Ronnie Self (July 5, 1938 - August 28, 1981) was a
rockabilly singer and songwriter.
Although Ronnie Self found only limited success as a recording artist in the 1950s and '60s, he wrote hit songs for other vocalists and became the epitome of rockabilly: wild, untamed, erratic. His solo career was unsuccessful, despite being signed to contracts with Columbia and then Decca from the late 1950s through the early 1960s. His only charted single was
Bop-A-Lena; recorded in 1957 and released in 1958, it reached #68 on the Billboard charts. His boastful country anthem Ain't I'm a Dog was a regional hit in the South, but failed to score nationally.
Although Ronnie Self found only limited success as a recording artist in the 1950s and '60s, he wrote hit songs for other vocalists and became the epitome of rockabilly: wild, untamed, erratic. His solo career was unsuccessful, despite being signed to contracts with Columbia and then Decca from the late 1950s through the early 1960s. His only charted single was
Bop-A-Lena; recorded in 1957 and released in 1958, it reached #68 on the Billboard charts. His boastful country anthem Ain't I'm a Dog was a regional hit in the South, but failed to score nationally.
Ronnie Self was born in 1938 in Tin Town, Missouri, and
lived a rural life with his family until his parents decided to move to
Springfield when he was still a boy. Ronnie Self was a respectful child who
learned to appreciate music at an early age. He took up the guitar, and
discovered the joys of country music while still living on the farm. He
listened to the recordings of such country artists as Hank Williams and Jimmie
Rodgers, but when Elvis got popular in the mid 50s, Ronnie Self found a new
kind of music with which to identify.
Like many of the early rockabilly performers, he
successfully merged the two musical styles and fashioned his own music.
According to legend, he got into a rockin' band while still in high school. Seems
that Ronnie got a little upset with one of his teachers at school one day, and
went after the teacher with a baseball bat. So much for the three Rs!
Ronnie Self went into rock'n'roll. He was always a little wild.
Ronnie Self went into rock'n'roll. He was always a little wild.
Not bad, though. His music was a bit wild, too. When he tried out for a
radio talent contest once, the station rejected him because his act was too
strange. Later, he set out for Nashville, where he recorded for a number of
major labels, including ABC-Paramount, Columbia, Decca, and Kapp. He also wrote
for Cedarville Music, a big Nashville publisher. His manager billed him as 'Mr.
Frantic', presumably for his restless energy on stage.
In the late 50s, he recorded a number of strong rockabilly sides, including 'Big Fool', 'Date Bait', 'Ain't I'm A Dog' and 'Bop-A-Lena'. It seemed that Ronnie Self was eighteen, cocky, and a little crazy, and headed for the top.
But his one hit -
and it reached only number 63 in 1958 - was 'Bop-A-Lena', a song by Mel Tillis
and Webb Pierce. Ronnie Self did go on to write 'Sweet Nothin's' and 'I'm
Sorry' for Brenda Lee in late 1959 and early 1960, but he sank into personal
troubles and frustration with Nashville. He even burned his gold records in
front of the BMI office there. He was a perfectionist. He could not
tolerate those who were not..
tolerate those who were not..
By the early '60s, the bottom had fallen out of his
reputation, however, as his chronic alcoholism began taking its toll. Pressured
by the twin responsibilities of taking care of a family and maintaining a
career, he chose the career, but he couldn't keep that going properly either.
He left Decca in 1962 without a hit or many prospects and was signed to the
Kapp label, where he cut a pair of songs, "Houdini" and "Bless
My Broken Heart."
During the mid-'60s, he continued writing songs and
living out a chaotic personal life, which was characterized by increasingly
bizarre and self-destructive episodes, some played out in public and many a
product of his triple-threat addictions to alcohol, marijuana, and various
pills.
By the early '80s, his condition had deteriorated so severely so that he couldn't work any longer.
On August 28, 1981, he died in Springfield, MO. However, Brenda Lee's cover of
his songs I'm Sorry and Sweet Nothin's became major pop classics and his
country gospel song Ain't That Beautiful Singing, recorded by Jake Hess, was
awarded a Grammy for Best Sacred Performance in 1969.
Why Ronnie Self never made it as a performer is one of
the great mysteries and injustices of pop music history. He had the look and
the sound - a mix of country, rockabilly and R&B that sometimes made him
sound like a white Little Richard, but mostly like the young Elvis or Carl
Perkins - and he wasn't lacking for good songs, which he mostly wrote himself.
He should have been there, thought of in the same breath as Perkins or Jerry
Lee Lewis; instead, he's a footnote in rock & roll history outside of
Europe, where he's treated as a legend. (info various, mainly nervous.co.uk
& answers.com)
Any chance you can re-upped this album of Ronnie Self born 5 July 1938
ReplyDeleteThank you
Thank you
ReplyDeleteIt would be very interesting to recover Ronnie Self's music. Thank you in advance.
ReplyDeleteSorry RF just couldn’t find the album you requested, but I did find this one. Hope it will do…..
ReplyDeleteFor “Ronnie Self – Bop-A-Lena (1990 Bear Family)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/gnJMs
1. Bop A Lena
2. I Ain't Goin' Nowhere
3. You're So Right For Me
4. Ain't I'm A Dog
5. Too Many Lovers
6. Date Bait
7. Big Blon' Baby
8. Petrified
9. Flame Of Love
10. Big Fool
11. Black Night Blues
12. Pretty Bad Blues
13. Three Hearts Later
14. Rocky Road Blues
15. Do It Now
16. Bless My Broken Heart
17. This Must Be The Place
18. Big Town
19. Some Other World
20. Instant Man
21. Oh Me, Oh My
22. Whistling Words
23. Past, Present And Future
24. So High
25. I've Been There
26. Moon Burn
27. Some Things You Can't Change
28. Houdini
29. Go Go The Cannibal
30. Ugly Stick
The meeting is magnificent. Very, very valid. It is a pleasure. Extremely grateful.
ReplyDelete