NOTE: I can load my shared among different channels bookmark this link in your browser instant access to an index of links to all John1948's Oldies Classics. LINK: tinyurl.com not quite satisfied, a 1950 R & B star on the strength of his immortal New Orleans classic "Lawdy Miss Clawdy," singer Lloyd Price yearned for massive pop acceptance. He also found an assault on the rock & roll reading of the old blues "Stagger Lee" and unabashedly pop-slanted"Personality" and "I'm Gonna Get Married" (the latter pair of sound rather far from his Crescent City beginnings). Growing up in Kenner, a suburb of New Orleans, Price seminal sides by Louis Jordan, the Liggins brothers exposed, Roy Milton, Amos Milburn from the jukebox in his mother's common fish fry. Lloyd and his younger brother Leo (who later co-wrote Little Richard's "Send Me Some Lovin '"), a band for local consumption, all while in her teens.Bandleader Dave Bartholomew was enough to invite Specialty Records boss Art Rupe to see the young singer impressed (this was evident when Bartholomew was momentarily at odds with his employers for a long time to rival Imperial). In his first event of specialties in 1952, he sang his classic eight Blues Bar Price "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" (its rolling piano intro courtesy of moonlighting Fats Domino). E 'on top of the R & B charts for an extended period, so that a legitimate star price before it was quite oldVote. Four ...
Keywords: pop, rock, r&b
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