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- Artikel-Nr.:BCD15516
- Gewicht in Kg.: 0.115
Joe Clay: Ducktail (CD)
Diese Titel gehören zu den legendärsten Rockabilly-Aufnahmen aller Zeiten! Und Joe Claywar einer der großen Unbekannten des Rockabilly - bis wir ihn schließlich fanden. Wer war er? Was wurde aus ihm? Woher kam er? Hier finden sich alle Antworten sowie all die unglaublich seltenen RCA-Aufnahmen und vorher unveröffentlichte Out-Takes, Lieder wie Get On The Right Track, Did You Mean Jelly Bean, Sixteen Chicks, Skipping Out And Sneaking In und Cracker Jack. Wildes, richtig wildes Zeug!
Video von Joe Clay - Ducktail (CD)
Artikeleigenschaften vonJoe Clay: Ducktail (CD)
Interpret: Joe Clay
Albumtitel: Ducktail (CD)
Genre Rock'n'Roll
Label Bear Family Records
- Preiscode AH
Artikelart CD
EAN: 4000127155160
- Gewicht in Kg: 0.115
Clay, Joe - Ducktail (CD) CD 1 | ||||
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01 | Ducktail | Joe Clay | ||
02 | Get On The Right Track | Joe Clay | ||
03 | You Look That Good To Me | Joe Clay | ||
04 | Did You Mean Jelly Bean | Joe Clay | ||
05 | Cracker Jack | Joe Clay | ||
06 | Goodbye, Goodbye | Joe Clay | ||
07 | Sixteen Chicks | Joe Clay | ||
08 | Slipping Out And Sneaking In | Joe Clay | ||
09 | Get On The Right Track | Joe Clay | ||
10 | You Look That Good To Me | Joe Clay | ||
11 | Doggone It | Joe Clay |
Claiborne Joseph Cheramie was born in Harvey, Louisiana, part of the sprawling metropolis of New Orleans. His parents Nellie and Claiborne Snr. encouraged an early interest in country music and at the age of twelve he was already a competent drummer, later also learning rhythm guitar and electric bass. By the early fifties the C.J. Cheramie Trio were regulars on the now defunct Radio WWEZ out of New Orleans with a thirteen minute show every Saturday. This led to personal appearances within Louisiana and Cheramie had soon shortened and flip flopped his first and middle names to arrive at a stage alias more likely to attract attention in the surreal world of show business. During 1955 his local reputation enabled him to play the prestigious Louisiana Hayride out of Shreveport where he shared billing with the newly emerging Elvis Presley. The whole world would soon discover Rock'n Roll and Joe Clay, an enthusiastic and ambitious teenager, was to be one of that very first generation of ist exponents. Within the next twelve months his career really started to take off and he played shows with Carl Perkins and Fats Domino and even filled in as a drummer for Elvis when he played Pontchartrain Amusement Park in New Orleans and D.J. Fontana could not make the gig.
Early in 1956 a WWEZ Disc Jockey with the delightful name of Jolly Charlie received an approach from an agent for RCA Records who were on the lookout for regional acts to sign for their new subsidiary label VIK and Joe quickly submitted a demonstration tape that he cut at the radio station offices at the Jung Hotel on Canal Street. It comprised two country tunes and two rockers including a frenzied Shake, Rattle And Roll.
RCA must have liked what they heard because Herman Diaz, Jr whisked Clay up to Houston and on April 25, 1956 accompanied by Link Davis and Hal Harris on guitars, lay down some wild rockabilly of sufficient quality to stand comparison with the very best.
The record company picked out the Link Davis' song Sixteen Chicks and Joe's cover of Rudy Grayzell's Ducktails to be the first single which was released on VIK 0211. A month later Joe Clay was back in the studio again.
This time RCA summond him to Headquarters in New York and four more songs were recorded at the Victor's studio 1, this time accompanied by a rhythm'n blues band fronted by Mickey Baker. His second and final single (VIK 0218) comprising Crackerjack and Get On The Right Track was culled from this session but RCA in their wisdom could find no use for the other tracks among them the amazingly titled Did You Mean Jelly Bean (What You Said Cabbage Head) which has remained a fascinating mystery until now. (Bear Family had made the other unissued titles available in 1983).
Although far from achieving hit status Joe Clay's contribution to the world of Rockabilly had attracted enough attention for him to obtain a booking on the Ed Sullivan Show as support for Nat King Cole. He was originally lined up to perform Ducktails but the shows producers no doubt still mindful of the national furore caused by Presley's early television appearances became nervous of further controversy. Joe ended up switching to the more restrained Only You which was felt more palatable for the mass American public.
The RCA contract was not renewed and having played his small part in Rock'n Roll history Joe returned to New Orleans and became C.J. Cheramie again. The name of Joe Clay dissolved into a memory and the C.J. Cheramie Trio supplemented their day jobs by playing the 544 Club and other night spots on Bourbon Street, occasionally backing local celebraties such as Dr. John, Frankie Ford and the late Smiley Lewis.
Nearly thirty years later America had forgotten Joe Clay but in Europe where old Rockabillies are sometimes treated with respect and reverence, his old records changed hands at alarming prices and reissues on RCA Great Britain and Bear Family introduced his name to a new audience born too late to rock the first time around. C.J. Cheramie carried on singing on his school bus and in Europe interested parties poured over the only known photo of Joe – a faded, indistinct, black and white print of Clay standing alongside Presley at the Louisiana Hayride – and wondered if he was dead or alive.
After years of searching, an English Rockabilly fan returned from the States bearing news that Joe Clay had been seen playing guitar in a local band in New Orleans.
After weeks of frustration, the British Rock'n Roll Promoter 'Wild' Willie Jeffery was able to arrange a concert tour with shows in England, Holland, and Sweden.
This album contains the complete recorded works of Joe Clay. It is savage, wild, primeval Rock'n Roll music guaranteed to start your feet tapping and to get you up and on to the dance floor.
The future looks bright for C.J. Cheramie as he signs autographs on the school bus. Anybody who can sing - Did You Mean Jelly Bean, What You Said Cabbage Head deserves to succeed.
rockabilly royalty
There are only eleven tracks on this CD but you DON'T NEED ANY MORE than this. Joe Clay recorded just nine tunes for a subsidiary label of RCA in the 1950s and they are the very definition of rockabilly, as much so as Gene Vincent, Johnny Burnett, and Ronnie Self (all of whom are well represented on Bear Family releases). Joe Clay had just two sessions for Vik, one in Houston with Hal Harris & Link Davis on guitars and one in New York with Mickey Baker on guitar. These cats will put blisters on your eardrums! They rock that hard. And they needed to in order to keep up with Joe's equally blistering singing. Especially on the New York session it sounds like there was a bare minimum of rehearsal, almost like they are winging it with the tapes rolling. There is just that much rocking tension in these tunes. Perfect example of why to not over-rehearse before recording. An absolutely perfect album of real rockabilly music.
Rockabilly rules
i know you dig the way i bop! genius
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