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风格
#沼泽摇滚
地区
欧美

艺人介绍

by Richie UnterbergerLouisiana pianist Roy Perkins made some minor singles on small regional labels in the late 50s and early 60s that were very much in the style of the eras New Orleans rock & roll and R&B. Perkins was not actually from New Orleans, but from Lafayette in Cajun country some ways to the west, and his recordings sometimes had a touch of swamp pop as well. Perkins also was involved in some recordings by Bobby Page, Scatman Patin, and Harry Simoneaux, musicians that he played with in the Riff Raffs.Perkins was born Ernie Suarez, and began playing R&B as a teenager in high school in the early 50s, when there were still very few White musicians playing the music. His name was changed to Roy Perkins by Mel Mallory of Mel-A-Dee Records, which released a single by Perkins and his band, Youre on My Mind. It was a number one hit in Lafayette and did well in New Orleans, and was covered by swamp pop singer Rod Bernard in 1959. In the late 50s Perkins moved to the Ram label, which operated out of Shreveport, LA, and his Drop Top was leased by Mercury, but went nowhere. He moved from piano to bass in the Riff Raffs. He did another single for Dart, and continued to play with the Riff Raffs until they broke up in 1962. Perkins wrote much of his material and was an amiable enough practitioner of New Orleans-styled rock, but frankly just a so-so talent whose compositions sounded sincere but formulaic. He never was a full-time musician; unlike a lot of fellows with his assets, he did keep his day job. But he did a few more singles after the Riff Raffs split, as well as an album, and played with swamp pop singer Johnnie Allan. He did a lot of unreleased tracks for Ram, and by combining a couple of his singles with that vault material and sessions he did with Scatman Patin, Bobby Page, and Harry Simoneaux, Ace was able to issue a 25-track retrospective of his work in the late 50s and early 60s.