egroj world: Billy Lee Riley • Repossession Blues - The Roland Janes Recordings

Friday, August 30, 2024

Billy Lee Riley • Repossession Blues - The Roland Janes Recordings

 


Hijo de un aparcero de Arkansas medio cherokee, Billy Lee era parte de la llamada basura blanca del sur y con solo 6 años ya tenía que estar recogiendo algodón (a esa edad empezó a tocar la armónica como distracción en los descansos). De adolescente pasaba más tiempo con los jornaleros negros que con los chicos de su edad, y de ellos fue de quién aprendió a tocar la guitarra, principalmente blues. Huyendo de la pobreza se alistó en la Marina de Estados Unidos sin tener edad para ello falsificando su partida de nacimiento en 1951. A pesar de que estaban en guerra con Corea Billy Lee sacaba tiempo para tocar, para componer canciones e incluso para grabar algun acetato en el barco, con un estilo country muy acelerado que ya presagiaba lo que habría de ser su toque rockabilly personal. En 1955 se licencía y marcha a Memphis, La Meca del rock and roll en esos dias, con un buen bagaje de composiciones propias, donde forma una banda de hillbilly llamada The Arkansas Valley Ranch Boys. Consiguieron algunas actuaciones en la radio que Billy alternaba con apariciones con un grupo de gospel. Un dia cogió a dos autoestopistas, Jack Clement y Slim Wallace, que resultaron ser dos músicos que estaban formando un estudio de grabación. Se hicieron muy amigos y juntos grabaron "Trouble bound", canción que impresiona tanto al gurú del r´n´r Sam Phillips que le ficha para su discográfica Sun. Le cambia el grupo de acompañamiento (ahora son Billy Lee Riley y sus Little Green Men, porque van siempre vestidos de verde, uno de los cuales es un joven pianista llamado Jerry Lee Lewis) y regraban "Trouble bound" en 1956, pero su primer éxito, y su canción más conocida, no llega hasta el año siguiente con "Flying saucers rock and roll", un salvaje rockabilly que gracias a una espectacular puesta en escena les convierte en el grupo revelación sureño. Lewis iniciaría su carrera en solitario gracias a los arreglos que hizo Riley para la canción "Crazy arms". En 1958 Riley graba una magnífica versión del "Red Hot" de Emerson pero Phillips no la distribuye como es debido ya que ha reservado todos los recursos de la discográfica para su nueva estrella Jerry Lee Lewis. Riley se emborracha y monta un follón en Sun que solo Phillips puede aplacar diciendole que tiene mejores planes para él. Era solo comedia, las siguientes grabaciones de Riley (no solo rockabilly sino tambien de blues y de rythm & blues) no se vendieron tampoco y rompió su contrato con Sun en 1959. Tras pasar sin pena ni gloria por otras modestas discográficas, en los ñaos 60 Billy Lee se empleó como músico de estudio para otros artistas, así fue el guitarrista del éxito de Herb Alpert "The lonely bull", y la fantástica armónica de "Houston" de Dean Martin, del "Help me Rhonda" de los Beach Boys o del "But not for me" de Sammy Davis Jr., aparte de otros acompañamientos para gente como Ricky Nelson o Johnny Rivers.

///////

Son of a half-Cherokee Arkansas sharecropper, Billy Lee was part of the so-called southern white trash and by the time he was 6 years old he had to be picking cotton (at that age he started playing the harmonica as a distraction during breaks). As a teenager he spent more time with black day laborers than with boys his age, and it was from them that he learned to play the guitar, mainly blues. Fleeing poverty he enlisted in the United States Navy without age to do so by falsifying his birth certificate in 1951. Although they were at war with Korea Billy Lee took time to play, to compose songs and even to record some acetate on the boat, with a very fast country style that already presaged what would be his rockabilly personal touch. In 1955 he graduated and went to Memphis, the Mecca of rock and roll in those days, with a good background of his own compositions, where he formed a hillbilly band called The Arkansas Valley Ranch Boys. They got some performances on the radio that Billy alternated with appearances with a gospel group. One day he caught two hitchhikers, Jack Clement and Slim Wallace, who turned out to be two musicians who were forming a recording studio. They became very close friends and together they recorded "Trouble bound", a song that so impresses the r'n'r guru Sam Phillips that he takes him to his label Sun. He changes the accompaniment group (now they are Billy Lee Riley and his Little Green Men, because they are always dressed in green, one of which is a young pianist named Jerry Lee Lewis) and re-recorded "Trouble bound" in 1956, but his first success, and its best-known song, does not arrive until the following year with "Flying saucers rock and roll", a savage rockabilly that thanks to a spectacular staging makes them the southern revelation group. Lewis would start his solo career thanks to Riley's arrangements for the song "Crazy arms". In 1958 Riley recorded a magnificent version of Emerson's "Red Hot" but Phillips did not distribute it properly because he has reserved all the resources of the label for his new star Jerry Lee Lewis. Riley gets drunk and rides a mess in Sun that only Phillips can placate by telling him he has better plans for him. It was just comedy, the following recordings of Riley (not only rockabilly but also blues and rythm & blues) did not sell either and broke his contract with Sun in 1959. After passing without grief or glory for other modest record companies, in the ñaos 60 Billy Lee was employed as a studio musician for other artists, such as the guitarist of Herb Alpert's hit "The lonely bull", and the fantastic harmonica of "Houston" by Dean Martin, from "Help me Rhonda" by the Beach Boys or "But not for me" by Sammy Davis Jr., apart from other accompaniments for people like Ricky Nelson or Johnny Rivers.


Tracks:
A1 - Billy Riley - Red Hot
Bass – Roland Janes
Drums – James Van Eaton*
Vocals, Guitar, Harmonica – Billy Riley*
Written-By – Emerson*
A2 - Billy Riley* Aka Lightnin' Leon– - Dark Muddy Bottom
Bass – Roland Janes
Drums – James Van Eaton*
Piano – Larry Mohoberac*
Vocals, Guitar, Harmonica – Billy Riley*
Written-By – Mercy Dee*
A3 - Billy Riley* Aka Lightnin' Leon– - Reposession Blues
Bass – Roland Janes
Drums – James Van Eaton*
Piano – Larry Mohoberac*
Vocals, Guitar, Harmonica – Billy Riley*
Written-By – Janes*
A4 - Billy Riley - Mud Island
Drums – James Van Eaton*
Guitar – Roland Janes
Harmonica – Billy Riley*
Piano – Tommy Bennett
Saxophone [Sax] – Martin Willis
Written-By – Riley*, Janes*
A5 - Billy Riley - My Baby's Got Love
Bass – Roland Janes
Drums – James Van Eaton*
Guitar – Wiley Gann
Piano – Tommy Bennett
Vocals, Lead Guitar – Billy Riley*
Written-By – Dorman*
A6 - Billy Riley - That's What I Want To Do
Bass – Roland Janes
Drums – James Van Eaton*
Piano – Larry Mohoberac*
Vocals, Guitar – Billy Riley*
Written-By – Bill Huskey
A7 - Martin "Willy" Willis - Columbus Stockade Blues
Bass – Billy Riley*
Drums – James Van Eaton*
Guitar – Roland Janes
Saxophone – Martin Willis
Written-By – Eva Sargent, Jimmie Davis
A8 - Martin "Willy" Willis - San Antonio Rock
Bass – Riully Riley*
Drums – James Van Eaton*
Guitar – Roland Janes
Saxophone – Martin Willis
Written-By – Bob Wills
B1 - J.M. Van Eaton - Beat-Nik
Bass – Billy Riley*
Drums – J.M. Van Eaton*
Guitar – Roland Janes
Piano – Tommy Bennett
Written-By – Riley*, Van Eaton*, Janes*
B2 - J.M. Van Eaton - Foggy
Bass – Billy Riley*
Drums – J.M. Van Eaton*
Guitar – Roland Janes
Piano – Tommy Bennett
Written-By – Riley*, Van Eaton*, Janes*
B3 - J.M. Van Eaton - Jump Back
Bass, Vocals – Prentiss McPhail
Drums, Vocals – J.M. Van Eaton*
Organ – James Luther Crabb
Vocals, Guitar – Travis Wammack
Written-By – R. Thomas*
B4 - J.M. Van Eaton - Out-Standing
Written-By – Van Eaton*
B5 - J.M. Van Eaton - Something Else
Bass, Vocals – Prentiss McPhail
Drums, Vocals – J.M. Van Eaton*
Organ – James Luther Crabb
Saxophone – Ed Logan, Les Brueck
Trumpet – Ted Garretson (2)
Vocals, Guitar – Travis Wammack
Written-By – Van Eaton*
B6 - Billy Riley - That's What I Want To Do
Bass – Roland Janes
Drums – J.M. Van Eaton*
Piano – Larry Mohoberac*
Vocals, Guitar – Billy Riley*
Written-By – Huskey*
B7 - Billy Riley - Too Much Woman For Me
Drums – J.M. Van Eaton*
Guitar – Roland Janes
Saxophone [Sax] – Martin Willis
Vocals – Billy Riley*
Written-By – Jack Clement

Note:
Dub off disc; the tapes are lost: Barry McVicker, Montclair Sound.
Track B4 left out on sleeve back, but present on B-side label.
A1 to A3: Recorded 1959 at Pepper Studio, Memphis, Tennessee.
A4: Recorded early 1960 at Sonic Studio, Memphis, Tennessee.
A5: Recorded 1960 at Pepper Studio, Memphis, Tennessee.
A6: Recorded 1959 at Fernwood Studio, Memphis, Tennessee.
A7 to B2: Recorded 1959 at Royal Studio, Memphis, Tennessee.
B3, B5: Recorded 1964 at Sonic Studio, Memphis, Tennessee.
B6: Recorded 1959 at Fernwood Studio, Memphis, Tennessee.
B7: Recorded 1959/1960 at Royal Studio, Memphis, Tennessee.

Label:    Bear Family Records – BFX 15272
Series:    The Roland Janes Sessions
Country:    Germany
Released:    1988
Genre:    Rock, Blues, Folk, World, & Country
Style:    Rock & Roll, Rockabilly
https://www.discogs.com/release/5113288-Billy-Riley-The-Little-Green-Men-Repossession-Blues-The-Roland-Janes-Recordings




MORE Billy Lee Riley ...



 

This file is intended only for preview!
I ask you to delete the file from your hard drive or device after reading it.
thank for the original uploader


 
 
 
 

5 comments:

  1. Son grabaciones de cuando el R&R ya había muerto: Elvis ya no era el salvaje de antes de estar en el ejército, Jerry Lee Lewis había sepultado involuntariamente su carrera en el R&R al casarse con su prima menor de edad, Buddy Holly ya no estaba en este mundo,... y todo se había convertido o se estaba convirtiendo en Pop y en la época que Diego A. Manrique etiquetó como "de los niños bonitos" (Ricky Nelson, Frankie Avalon, Paul Anka, etc.). Una lástima. Para mi gusto, claro, pero espero que much@s disfruten de este material, que durante un buen tiempo no fue posible o fácil de encontrar. Buen finde a tó quisqui ;)

    ReplyDelete
  2. (Otro Anónimo) - ... y si no recuerdo mal Little Richard se había metido a cura, y Chuck Berry estaba en la cárcel, Ritchie Valens y Big Bopper también estaban bajo tierra. A mi lo de Riley de esta época y en adelante no me tira, pero admito que Flying Saucers y Red Hot tienen un salvajismo fantástico. Esta versión suya del "Baby Please Don't Go" popularizado a partir de mitad de los años 30 también me atrajo desde la primera escucha:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Btt6-naL9XU
    Saludos.

    ReplyDelete
  3. ٩(^ᴗ^)۶ ¡Infinitas gracias, Egroj! :)
    🤗

    ReplyDelete