A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode Sixty-Four: “Reet Petite” by Jackie Wilson
Episode Date: January 6, 2020Episode sixty-four of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at “Reet Petite” by Jackie Wilson, and features talent contests with too much talent, the prehistory of Motown, a ...song banned by the BBC, and a possible Mafia hit. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a ten-minute bonus episode available, on “Get a Job” by the Silhouettes. (more…)
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs by Andrew Hick.
Episode 64, Reit Petit by Jackie Wilson.
Today, we're going to have a look at one of the most important people in the history of popular music,
and someone will be seeing a lot more of as the series goes on.
There are very few people in the world who can be seen.
said to have created an entire genre of music, and even fewer who were primarily record company
owners rather than musicians, but Barry Gordy Jr. was one of them. Gordy didn't start out,
though, as a record executive. When he first got into the music industry, it was as a songwriter,
and today we're going to look at his early songwriting career. But we're also going to look at a
performer who was massively important in his own right, and who was one of the most exciting
performers ever to take to the stage. Someone who inspired Elvis, Michael Jackson, and James Brown,
and who provides one of the key links between 50s R&B and 60s soul. I'm afraid that this episode
is another case where I have to point you to the disclaimer I did in the early weeks of
show. Jackie Wilson was an admirable musician, but he was in no way an admirable human being,
particularly in his treatment of women. He's been credibly accused of at least one sexual assault,
and he fathered many children by many different women, who he abandoned, and was known for having a
violent temper. As always, this podcast is not about his reprehensible acts, but about the music,
but again, it should not be taken as an endorsement of him as a person
when I talk about his artistic talent.
Wilson started out as a boxer in his teens,
but he quickly decided to move into singing instead.
He would regularly perform at talent contests around Detroit,
and he was part of a loose association of musicians and singers,
including Wilson's cousin Levi Stubbs,
the Royals, who would later be.
become Hank Ballard and the Midnighters, and the blues singer Little Willie John.
They would all perform on the same talent shows, and would agree among themselves who was going
to win beforehand. Wilson would tell Stubbs, you win this week, I'll win next week.
On one occasion, Johnny Otis happened to be in the audience, when the Royals, Little
Willie John and Wilson, were all on the same bill, and on that particular show,
Wilson came third. Otis was working as a talent scout for King records at the time,
and tried to get all three acts signed to the label, but for reasons that remain unclear,
King decided they only wanted to sign the Royals, though they would sign Little Willie John
a couple of years later. As a result, a song that Otis had written for Wilson was recorded
instead by the Royals.
Wilson kept performing at the amateur nights
for a couple of years,
until at the age of 17 he was signed
to DG Records,
a small label co-owned by the jazz trumpet player
Dizzy Gillespie. There he cut
two singles under the name
Sonny Wilson. Wilson's favourite song to sing in talent
contests was Danny Boy,
which would remain in his set list
until late in his life, and he would
use that song as a way to show off his vocal virtuosity,
ornamenting it to the point that the melody would become almost unrecognisable.
And so that was, of course, one of the two singles.
Neither single was particularly successful,
but Wilson continued performing in nightclubs around Detroit
and built up something of a local following.
But in 1953, he got a big break,
when he auditioned for Billy Ward and his dominoes.
We've talked about the dominoes before,
back in the episode on Money Honey,
but as a bit of a recap,
they were the biggest black vocal group of the early 50s,
and they were led by Billy Ward,
a vocal coach who was not their lead singer.
The lead singer in the early 50s was Clyde McFatter,
but MacFatter was getting restless.
There are several different stories,
about how Wilson came to be picked for Ward's group,
but one that sticks out in my mind
is one that Ward used to tell,
which is that one reason Wilson was picked for the group
is that his mother begged Ward,
saying that she was scared for the life of her son
as he was getting into trouble on the street.
Certainly, she had every reason to be worried for him.
Wilson had recently been stabbed in the chest by a sex worker,
but Ward noted that Wilson was a diamond in the roof
and could have a great deal of success
with the right amount of polishing.
He decided to get Wilson into the group
as a replacement for McFatter,
though MacFatter and Wilson were in the group together for a while,
as McFatter served out his notice with the group.
Over the next few weeks,
Wilson studied what McFatter was doing
until he was able to take McFatter's place.
Ward taught him breath control
and became something of a father figure
giving him some discipline for the first time in his life.
McFatters were very big shoes to fill
but Wilson soon won the audiences over
both with his vocals and his dancing.
While Wilson was not regarded as a good dancer
by most of the people who knew him
he couldn't dance with a partner at all
He had a unique way of moving all his own,
which he had learned in the boxing ring,
where he'd learned to slide, sidestep,
and duck away from other fighters,
and to come at them from unexpected angles.
He soon became one of the most riveting performers on stage,
jumping up, throwing his mic in the air,
doing mid-air splits, and completely dominating the stage.
As well as teaching him to perform,
Ward made one other major change.
Up to this point, Wilson had always been known either as Jack or as Sunny.
Ward thought that being called Sunny smacked of Uncle Tomary,
and decided that from this point on, Wilson's stage name was going to be Jackie.
Wilson was not happy with this at first, but later decided that Ward had been right,
though he was still always Jack or Sunny to those.
those who knew him. Wilson's first recording with the group as lead singer came just after he
turned 19, when he went into the studio with them to cut You Can't Keep a Good Man Down for King
Records, the same label that had turned him down when Johnny Otis had put him forward.
Four months later, they went back into the studio to cut 11 songs in a single day, a mammoth
session which really allowed Wilson
to show off his vocal versatility.
From that session,
their version of Rags to Richers,
which had been a massive hit
for Tony Bennett earlier in the year,
went to number two on the R&B chart,
though it didn't dent the pop chart.
But after this,
the Dominoes started to have
less success in the charts.
Their records weren't selling
as well as they had been
when Clyde McFratter was the group's lead.
singer, and in 1954 they had no hits at all. But in some ways, that didn't really matter.
The group weren't just looking to have success as recording artists, but as live performers,
and they got a two-year residency in Las Vegas, supporting Louis Prima and Keely Smith.
The group were getting $5,000 a week, a massive amount of money in those days, though most of that
went to Ward, and Wilson was on a salary of only $90 a week.
It was while he was performing in Las Vegas, that Wilson first came to the notice of someone
who would later become a good friend, Elvis Presley. In 1956, Elvis made his own first
trip to perform in Vegas, though he was far, far less successful there than he would be
13 years later.
While he was there, he watched
with amazement as Jackie Wilson
performed Elvis' own hit
Don't Be Cruel,
much better than Elvis did himself.
And in the famous million-dollar
quartet tapes, you can
hear Elvis raving about Wilson
to Johnny Cash, Carl
Perkins, and Jerry Lee Lewis.
Just a member of
Ward's Domino's.
He had already done
a hound dog and another one of two,
he didn't do too well, you know, he was trying too hard.
But he done that don't be cruel, he was trying so hard
and he got better, boy.
Man, he sung that song.
That court just in the background, you know.
Baud off, butt off, bada up, and he was out there cutting it, man.
That's all I'm going way up in there.
Oh, man, that's classic.
It's quite funny listening to those recordings,
as the others keep trying to drag Elvis onto other topics of conversation,
and Elvis keeps insisting on telling them just how good this singer with Billy Ward and the Dominoes,
whose name he hadn't caught, was.
But Vegas wasn't a good fit for Wilson.
He chafed at the discipline of the Dominoes and at staying in one place all the time.
After a couple of years of disappointing record sales,
the Domino's switched labels to Decker,
and for the first time Jackie Wilson hit the pop charts as a lead singer,
when St. Teresa of the Roses made number 13 on the pop charts and number 27 on the Hot 100.
Incidentally, over in the UK, where American chart records were often covered for the domestic market by British Act.
That was recorded by Malcolm Vaughan, a pop tenor who wanted to be England's answer,
to Dean Martin.
That version actually became a massive hit over here,
reaching number three after being banned by the BBC.
Yes, you heard that right.
That song was banned,
because it was contrary both to Roman Catholic doctrine
and to Protestant sentiment.
The ban caused enough controversy
that the record sold half a million copies.
Vaughan would later go on to have a minor hit
with the cover version of another Jackie Wilson record
To be loved
In 1957
Jackie decided to leave Billy Ward and the Dominoes
It had become apparent that Ward had no bigger ambitions
than to keep playing Las Vegas forever
and keep making vast amounts of money
without having to travel or work especially hard
Jackie Wilson wanted something more
and he went back to Detroit.
At first, he was going to join a vocal group
that had been performing for a few years,
the Four Ames,
which featured his cousin Levi Stubbs
and another distant relative, Lawrence Payton.
Unfortunately, they found that Jackie's voice
didn't blend well with the group.
He sounded, according to Wilson's first wife, Frieda,
too similar to Stubbs,
though I don't hear that much of a vocal resemblance myself.
Either way, the attempt to work together quickly whizzled out, and the four tops, as they became,
had to find their own success without Jackie Wilson in the group.
Around this time, Wilson also became obsessed with the singer Mario Lanzer.
Lanzer was an Italian-American pop singer, who sang in a pseudo-operatic style,
rather than in the more casual crooning style of contemporaries like Frank Sinatra and two.
Tony Bennett, and Wilson was a huge fan of Lanzas' 1951 film, The Great Caruso, in which he played
the opera singer Enrico Caruso. Wilson studied Lanzas performances, and he tried to emulate
Lanz's diction and projection, but at the same time he was, at heart, an R&B performer, and he also
knew that as a black singer in Detroit in the early 50s, R&B was what he needed to do.
do to make money. And making money was what Wilson needed to do more than anything else,
and so he got an audition at the Flame Bar, which was owned and run by a local mobster,
Al Green. Green was a big name in the local music business. He managed Johnny Ray,
one of the biggest names in white pop music at the time, and also Laverne Baker, who had had a string of
R&B hits. Wilson got the audition.
through his friend Rochelle Davis, who went by the name Billy Davis, who was Lawrence
Payton's cousin and had performed with him in an early line-up of the Four Ames.
Davis had also written songs for the Four Ames, but more importantly for this purpose,
his girlfriend, Gwen Gordy, worked with her sister Anna at the Flame Bar.
Through these connections, Wilson got himself a regular spot at the flame, and he also got to meet
Gwen and Anna's little brother, Barry.
Barry Gordy Jr. was someone who would go on
to be one of the most important people
in the history of 20th century music.
Someone without whom
none of the rest of this story would happen.
He was as important to the music of the 60s
as Sam Phillips was to the 50s,
if not more important.
Gordy was born, the 7th of 8 children,
to a poor family in Detroit,
As a child, he was taught some of the rudiments of the piano by an uncle,
who tried to get him to learn to play in the proper manner,
learning scales and arpeggios and how to read music.
But young Barry was easily bored,
and soon figured out that if you played the first three notes of an arpeggio together,
you can get a simple triad chord.
A diversion here, just for those of you who don't know what I'm talking about.
An arpeggio is a musical term that leads to you.
literally means like a harp, and it's used for a type of scale where you pick out the individual
notes of a chord. You know the sound, even if you don't know the term. So when you arpeggiate a C major
chord, you play the notes C, E and G, sometimes in multiple octaves. C, E, G, C, G, C, G.
When you play those notes together, that's a C major chord.
Once young Barry Gordy Jr. figured out how to play the chords C, F and G,
he was able to start playing boogie-woogie piano by ear.
His favourite boogie record was Hazel Scott's Boogie Wooge.
From an early age, he also became a fan of a particular type of vocal group performance,
especially when the singers were singing touching songs about loneliness.
He loved Paper Doll by the Mills Brothers,
I guess I've played the dog game four and all
I just quarrels
With Sue
That's why I'm blue
She's gone away and left me
Just like all dolls do
I'll tell you boys
It's tough to be alone
And it's tough to love a doll
That's not your role
and We Three
By the Ink Spots
But in his early years
Gordy was unsure
whether he wanted to become a musician
or if instead he wanted to become a boxer
like his hero Joe Lewis
and in this way his career was paralleling
that of Jackie Wilson
though he didn't know Wilson at the time
he actually had a reasonable amount of success
as a boxer
up until a point in 1950 where he saw two posters next to each other.
One of them, on top, was advertising a Battle of the Bands
between Stan Kenton and Duke Callington,
while the other was advertising a fight.
He noticed two things about the posters.
The first was that the bandleaders could work every night and make money,
while he knew that boxers would go weeks or months between fights.
And the second was that the bandleaders
were about 50 and looked 23,
while the boxers were about 23 and looked 50.
He knew what he was going to do, and it wasn't boxing.
His attempt at a music career was soon put on the back burner
when he was drafted to fight in the Korean War.
After he got out of the military,
he had a variety of short-term jobs,
but he was regarded by his family more or less as a bum.
He never held down a steady job
and he was a dreamer who saw himself as becoming a successful songwriter and a millionaire,
but had never quite managed to make anything of his dreams.
That was, at least, until he met Billy Davis,
who at the time was a struggling songwriter like him,
but one who had had slightly more success.
Davis had managed to persuade chess records to sign up the Four Tops,
as they were now called,
and release a single with Davis credited as the songwriter.
I say Davis was credited as the songwriter because that song bears more than a little resemblance to the Ray Charles song from a few years earlier, Kissimmee Baby.
But Chess hadn't really been interested in the four tops themselves.
They'd instead been interested in Billy Davis as a songwriter, and they quickly used songs he'd written for the four tops and cut them instead with The Moonglows,
and the Flaminsaw baby
When you said you'd be my baby
And the Flamingos
Neither of those had been a big hit
But the result was that Billy Davis was
In Gordy's eyes at least
someone with a track record and connections.
The two men hit it off musically as well as personally,
and they decided that they'd start to collaborate on songs,
along with Gordy's sister Gwen, who was dating Davis.
Anything any of them wrote on their own
would also get credited to them as a group,
and they'd pool whatever they got,
and they were going to write songs for Jackie Wilson.
Davis tried to get Wilson signed to chess records,
but they weren't interested in Wilson's sound.
They wanted a harder blues sound
rather than Wilson's more soulful sound.
But then Al Green took on Wilson's management
and managed to persuade Bob Thiel at Decker Records,
who had just signed Buddy Holly and the cricket,
to sign Wilson.
Not so much for Wilson's own talent,
though Thiel was impressed by him,
but because Green promised that he could also sign Laverne Baker
when her contract with Atlantic expired.
As it turned out though, Thiel would never get to sign Baker,
as the day before Wilson's contract was meant to be signed,
Al Green died suddenly.
More by Chutzpah than anything else,
Nat Tarnapol, an office boy who had been employed by Green,
managed to take over Wilson's management,
just by saying that he was in charge now.
He got the contract signed and got Wilson signed to Brunswick,
the Decker subsidiary that put out rock and roll records.
Over the next few years, Tarnapol would manage to get himself made a co-owner of Brunswick
by using the leverage he got as Wilson's manager.
The first record Wilson put out as a solo artist was a song that Billy Davis had originally come up with when he was 16,
inspired by a Louis Jordan song titled Rite Petit and Gone.
Davis, Petit and Map of Cops.
Davis and the traffic stops
because she's Reit Petit and God.
I pick you know, because I got Dolos ready to go.
But this chick's so mighty fine,
she got me all tied up like a ball of twilight.
Davis and the Gordyze reworked his original idea
into a new song called Reit Petit,
which became Wilson's first solo single since leaving the Dominoes.
When Wilson took the song to Dick Jacobs, the arranger assigned to the session,
Jacobs was impressed with the song, but became worried.
He sat down with Wilson to work out what key to record the song in,
and Wilson kept telling him to take it higher and higher and higher.
Wilson couldn't demonstrate what he meant during the preparations for the session,
as he had laryngitis, but he kept insisting that he should sing it a full octave higher
than Jacobs initially suggested.
Jacobs went to Bob Thiel,
and Thiel said it didn't really matter.
They'd only signed Wilson in order to get Laverne Baker,
and just to do what he wanted.
Jacobs hired some of the best session players in New York,
including Panama Francis on drums
and Sam the man Taylor on saxophone,
reasoning that if he had the best players around,
then the record wouldn't end up too bad,
whatever the singer sounded like.
I'll now quote some of Jacobs's description of the session itself.
I got him behind the microphone and said a silent prayer that this aerial key he'd picked to singing would be okay,
and that this guy was a reasonable approximation of a singer.
Jackie Wilson opened his mouth and out poured what sounded like honey on moonbeams,
and it was like the whole room shifted on some weird axis.
The musicians, these meat and potatoes prose, stared at each other slack Jordan goggle-eyed and disbelief.
It was as if the purpose of their musical training and woodshedding and lickspitting
had been to guide them into this big studio in the Pythian Temple
to experience these pure shivering moments of magic.
Bob Thiel and I looked at each other and just started laughing,
half out of relief and half out of wonder.
I never thought Crow could taste so sweet.
The record wasn't a massive hit in the US.
It only went to number 62 on the pop charts.
But it was a much bigger hit in the UK, reaching number six.
And over here it became a much loved classic,
so much so that it went to number one for four weeks
when it was reissued in 1986.
At one show where he was Diana Washington's support,
act. He rolled his R on the title of the song, like he did on the record, and his two front
dentures went flying off. He never sang the song live again. Rie Petit was the start of a run of
songs that Davis and the Gordy's wrote for Wilson, most of them big hits, and several of them
classics. Most notably, there was Wilson's second solo single, to be loved. That song was
written by Barry Gordy and Davis, after Gordy found out his wife was divorcing him.
Gordy went round to his sister Gwen's house, where Davis also was, and started playing the piano,
after Gwen reassured him that even though his wife had left him, he still had the love of his
children and his siblings. The result was a gorgeous ballad that went to number seven on the R&B
charts, and number 22 on the pop charts. They also wrote what became Wilson's Bigger's
biggest early hit, lonely teardrops, which went to number one on the R&B charts.
That had originally been written as a ballad, but was reworked into a more danceable song in the
studio. Barry Gordy and Davis hated it when they first heard the finished record, but grew
to appreciate it as it became a hit. However, from that point on, they started to take more
interest in the production side of Wilson's recordings, and they developed a routine where
Davis and Gordy would rehearse Wilson with Gordy on the piano, and they'd teach him the song
and record a demo, which Jacobs would then use to write the arrangements. Dick Jacobs wasn't the
only arranger on Wilson's early records, but they soon learned that he was the one who could
best capture the sound they wanted. The three men would then supervise in the studio. Gwen Gordy is also credited
as a co-writer on several of the records,
but her contributions tend to be played down by the others,
and she doesn't appear to have been involved in the production side.
How much of that is her not contributing as much,
and how much is just misogyny in how the story is told,
is hard to say.
But eventually they fell out with Nat Tarnapol,
after they figured out that Tarnapul was putting songs to which he owned the copyright
on the B-sides of all Wilson's records, so he could get royalties from the sales.
Gordy and Davis insisted that they should get to write the songs on both sides of the singles
so that they could get a fair share of the money,
especially as they were effectively producing the sessions without either a credit or royalties.
Tarnapol disagreed.
As far as he was concerned, Jackie Wilson could be a star with anyone writing his material,
and he didn't need these songwriters.
Their days as Jackie Wilson's hit factory were over.
Davis and Gwen Gordy went off to found their own record label,
along with Gwen and Berry's sister Anna.
Anna Records, as it was called,
didn't have the most propitious start,
with its first single being a Davis and Gwen Gordy song,
Hope and Pray, performed by the Voicemasters.
But it would later put out some much more influential records.
Barry, meanwhile, decided to groom another young artist for stardom.
He saw a lot of possibilities in a young man called William Robinson,
who everyone referred to as Smokey, and his group The Miracles.
We'll pick up on the Gordies and their business ventures in a few months' time.
Jackie Wilson continued having hits for several years,
although his career dipped in the early 60s with the British invasion.
He then had a revival in 1967, when he recorded what would end up being his biggest hit,
Higher and Higher.
Wilson continued having occasional hits through to 1970, and remained a popular live artist for years afterwards.
But then, in 1975, in the middle of performing lonely teardrops,
right after singing the line, My Heart is Crying, He clutched his chest and collapsed.
At first, people thought it was part of the act, but he didn't get back up.
Cornell Gunter of the Coasters gave him mouth to mouth, and possibly saved his life.
But some would question whether that was, in retrospect, a bad idea.
Wilson was in a coma, from which he would never fully recover.
For the next eight and a half years, Wilson was institutionalised.
There are some people who claim he gained a little bit of awareness during that time,
but by most accounts he was in a persistent vegetative state.
At first, the music business rallied round
and helped pay for his treatment.
There are some reports that Jackie's old friend Elvis Presley
anonymously donated a lot of the money for his medical bills,
though these obviously can't be verified.
The Detroit Spinners held a benefit concert for him
and donated $5,000 of their own money.
Earl Green, the singer, not Wilson's ex-manager,
performed at the concert and gave $10,000.
Stevie Wonder gave $5,000.
Gladys Knight gave $2,500,
Michael Jackson, $10,000, rich prior $1,200.
James Brown sent a $1,000 check which bounced,
but he coughed up the actual money
when Jackie's common law wife said she was going to tell Jet Magazine
about the bouncing check.
Nat Tarnapol and Vunswick Records, on the other hand, gave nothing.
In fact, they did worse than nothing.
They lied to Blue Cross Blue Shield,
claiming that Wilson hadn't had any earnings from them
in the year prior to his collapse,
when he'd been in the studio and was owed regular union rates for recording sessions.
If they'd told the truth, his medical bills would have been covered by the insurance,
but they weren't.
There are many hypotheses as to why Wilson collapsed on stage that day,
including that he used to drink salt water before going on stage to make himself sweat,
and that this caused him to have a heart attack due to induced hypertension.
But several people close to Wilson believed that his collapse was somehow caused by Nat Tarnopol, having him poisoned.
Wilson had been due to testify against Tarnapol in front of a grand jury 10 days after his collapse,
and Tarnapol was very involved with the mafia.
At one point he tried to have Carl Davis, who produced Hire and Higher,
killed, and it was only Davis's friendship with another mobster with ties to Brunswick,
Tommy Vastola, that saved him.
Johnny Roberts, Wilson's manager in the 70s, and another mobster,
actually faked his own death in the 80s and had a funeral,
and then reappeared once Tarnapol himself died in 1987.
While some of those close to Wilson think it's no coincidence that Cornel Gunter,
who had been there when Wilson collapsed and had always thought there was something strange about it,
was murdered himself in 1990, in Las Vegas, by an unknown gunman.
Though if that murder did have anything to do with Wilson,
it can't have been Tarnapol himself who ordered it, of course.
Jackie Wilson finally died of pneumonia on January the 21st, 1984.
After having been hospitalized since September the 29th, 1975,
he was buried in an unmarked grave,
but three years later, funds were raised for a headstone,
which reads,
No More Lonely Teardrops.
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