Carl Lee Perkins (April 9, 1932 – January 19, 1998) was an American pioneer of rockabilly music, a mix of rhythm and blues and country music, recorded most notably at Sun Records in Memphis, beginning in 1954. An outstanding performer, his touch on rock and roll music is still heard to this day, especially through his fine compositions and guitar playing. His best known song is "Blue Suede Shoes".
Along with Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, and Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins was one of the seminal rockabilly artists on Sam Phillips' Sun label, but a series of bad breaks, followed by personal problems, undermined his solo career. Despite that, Perkins persevered, creating a body of work that has been
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Perkins grew up poor in a sharecropping family that picked cotton in various northwestern Tennessee fields around Tiptonville. Perkins was first put to work at age six, and it was in the fields that he first heard gospel songs. At night, he heard hillbilly country and Delta blues over the family radio. An older, black field hand befriended Perkins and taught him to play guitar; by age 10 Perkins was entertaining his
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He kicked off his musical career in the mid-’40s, performing at local dances with his brothers Jay and Clayton as the Perkins Brothers Band. In 1953 drummer W.S. “Fluke” Holland joined. The next year, after hearing Presley’s debut Sun single, “Blue Moon of Kentucky” (a Bill Monroe song Perkins and his group had been playing since 1949), Perkins and his brothers drove to Memphis to audition for Phillips. Shortly thereafter, they signed to the label and released Perkins’ first single, “Movie Magg” (a song Perkins wrote at age 13) b/w “Turn Around.”
In early 1955 came “Let the Jukebox Keep On Playing” b/w “Gone Gone Gone.” Perkins’ biggest hit came in late 1956.
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“Blue Suede Shoes”; over time, Perkins’ original sold more copies.)
Perkins was at the height of his career when tragedy struck. He and his group were driving to New York to appear on
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In early 1958 Perkins moved to Columbia Records, where he recorded several more minor rockabilly hits, but by the early ’60s, he’d hit a low point. On a British tour in 1964, Perkins was surprised to learn that the Beatles admired him and that George Harrison taught himself to play guitar by copying Perkins’ records. Perkins became friendly with the Beatles and oversaw the sessions where they recorded five of his songs - “Matchbox,”
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As a solo artist, Perkins cut some country records and
recorded an album with NRBQ. After the Cash show ended, he toured as Johnny’s guitarist until 1975. He then formed the C.P. Express with his sons Greg and Stan, and started his own label, Suede, on which he released two albums (The Carl
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Through the years, Perkins continued to record and write. He cowrote the Judds’ 1989 hit “Let Me Tell You About Love,” on which he played lead guitar. In 1992 Dolly Parton had a C&W hit with a song Perkins wrote for her, “Silver and Gold.” In 1992 Perkins was diagnosed with throat cancer; following
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from The Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll (Simon & Schuster, 2001)
1 comment:
For Carl Perkins Original Sun Greatest Hits go here:
http://uploaded.net/file/wmzu251m
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