A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - PLEDGE WEEK: “Farmer John” by Don and Dewey
Episode Date: June 20, 2021This is a bonus episode, part of Pledge Week 2021. Patreon backers get one of these with every episode of the main podcast. If you want to get those, and to support the podcast, please visit patreon.c...om/andrewhickey to sign up for a dollar a month or more. Click below for the transcript. (more…)
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This is a bonus episode, part of Pledge Week 2021.
Patreon backers get one of these with every episode of the main podcast.
If you want to get those, and to support the podcast,
please visit patreon.com slash Andrew Hickey,
that's A-N-D-R-E-W-H-I-C-E-Y, to sign up for a dollar a month or more.
Just a heads-up for those of you who have a limited time.
This one runs slightly longer than most of the Patreon bonus episodes.
The script's the same length, but there are about twice as many music clips as normal,
so it may last closer to 15 minutes than 10.
Today, we're going to look at a duo who at one point I planned to include in the main podcast,
and when I moved them out of the list for that,
I forgot to do as a Patreon episode at the appropriate time.
but this week's main episode deals with The Searchers,
who popularised their most successful song.
So today we're going to look at a duo
who are almost certainly the only artists ever to influence
both Frank Zappa and Donnie and Marie Osmond.
We're going to look at Don and Dewey and Farmer John.
Don, Sugarcane Harris, and Dewey Terry
were two of the best multi-instrumentalists
on the California R&B scene in the 50s.
Harris could play guitar, harmonica and piano,
and also spent a decade learning classical violin,
while Terry started out on piano,
but soon became a fearsome blues guitarist
in the style of guitar slim.
They started working together
in a six-piece vocal group,
the Squires,
who were based in Pasadena,
where both men grew up.
As well, the first time it's just, you scared of life, I'd have a bit fat with those, I've ever seen.
recording under their own name, the Squires also recorded as the Blue Jays, making sound-alike
EPs of current R&B hits for a budget label called Dig This Record. One EP as an example
featured sincerely, Earth Angel, Hearts of Stone and Pledging My Love, the latter with Don
on lead vocal.
However, don't know me, darling,
Your love in return,
Feathers fire, my soul dear.
However, Don and Dewey soon realized that since between them
they could play most instruments, sing most parts, and write songs,
there was no need for them to continue splitting the money with four other people,
and started working as a duo, while the Squires continued on their own.
Don and Dewey recorded a couple of singles for small labels.
The vocal, Miss Sue,
and the instrumental Slumman,
and the instrumental Slummin,
which was the first record to show off Harris' unique violin playing.
I can't find my source for this,
but I read somewhere that Harris created his own electric violin
by taping a record needle to his violin
and hooking it up to an amp.
Whatever he did, he got a unique sound,
that proves that the violin can work as a great blues instrument.
His playing manages to combine the tomber
of both the blues guitar and the harmonica,
and it sounds stunning.
Shortly after this, Bump's Blackwell signed the duo to specialty,
where they were quickly fitted into what was fast becoming the specialty house style,
making records that sounded just like Little Richard or Larry Williams,
starting with Junglehop.
Their baby lipop, was a song that would become a standard.
I'm leaving it all up to be a tall up to bea-huryl like a snaker when she started to
walk.
Their second specialty single was a song that would become a standard.
I'm leaving it all up to you.
In 1963, that would reach number one for a duo called Dale and Grace, and in the 70s it would become a top ten hit.
for Donnie and Marie Osmond.
But it was their last record of the 50s
that became their most influential,
even though like their other records
it wasn't a hit,
a song called Farmer John,
that they released in 1959.
Shortly after that, they moved labels,
as their A&R man,
Sonny Bono, who had written their earlier single
Coco Joe, was moving,
and they went with him.
Unfortunately, their new label did little to promote them,
and the duo spent the next few years in obscurity,
while Bono went on to bigger things,
some of which you can hear about in this week's main episode.
They eventually joined Little Richard's backing band
and played on his comeback attempt, Bama Lama Bamaloo.
They also released another record on specialty around that time, Mamma Jama.
Neither of those records was a hit,
and Don and Dewey started playing as a Vegas lounge act for the next few years.
But oddly, Farmer John started to take off,
more than four years after originally being released.
The first cover version of it seems to have been by The Searchers,
who often sorts out obscure R&B songs.
Their version of it was an album track on their first album.
That was then picked up by a Swedish group called The Hepstars,
who had a top ten hit with the song in Sweden,
with a copy of The Searchers arrangement.
The Hepstars keyboard player Benny Anderson
would later start writing songs in collaboration
with another member of a later line-up of the group,
and they would have some small amount of success with their new band, Abba.
In 1964 as well, another band revived it,
a Chicano band called the Premiers from East L.A.
Their version is clearly based on Don and Dewey's original,
combined with Louis-Louis.
They've said that they specifically modelled their record on Louis-Louis,
but it seems likely to me that the searchers reviving the song
a few months earlier will have brought the song to mind,
as nobody had covered the song in the years since 1959
and the British invasion bands were so popular at the time.
Whatever the reasoning was, the premiere's version made the top 20.
That would be the premiere's only hit,
but it would turn Farmer John into a garage rock standard,
recorded by dozens of other artists over the years,
most notably Neil Young.
In the late 60s, Frank Zappa was working with Johnny Otis
and asked him about Sugarcane Harris.
Otis had recently worked with Harris, who had played piano and violin on the cold shot album with Otis and his son Shuggy, who was also working with Zappa.
Otis introduced the two, and Harris played with Zappa on several tracks, including two on his biggest selling album, Hot Rats.
And he played violin and sang lead on Zappa's cover version of Little Richards, directly from my heart to you.
The exposure that these appearances with Otis and Zappa gave to Harris meant that for the next few years,
he was a successful sideman,
playing with John Mayle,
John Lee Hooker, Harvey Mandel and others,
as well as releasing a string of his own solo blues albums in the 70s.
Later, he and Dewey reunited to play the nostalgia circuit,
and they carried on playing together until 1999,
when Don died.
Dewey got in a replacement, but died himself four years later.
of the way.
