Gospel Song Lyric
Re: Go ahead, I dare ya.....
Date: 9 Apr 2003 23:02:19 -0700Newsgroups: rec.music.rock-pop-r+b.1950s
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> That's My Desire (HUGE Frankie Laine influence!!!) Well, sure Bruce. THAT'S MY DESIRE was a Gold Record. By 1958 (Buddy Holly's time), Frankie Laine had racked up 19 Gold Records. He'd had, at that time, 59 singles that charted. He'd had his own TV show, starred in a half dozen movies, and was one of the highest paid singers of the time (the highest paid before Elvis). Now (ignoring artistic aspirations for the moment), if Buddy Holly wanted to be a successful singer, then he'd have wanted to take some cues from Frankie Laine. Re FL's artistic influence on BH (R&R in general): I've recently purchased the first 2 Bear Family albums -- which constitute all of Laine's commercial recordings from 1944 - 1955. I was surprised to find that a fair amount of his singles from this period sound pretty darn close to R&R. His early recordings have a strong R&B/Jazz feel to them (many of these make for far stronger candidates for R&R forerunners than the majority of songs recently elected into the "Hall of Fame" by this group). With songs like AIN'T THAT JUST LIKE A WOMAN, BEBOP SPOKEN HERE, IT AIN'T GONNA BE LIKE THAT, THAT AIN'T RIGHT, DON'T DO SOMETHING TO SOMEONE ELSE, etc., he has to be considered an R&B singer (as well as Jazz, Western, Pop, etc.). But it his work in the early 50s, at Columbia, that really surprised me. Because, along with the great Standards I was familiar with, he also recorded a lot of songs that are, if not straight R&R, only a hair's breadth away from it. First off, there are the duets the Jo Stafford: HAMBONE, PIECE-A-PUDDIN', SETTIN' THE WOODS ON FIRE, GOIN' LIKE WILDFIRE, and HEY GOOD LOOKIN' are a mix of country and rock. Backed on many of these by an electric guitar (some of the guitar solos make Chuck Berry sound tame), these songs are loud, uptempo, even violent (musically), rock songs (written by Hank Williams or a variation on the Bo Diddley/Papa's gonna buy you a... lyric). 6 of the Laine/Stafford collaborations charted -- 3 of which I'd consider to be R&R (or Damn Near R&R) songs. In 1955, he collaborated with The Four Lads (who had earlier backed Johnnie Ray on *the* first R&R song, CRY) on 12 gospel songs -- 11 of which ROCK! These songs have all the elements of the R&R/Doo Wop groups including driving rhythms, hand clapping, Doo Wa's, multi-part harmonies, etc. -- and blow all the Doo Wop music I've ever heard clear out of the stratosphere (including even the great Dion and the Belmonts). Laine does a spoken interlude in two of these and (as in his Hawaiian SONG OF THE ISLANDS) immediately brings to mind later recordings by Elvis. Some of his solo efforts from this period would also qualify as R&R or Near-R&R. TONIGHT YOU BELONG TO ME (one of the first Laine songs I ever heard -- from an old 78) is a slow rock ballad. In the accompanying Bear Family book, Laine says that he did this song sort of like a hymn. I can see what he means, but it's closer to Johnnie Ray and Elvis (who hadn't hit yet). He also did a couple of uptempo, country flavored tunes, HEY JOE! and HAWKEYE, which are similar to his duets with Stafford. Both of these songs were hits (HEY JOE!, in the Top Ten, went Gold). BUBBLES (described by Laine as a half-assed rock song) is actually a very good Pop Rock song from 1955. How much was Buddy Holly influenced by Frankie Laine? Probably not a lot ... that is to say, not in a direct fashion. Their vocal styles are completely different (Frankie didn't hiccup), and none of Frankie's songs have Buddy's "Tex-Mex" sound. Still, when one of the biggest singers of the day had a long string of proto-rock hits, I don't see how any R&R singers who follow in his wake can be entirely free of his influence. Indirectly, his music, like that of Johnnie Ray (and to a lesser extent, many of the Mercury and Columbia stars) served as a bridge between the big band era crooner style and R&R.
