Friday 27 October 2017

Bill Lee Riley - 1966 - At The Whisky A-Go-Go


Tobacco Road/Dimples/Baby Please Don't Go/Geraldine


Billy Lee Riley (October 5, 1933 – August 2, 2009) was an American rockabilly musician, singer-songwriter, and record producer. His most memorable recordings include "Rock with Me Baby" and "Red Hot".

Born in Pocahontas, Arkansas, the son of a sharecropper, Riley learned to play guitar from black farm workers. After four years in the Army, Riley first recorded in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1955 before being lured to Sun Studios by Sam Phillips. He recorded "Trouble Bound" for Jack Clement and Slim Wallace. Phillips obtained the rights and released "Trouble Bound" backed with "Rock with Me Baby" on September 1, 1956 (Sun 245). His first hit was "Flyin' Saucers Rock and Roll" backed with "I Want You Baby", released February 23, 1957 (Sun 260), with backing piano by Jerry Lee Lewis, after which he recorded "Red Hot" backed with "Pearly Lee", released September 30, 1957 (Sun 277).


"Red Hot" was showing a lot of promise as a hit record, but Sam Phillips stopped promoting it and switched to promoting "Great Balls of Fire" by Jerry Lee Lewis. Riley felt that his own chances of chart success were compromised when Phillips diverted resources to Lewis's career. He had other Sun recordings, and they likewise did not have a lot of sales, as his promotion had stopped. Like other artists such as Sonny Burgess, Hayden Thompson, Ray Harris, and Warren Smith, chart success largely eluded him.

Considered good looking and with wild stage moves, Riley had a brief solo career with his backing band the Little Green Men. Riley and his Little Green Men were the main Sun studio band. They were Riley, the guitarist Roland Janes, the drummer J.M. Van Eaton, bassist Marvin Monroe Peppers, and Jimmy Wilson, later joined by Martin Willis.

In 1960, he left Sun and started Rita Record label with Roland Janes. They produced the national hit record "Mountain of Love" by Harold Dorman. He later started two other labels, Nita and Mojo. In 1962, he moved to Los Angeles and worked as a session musician with Dean Martin, the Beach Boys, Herb Alpert, and Sammy Davis Jr. among others, as well as recording under various aliases.

Riley appeared in a Scopitone performing the song High Heel Sneakers filmed live at the Whiskey A Go Go 1965. That same year Mercury Records released the LP Whiskey A Go Go presents Billy Lee Riley, recorded live at the Whiskey A Go Go in Hollywood.


 In the early 1970s, Riley quit music to return to Arkansas to begin his own construction business. In 1978 "Red Hot" and "Flyin' Saucers Rock 'n' Roll" were covered by Robert Gordon and Link Wray, which led to a one-off performance in Memphis in 1979, the success of which led to further recording at Sun Studio and a full-time return to performing.

Rediscovered by Bob Dylan in 1992, who had been a fan since 1956, Riley played rock and roll, blues, and country blues. His album Hot Damn! (Capricorn, 1997) was nominated for a Grammy Award. He was injured falling on a slippery department store floor in 2005, requiring two surgeries as a result. In 2006, he released a country CD, Hillbilly Rockin' Man.

The Rockabilly Hall of Fame reported in summer 2009 that Riley was in poor health, with stage four colon cancer. His last public performance was in June 2009 at the New Daisy Theatre on Beale Street in Memphis, when he took part in Petefest 2009, honoring the historian Pete Daniel, who had befriended Riley while helping launch the Memphis Rock 'n' Soul Museum. Supported by a walker, Riley rocked out on "Red Hot" and other of his old hits. He died of colon cancer on August 2, 2009, in Jonesboro, Arkansas.

2 comments:

  1. Any chance you can post Riley's "Harmonica and the Blues" on Crown, from 1962?

    ReplyDelete