.
Rock Around the Clock went to number one on the pop charts, but it did more than that.
It sold, in total, well over 25 million copies as a vinyl single, becoming the best-selling
vinyl single in history. When counting compilation albums on which it has appeared, the number of
copies of the songs that have sold must total in the hundreds of millions.
Bill Haley and the Comets had become the biggest act in the world,
and for the next couple of years they were tour constantly,
playing to hysterical crowds,
and appearing in two films,
rock around the clock and don't knock the rock.
They were worldwide superstars,
famous at a level beyond anything imaginable before.
But at the same time that everything was going right
for rock around the clock's sales,
things were going horribly wrong for everything else in Haley's life.
Ten days after the session for shake,
vatl and roll, at the end of June 1954,
Danny Sidrone, the session guitarist who had played on all Haley's records
and a close friend of Haley,
fell down the stairs and broke his neck,
dying instantly.
At the end of July, Haley's baby daughter died suddenly of cot death.
And there was no follow-up.
to rock around the clock.
You can't follow up anything that big.
There's nothing to follow it up with.
And Haley's normal attitude
of scientifically assessing what the kids liked
didn't work anymore either.
The kids were screaming at everything
because he was the biggest star in the world.
The next few records all hit the pop charts
and all got in the top 20 or 30.
There were big hits by most standards
but they weren't rock around the clock big.
and then in 195
the band's bass player
saxophone player and drummer
quit the band
forming their own group
the Jodimars
Phailley's
their own hit this
maybe I insist
and we just can't me dance
Secretary Coats
Haley soldiered on however
and the new lineup of the band
had another top ten hit
in December 1955
their first in over a year
with See You Later
alligator.
Well, that was no rock around the clock.
It did sell a million copies.
But it was a false dawn.
The singles after that made the lower reaches of the top 30,
and then the lower reaches of the top 100.
and then stopped charting altogether.
They had one final top 30 hit in 1958
with the rather fabulous Skinny Mini.
That's an obvious attempt to copy Larry Williams as Boney Moroni,
but also it's a really good record.
But the follow-up, Lean Gene, only reached number 60,
and that was it for Bill Haley and the Comets on the US charts.
And that's usually where people live.
leave the story, assuming Haley was a total failure after this. But that shows the America-centric
nature of most rock criticism. In fact, Bill Haley moved to Mexico in 1960. The IRS were after
Haley's money, and he found that he could make money from a Mexican record label, and if it
stayed in Mexico, he didn't have to give his new income to them. He was going through a divorce,
and he'd met a Mexican woman who was to become his third wife,
and so it just made sense for him to move.
And in Mexico, Bill Haley became king of the Twist.
Florida Twist by the
world
always
Friada Twas
La La La La
Florida Twist
went to number
one in Mexico
as did the
album of the same name
Indeed
Florida Twist
by Bill Haley
Isus Cometas
became the
biggest selling single
ever up to that
point in Mexico
The Comets
had their own TV show
in Mexico
Orfeon Agogo
and made three
Spanish language
films in the 60s
They had a string of hits there
and Mexico wasn't the only place they were having hits
Their chick safari went to number one in India
A warning before this bit
It's got a bit of the comedy racism
that you would find at the time in too many records
I said Dr. Livingston
What's with this hermit kick
He said Jim I'm in a swim
Somebody stole my chick
and even after his success as a recording artist finally dried up
in the late 60s, not the late 50s like most articles on him assume
Haley and the Comets were still a huge live drawer across the world
At a rock revival show in the late 60s at Madison Square Garden
Haley got an 8.5 minute standing ovation before playing a song.
He played Wembley Stadium in 1972
and the Royal Variety Performance in 1979.
Haley's last few years weren't happy ones.
He started behaving erratically,
shortly after Rudy Pompili,
his best friend and saxophone player for over 20 years,
died in 1976.
He gave up performing for a couple of years.
He and Pompili had always said
that if one of them died, the other wouldn't carry on.
and when he came back, he seemed to be behaving oddly,
and people usually put this down to his alcoholism,
and plain that on his resentment at his so-called lack of success,
forgetting that he had a brain tumour,
and that just perhaps that might have led to some of the erraticness.
But people let that cast a shadow back over his career,
and let his appearance, a bit fat, not in the first flush of youth,
convinced them that because he didn't fit with later standards of cool,
he was forgotten and overlooked.
Bill Haley died in 1981,
just over a year after touring Britain and playing the Royal Variety Performance,
a televised event which would regularly get upwards of 20 million viewers.
I haven't been able to find the figures for the 1979 show,
but the Royal Variety Performance regularly hit the top of the ratings for the year
in the 70s and 80s.
Bill Haley was gone, yes,
but he hadn't been forgotten,
and as long as rock around the clock is played,
he won't be.
A history of rock music and 500 songs
is written, produced and performed by Andrew Hickey.
Visit 500Songs.com,
that's 500Songs.com,
to see transcriptions,
liner notes,
and links to other materials,
including a mixed cloud,
dream of all songs excerpted in this episode.
A history of rock music and 500 songs is supported by the backers on my Patreon.
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