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Little Richard - The Formative Years: 1951-1953 Audio CD

A fair review of the Little Richard "The Formative Years: 1951-1953" Audio CD. Please note that the below review is the views of the authors, and authors only. You can get a complete list of all Little Richard reviews here, or go back to the Little Richard tabs.

Little Richard Band: Little Richard
Title: The Formative Years: 1951-1953
Rating:
Release Date: 1994-06-27
Media: Audio CD

Tracks: 1: Get Rich Quick 2: Why Did You Leave Me? 3: Taxi Blues 4: Every Hour 5: I Brought It All on Myself 6: Thinkin' 'Bout My Mother 7: Ain't Nothing Happenin' 8: Please Have Mercy on Me 9: Get Rich Quick [Alternative] 10: Thinkin' 'Bout My Mother [Take A] 11: I Brought It All on Myself [Take C] 12: Little Richard's Boogie 13: Directly from My Heart to You 14: I Love My Baby 15: Maybe I'm Right 16: Ain't That Good News 17: Fool at the Wheel 18: Rice, Red Beans and Turnip Greens 19: Always 20: Directly from My Heart to You [Alternative][#] 21: I Love My Baby [Take 2][#] 22: Please Have Mercy on Me [Take A]

The "One and Only"
As I had flipped over LR (my epiphany had come with "Long Tall Sally," "Ready Teady," etc. Once upon a time, I had the RCA Camden LP that many of these cuts are from. ) it seemed that these recordings were strange. "I Brought it All on Myself" even seemed slowed down a bit (?) I had everything that Richard did on Specialty, and, after all, there was nothing that matched the excitement of his work with that band in N/O. I was just 11, but I copied many of Richards piano breaks, including the bass lines, and together with a friend (who played sort of a rockabilly guitar) put some neat little tunes together (about 12-15 #'s). We had lots of fun, and a bit of a following for about a year -- but we were very young. . . I gave away that RCA recording, with handfuls of other records, at college. Years later, I found myself singing those old tunes, as Richard sung them, in my head -- especially "Ain't Nothin' Happening. " At last, here was a disc with all that and more.
Recently I came across "Rice, Red Beans and Turnip Greens" on an imported collection.
One has to remember that Richard was just a mid-teen when most of this was recorded. His voice is remarkable--very mature, and he doesn't waste a word.
The Tempo Toppers cuts are priceless. Among these "Fool at the Wheel" is striking. In it's day, this record would have been absolutely banned from popular radio (let alone the fact that it was offered by a "colored" group). Today, the same recording might serve as a lesson on drinking and driving.
Believe me, for anyone who has a mature appreciation for R&B, this is OLD GOLD!!!.


History In The Making


At 19 he wrangled a recording contract with RCA Victor and in 1951-52 he cut a variety of R&B tunes. Richard Penniman was born in Macon, Georgia on December 5, 1932 and, years before he bashed down the doors leading to international fame later in 1955, he began to pay his dues performing with a number of itinerant medicine shows and in clubs in the South. In 1952 the company released Every Hour b/w Taxi Blues (RCA Victor 47-4392) on which Richard emulates Roy Brown, then one of the biggest names in R&B. It sold quite a few copies but not enough to get him onto the national charts. Nor did the next release, Get Rich Quick b/w Thinkin' 'Bout My Mother (RCA Victor 47-4582).

On the A-side he tried his hand at imitating another R&B giant, the blues shouter Wynonie Harris, but on the flip his stark delivery hinted at what was to come. The follow-up singles - Why Did You Leave Me? b/w Ain't Nothin' Happenin' (RCA Victor 47-4772) and I Brought It All On Myself b/w Please Have Mercy On Me (RCA 47-5025) - also failed to chart. But his own style was emerging.

His next stop was with Don Robey's Peacock label in Houston where he joined up with The Tempo Toppers (Jimmy Swan, Billy Brooks, Raymond Taylor on organ, and Barry Gilmore). The first cuts, released in 1953, were Fool At The Wheel b/w Ain't That Good News (NOT the Sam Cooke hit) on Peacock 1616, and Rice, Red Beans And Turnip Greens b/w Always (NOT the old standard) on Peacock 1628 in 1954.

In 1955 he teamed up with The Johnny Otis Band for Little Richard Boogie b/w Directly From My Heart To You on Peacock 1658 and I Love My Baby b/w Maybe I'm Right on Peacock 1673. Now his sound was developed.

While the charts always evaded him in these early years, this is history in the making and on several of the cuts there is no mistaking the dynamic talent that would soon explode on the Specialty label with Tutti Frutti. Just a great companion CD for The Specialty Sessions box set. .


Very Important Recordings
It seems that record companies were not yet ready for the pioneering sound of "Long Tall Sally". Although it has been said that Richard *Rocked* in Clubs in the early '50s his recordings on RCA and Peacock from that era are more in the melancholy slow blues and swingin' fast blues tradition of the 1940s. But just because tracks like "Get Rich Quick", "Ain't Nothin' Happening", "Taxi Blues" have only a hint of what to come, that doesn't mean they do not represent an amazing new talent on the scene, singer-songwriter-showman Little Richard. Despite the obvious echoes of Roy Brown, Billy Wright, etc. , you can hear a joyful tenor singing circles around any "influences", and on "Little Richard's Boogie" you can hear a funky piano leaving the other instrumentalists breathless.
A big selling point are the early incarnations of Specialty Classics like "Directly From My Heart You" (released and alternate). This blues-based number was recalled by Mr. Penniman in late '65 for Modern Records, as well. [Look for the 45rpm version].
With the seemingly weekly release of unissued Elvis Presley, plus a decent number of rarities out there by other Rock and Roll Hall of Famers, this highly under-represented artist has (apparently) only his '50s material in "previously unreleased" form. This CD may cry out for '60s and '70s companions but more than stands alone. Well, Allright!.


You can see a complete list of all Little Richard discography, or go back to the Little Richard tabs. There is also a good guide on how to read guitar tabs here.

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