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by Bill DahlWhen you draw up a short list of the R&B pioneers who exerted a primary influence on the development of rock & roll, respectfully place singer Roy Browns name near its very top. His seminal 1947 DeLuxe Records waxing of Good Rockin Tonight was immediately ridden to the peak of the R&B charts by shouter Wynonie Harris and subsequently covered by Elvis Presley, Ricky Nelson, Jerry Lee Lewis, and many more early rock icons (even Pat Boone). In addition, Browns melismatical pleading, gospel-steeped delivery impacted the vocal styles of B.B. King, Bobby Bland, and Little Richard (among a plethora of important singers). Clearly, Roy Brown was an innovator — and from 1948-1951, an R&B star whose wild output directly presaged rocks rise. Born in the Crescent City, Brown grew up all over the place: Eunice, LA (where he sang in church and worked in the sugarcane fields); Houston, TX; and finally Los Angeles by age 17. Back then, Bing Crosby was Browns favorite singer — but a nine-month stint at a Shreveport, LA, nightclub exposed him to the blues for the first time. He conjured up Good Rockin Tonight while fronting a band in Galveston, TX. Ironically, Harris wanted no part of the song when Brown first tried to hand it to him. When pianist Cecil Gant heard Browns knockout rendition of the tune in New Orleans, he had Brown sing it over the phone to a sleepy DeLuxe boss, Jules Braun, in the wee hours of the morning. Though Browns original waxing (with Bob Ogdens band in support) was a solid hit, Harris cover beat him out for top chart honors. Roy Brown didnt have to wait long to dominate the R&B lists himself. He scored 15 hits from mid-1948 to late 1951 for DeLuxe, ranging from the emotionally wracked crying blues of Hard Luck Blues (his biggest seller of all in 1950) to the party-time rockers Rockin at Midnight, Boogie at Midnight, Miss Fanny Brown, and Cadillac Baby. Strangely, his sales slumped badly from 1952 on, even though his frantic Hurry Hurry Baby, Aint No Rockin No More, Black Diamond, and Gal From Kokomo for Cincinnatis King Records rate among his hottest house rockers. Brown was unable to cash in on the rock & roll idiom he helped to invent, though he briefly rejuvenated his commercial fortunes at Imperial Records in 1957. Working with New Orleans producer Dave Bartholomew, then riding high with Fats Domino, Brown returned to the charts with the original version of Let the Four Winds Blow (later a hit for Domino) and cut the sizzling sax-powered rockers Diddy-Y-Diddy-O, Saturday Night, and Aint Gonna Do It. Not everything was an artistic triumph; Browns utterly lifeless cover of Buddy Knoxs Party Doll — amazingly, a chart entry for Brown — may well be the worst thing he ever committed to wax (rivaled only by a puerile School Bell Rock cut during a momentary return to King in 1959). After a long dry spell, Browns acclaimed performance as part of Johnny Otis troupe at the 1970 Monterey Jazz Festival and a 1973 LP for ABC-BluesWay began to rebuild his long-lost momentum. But it came too late; Brown died of a heart attack in 1981 at age 56, his role as a crucial link between postwar R&B and rocks initial rise still underappreciated by the masses.


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