A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - “Rocket 88” by Jackie Brenston and the Delta Cats
Episode Date: December 16, 2018Welcome to episode eleven of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs. Today we’re looking at “Rocket 88” by Jackie Brenston and the Delta Cats. Click the full post to read line...r 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 Huck.
There is, of Rocket 88.
There is, of course, no actual first rock and roll record.
And if there is, it's not Rocket 88.
But nonetheless, Rocket 88 has been officially anointed
the first rock and roll record ever made
by generations of white male music journalists.
And so we need to talk about it.
And it is actually quite a good record of its type,
even if not especially innovative.
Before I talk about this,
go and listen if you haven't already
to the disclaimer episode I did after episode two
about my attitudes towards misogynistic abusers
who happen also to have played on some great records.
I'll link it in the show notes.
I don't want to repeat all that here,
but at the same time,
I definitely want to go on record
that I'm not an admirer of Ag Turner,
because as it is, here at the official beginning of rock,
according to thousands of attempts to set a cannon.
We also have the beginning of rock being created by abusive men, literally at the beginning in this case.
Ike Turner plays the opening piano part, and here we see how impossible it is to untangle the work of people like him from this history,
as that piano part is one that would echo down the ages, becoming part of the bloodstream of popular music.
Anyway, enough about that.
To talk about Rocket 88,
we first have to talk about the Honey Drippers
and about the Liggins brothers.
Joe Liggins was a piano player
with a small-time band
called Sammy Franklin
and the California Rhythm Rascals.
In 1942,
Liggins wrote a song called
The Honey Dripper,
which the California Rhythm Raskles
used to perform quite regularly.
It's a pleasant, enjoyable, boogie-flavoured
jump band piece, which had a very catchy, unusual riff
based loosely around the riff from shortening bread.
It was mostly just an excuse for soloing and extended improvisation.
Sometimes it could last for 15 minutes or more when performed live.
But it was surprisingly catchy nonetheless.
Liggins believed it had some commercial potential,
so he went to his boss Franklin with a deal.
He said he thought it could be a big hit,
and they should make a record of it.
If Sammy Franklin would pay $500 towards the cost of making the record,
Liggins would give Franklin half the composer rights for the song.
Sammy Franklin turned him down.
and Liggins believed in his song so much
that he quit the band
and formed his own jump band
which he named after the song
Eventually, three years later
Joe Liggins and the Honey Drippers
went into the studio and recorded
The Honey Dripper Parts 1 and 2
for a small indie label
exclusive records
and it was released in April
1945
It doesn't sound
It doesn't sound that much now
Pleasant enough
But hardly the most exceptional record ever
But that's with 73 years of hindsight
It went to number 13 on the pop charts
which is a remarkable feat for an R&B record in itself,
but its performance on the R&B charts was just ludicrous.
It went to number one on the race charts,
later the R&B charts, for 18 weeks straight.
From September 1945 through January 1946,
the only reason it didn't stay at the top for longer
was because the record label simply couldn't keep,
up with the demand and it was replaced at number one by Louis Jordan but at number
two was Jimmy Lunsford playing the honeydripper the honey dripper he's a killer the
honey dripper song sweet hot he's a solid old cat at number three meanwhile was
Roosevelt Sykes playing the honey dripper later in 1940s
Cab Callaway also had a number three hit with the song.
Joe Liggins and the Honey Drippers version alone sold over 2 million copies in 1945 and 46,
and it still, 73 years later, is joint holder of the title for longest stay at number one in the race or R&B charts.
Choo Choo Chibugi is the other joint holder.
and that came a few months later it's likely that nobody will ever beat that record the honey-dripper was a sensation meanwhile the california rhythm rascals had renamed themselves sammy franklin and his atomics
in an attempt to sound more up-to-date and modern with the atomic bomb having so recently gone off they recorded their own version of the honey-dripper
It sank without trace, but you'll remember from last week that that record launched the production career of Ralph Bass.
The Honeydripper made money and careers for everyone in the music industry except for Sammy Franklin.
Sammy Franklin may not have been the single most unwise person in the history of rock and roll.
He didn't turn down Elvis or quit the Beatles or anything like that.
But still, one has to imagine that he spent the whole rest of his life, regretting that he hadn't just spent that five hundred dollars.
Joe Liggins never had another success as big as the honeydripper, but he had a few minor successes to go along with it,
and that was enough for him to give his brother Jimmy a job as the band's driver.
At that time, it was very rare for bands to have actual employees,
rather than doing their own driving and carrying their own instruments.
And for Jimmy, it was certainly an improvement on his previous career as a boxer under the name Kidzulu.
But Jimmy also played a bit of guitar, and so he decided, inspired by his brother's success,
to try his hand at his own music career.
he formed his own jump band, The Drops of Joy. The Drops of Joy signed up to specialty records,
a label we'll be hearing a lot about in upcoming episodes. But the drops of joy would normally
not be a band that we'd be talking about. They weren't the most imaginative or innovative
band by a long way, and they only had minor hits. Their songs were mostly generic boogies,
called things like Saturday Night Boogie Wogie Man
or Nightlife Boogie.
All perfectly good music of its type,
but nothing that set the world on fire.
But one B-side, Cadillac Boogie,
was indirectly responsible
for a great deal of the music that would follow.
I had to have a boogie with the woogey wouldn't wait.
Bort me in long black cat like aid.
It's all reeked, solid streamline.
I enjoy jumping catlikes on time.
It's the cat like boogie, boogie-wug-woogie rolling along.
Ugh, ugh, ug, ug-eye.
Ugg, hug, og-eye.
Look out, geat, don't be late.
This roving cat's got a cat like a cat like a.
To see why Cadillac Boogie was a big influence,
we now need to turn to Sam Phillips.
It's safe to say that he is one of the two or three
most important people in the history of rock and roll music.
And it's also safe to say that even if rock and roll had never happened at all,
we'd still be talking about Sam Phillips because of his influence on country and blues music.
He may well have been the single most important record producer of the 1950s.
He's as important to the history of American music as anyone who ever lived.
Phillips had started out as a DJ,
but had moved sideways from there
into recording bands for radio sessions.
He had very strong opinions about the way things should sound,
and he was willing to work hard to get the sound the way he wanted it.
In particular, when he recorded big bands for sessions,
he would mic the rhythm section,
far more than was traditional.
When you heard a big band recorded by Sampley,
Phillips, you could hear the guitar and the bass in a way you couldn't when you heard that band
on the records. He had a real ear for sound, but he also had an ear for performance. Like a lot of the
men were dealing with at this point, Sam Phillips was a white man who was motivated by a deeply
felt anger at racial injustice, which expressed itself as a belief that if other white people
could just see the humanity and the talent in black people the way he could,
the world would be a much better place.
The racial attitudes of people like him can seem a little patronising these days,
as if the problems in America were just down to a few people's feelings,
and if those feelings could be changed, everything would be better.
But given the utterly horrendous attitudes expressed by the people around him,
Phillips was at least partly right, if he could get his fellow white people to just stop being vicious towards black people.
Well, that wouldn't fix all the problems by any means, but it would have been a good start.
He was also someone who was very much of the opinion that if a problem needed fixing, he should try to fix it himself.
During the Cuban Missile Crisis, he decided that since Castro seemed a reasonable sort of person
and a good progressive like Phillips himself, the whole thing could be sorted out if a decent
American just had a one-to-one chat with him. And since no one else was doing that,
he decided he might as well do it himself. So he phoned Cuba, and while he couldn't get through
to Fidel Castro himself,
he did get through to Castro's
brother Raoul and had
a long conversation with him.
History does not relate, whether
it was Sam Phillips' intervention
that saved the world from
nuclear war. And what
Sam Phillips thought he could do to stop
the evil of racism, and
also to improve the world in other ways,
was to capture
the music that the black people he saw
around him in Memphis were making.
The world seemed
to him to be full of talented idiosyncratic people who were making music like nothing else he had heard.
And so he started Memphis Recording Services, with the help of his mistress, Marian Kaisker,
who acted as his assistant and was herself a popular radio presenter.
Both kept their jobs at the radio station while starting the business,
and they tried to get the business on a sound financial footing
by recording things like weddings and funerals.
Yes, funerals.
They'd mic up the funeral home
and get a recording of the service
which they'd put on an acetate disc.
Apparently this was a popular service,
but the real purpose of the business
was to be somewhere where real musicians could come and record.
phillips didn't have a record label but he had arrangements with a couple of small labels to send them recordings and sometimes those labels would put the recordings out
musicians of all kinds would come into memphis recording services and phillips would spend hours trying to get their sound on to disc and later tape not trying to perfect it but trying to get the most authentic version
of that person's artistry onto the tape.
In 1951, Memphis recording services hadn't been open that long,
and Phillips had barely recorded anything worth a listen.
But he had made some recordings with a local DJ called Riley King,
who had recently started going by the name Blues Boy, or just BB, for short.
To my mind, there are actually some of King's best material,
much more my kind of thing than the later recordings that made his name.
Here, for example, is one of those recordings that wasn't released at the time,
but has made compilations later.
Pray for you.
I know that I love you.
Yes, love you for myself.
And you're gone, gone and left me for somebody else.
I'll pray every night.
Yeah, I'm hoping you'll treat me right.
Until then, all I can do is pray for you.
That was the kind of music that Sam Phillips liked.
and it's the kind of thing I like too.
The piano player there, incidentally,
was a young man called Johnny Ace,
about whom we'll hear a lot more later.
A couple of years earlier,
King had met a young musician in Clarksdale, Mississippi,
called Ag Turner,
who led a big band called The Top Hatters.
Turner had sat in with King on the piano,
and had impressed King with his ability,
and King had even stopped over a couple of nights at Turner's house.
The two hadn't stayed in touch, but they both liked each other.
The top hatters had later split up into two bands.
There were the Dukes of Swing who played classy big band music,
and the Kings of Vitham,
who were a jump band after the Louis Jordan fashion, led by Turner.
One day, the Kings of Rhythm were coming back from a gig
when they noticed a large number of cars parked outside a venue
which had a poster advertising one BB King.
Aig Turner had noticed that name on posters before,
but didn't know who it was,
but he thought he should check out why there were so many people wanting to see him.
The band stopped and went inside
and discovered that B.B. King was Aig Turner's old acquaintance Riley.
Turner asked King if his band could get up and play a number,
and King let him, and was hugely impressed,
telling Turner that he should make records.
Turner said he'd like to,
but he had no idea how one actually went about making a record.
King said that the way he did it
was that there was a guy in Memphis called Sam who recorded him.
King would call Sam up and tell him to give him,
Turner a call on Monday. Monday came around, and indeed Sam Phillips did call Ike Turner on the telephone,
and asked when they could come up to record. Straight away, Ike replied, and they set off.
Five men, two saxes, a guitar and a drum kit in a single car, with a guitar amp and bass drum
strapped to the roof.
The drive from Mississippi to Memphis was not without incident.
They got arrested and fined, ostensibly for a traffic violation,
but actually for being black in the deep south.
And they also got a flat tire,
and when they changed it, the guitar ramp fell on the road.
At least, that's one story as to what happened to the guitar ramp.
Like everything when it comes to this music,
There are three or four different stories told by different people,
but that's definitely one of them.
Anyway, when they got to the studio and got their gear set up,
the amplifier made a strange sound.
The band were horrified.
Their big break, and it was all going to be destroyed
because their amp was making this horrible dirty sound.
The speaker cone had been damaged.
Sam Phillips, however, was very much.
not horrified. He was delighted. He got some brown paper from the restaurant next door to stuff
inside as a temporary repair, but said that the damaged amp would sound different, and different
to Sam Phillips at least, was always good. The song they chose to record that day was one that was
written by the saxophone player Jackie Brenston. Well, I say written by. As with the
so many of the songs we've seen here, the song was not so much written as remembered,
as indeed that line is. I remembered it from Leslie Halliwell, talking about Talbert
Rothwell's scripts for the Carry On Films, so I thought I should give it credit here.
Specifically, he was remembering Cadillac Boogie, as you can tell if you listen to it for even
a few seconds.
my new rocket 88
yes it's great
just one way
everybody likes my rocket 88
baby will ride in style
moving on along
now the main difference
in the songwriting
is simply the car that's being talked about
the 88 was a new exciting model
and Brentston made the song
more hip and current as a result
but musically
There are a few things of note here.
Firstly, there's the piano part written and played by Ag Turner.
That part is one that Little Richard adored,
to the point that he copied it,
on the intro to Good Golly Miss Molly.
Compare and contrast.
Here's the intro to Rocket 88.
And here's Little Richard playing Good Golly Miss Molly.
There's another difference,
as well. The guitar sound. There's distortion all over it thanks to that cone.
Now, this probably won't even have been something that anyone listening at the time noticed.
If you're listening in the context of early 50s R&B on the poor quality 78 RPM discs that the music was
released on, you'd probably think that buzzing boogie line was a baritone sax.
The line it's playing is the kind of thing that a horn would normally play,
and the distortion sounds the same way as many of the distorted sax lines at the time did.
But that was enough that when white music critics in the 70s were looking for a first rock and roll record,
they latched onto this one.
Because in the 70s, rock and roll meant distorted guitar.
When the record came out, Ag Turner was hard.
because he'd assumed it would be released as by Ag Turner and his Kings of Rhythm.
But instead, it was under the name Jackie Brentston and his Delta Cats,
and the record was successful enough to make Jackie Brentston decide to quit the Kings of Rhythm and go solo.
He released a few more singles, mostly along the same lines as Rocket 88, but they did nothing.
Brentston's solo career fizzled out quite quickly,
and he joined the backing band for Lowell Fulson, the Blues Star.
After a couple of years with Fulson, he returned to play with Ake Turner's band.
He stayed with Turner from 1955 through 1962, a sideman once more.
And Turner wouldn't let Brentston sing his hit on stage.
He was never going to be upstaged by his sax player again.
Eventually, Jackie Brentston became an alcoholic,
and from 1963, until his death in 1979,
he worked as a part-time truck driver,
never seeing any recognition for his part in starting rock and roll.
But Rocket 88 had repercussions for a lot of other people,
even if it was only a one-off hit for Brentston.
For Ike Turner, after Rocket 88 was released,
half his band quit and stayed with Brentston,
so for a long time he was without a full band.
He started to work for Phillips as a talent scout and musician,
and it was Turner who brought Phillips several artists,
including the artist who Phillips later claimed
was the greatest artist and greatest human being he ever worked with,
Harlin Wolfe.
That's a recording
That's a recording that was made
Several singles by Harlan Wolf and others to Chess Records
But then the Chess Brothers, the owners of that label
Used contractual shenanigans to cut Phillips out of the loop
and record the wolf directly.
So Phillips made a resolution
to start his own record label
when no one would steal his artists.
Sun Records was born out of this frustration.
Meanwhile, Ike Turner
resolved that he would never again
see his name removed from the credits
for a record he was on.
When he got a new Kings of Rhythm together,
he switched from playing piano
where you sat at the side of the stage
to playing guitar, where you can be up front and in the spotlight,
and when the Kings of Rhythm got a new singer, Annie Mae Bullock.
Turner made sure he would always have equal billing,
by giving her his surname as a stage name,
so any record she made would be by the new act,
Ike and Tina Turner.
And finally, Rocket 88 was going to have a profound effect
on the career of one man
who would later make a big difference to rock and roll.
The lead singer of the country band,
the Saddleman,
a singer who was best known as a champion nodler,
was also working as a DJ
for a small Pennsylvania station,
and he noticed that Louis Jordan records
were popular among the country audience,
and he decided to start incorporating a low
Louis Jordan's style in his own music.
But Jordan's records were so popular with a crossover audience
that when the Saddlemen came to make their first records in this new style,
they chose to cover something by someone other than Jordan,
someone that hadn't crossed over into the country market yet.
And so they chose to record Rocket 88,
which had been a big R&B hit,
but hadn't broken through into the local.
white audience their version of the song is also credited by some as the first rock and roll
record but it'll be a few weeks until bill haley becomes a full part of our story
a history of rock music and 500 songs is written produced and performed by andrew hickie
visit 500 songs.com that's 5000 the numbers songs.com to see transcriptions
liner notes and links to other materials, including a mixed cloud stream of all songs
excerpted in this episode. A history of rock music and 500 songs is supported by the backers
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