Billy Mure (born Sebastian Muré.; July 7, 1915 – September 25, 2013) was an American guitarist who recorded several albums in the 1950s and 1960s in a variety of styles, including surf, Hawaiian music, swing, pop, and lounge. He was one of those uncredited session men from the 1950s whose guitar licks have graced many a rock n roll record. Some aficionados of early electric guitar music rate him at least as highly as Les Paul.
Billy’s parents came from Sicily and settled in the Bronx.
At five years old, he’d taught himself to play the violin, which he played
outside his father’s barber shop, with the case open, to get money for the
family. By the age of 7 he was a self-taught guitarist. By 13 he was composing.
Between 1937 and 1943 he was part of Val Ernie's
prominent society orchestra. Enlisted from 1943-1945, he learned arranging
while playing with an Air Force band. He played string bass in the jazz band
and tuba in the marching band.
Upon returning to New York City in 1947, he played with the
Archie Bleyer Orchestra on Arthur Godfrey’s show, where he stayed for seven years.
He picked up occasional studio work on the side, playing on a couple of singles
by the Three Suns. The first record he played on that made it to number one was
“Rag Mop” by the Ames Brothers in 1950 after which his work as a session
guitarist began to increase. Especially the Atlantic and Jubilee labels often
made use of his services, resulting in sessions with artists like LaVern Baker,
Ivory Joe Hunter, Joe Turner, Bobby Darin ("Splish Splash"), Ben E.
King, Bobby Freeman ("Do You Wanna Dance"), Don Rondo, Della Reese,
the Sparkletones and Ersel Hickey and many others. On these sessions he often
also served as arranger and / or conductor. Other artists he worked with
include Paul Anka, Frankie Laine, Perry Como, Patti Page and Tony Bennett.
Already in 1957, Mure had started making albums featuring
his "Super- sonic" guitar. His first LP was recorded for RCA Victor
and was called "Supersonic Guitars in Hi-Fi". For this album Mure
utilized four guitars with amplified rhythm, two drums and one bass. The
playing was wild and frantic and would fit right into the new sounds of rock n
roll. His next LP was "Fireworks", this time recorded in "living
stereo". It included four of Billy's own songs, "Firecrackers",
"Dancing Guitars", "Guitar Theme" and
"Crackerjack". He added a third drummer and eight vocalists for these
sessions, giving him a unique sound. Billy followed this with a third album for
RCA entitled "Supersonics In Flight".
His first MGM LP, "Supersonic Guitars" is in
the same vein. It is primarily on these four LP's that Mure's reputation as an
exceptional guitarist is based. He followed Les Paul's pioneering work in multi-tracking,
recording separate guitar tracks, often speeding them up for spectacular
effects. Unlike Les Paul, he didn't enjoy consistent label sponsorship, so his
albums sold poorly and are now hard to find.
Mure was also a prolific songwriter, with 243 entries in
the BMI database. He produced and wrote "Got A Match" for the
Daddy-O's (# 39 in 1958) on the Cabot label, but more interesting is his
composition "Gazachstahagen", a good R&R instrumental, which the
Wildcats took to # 57 on the Billboard charts in early 1959. It's not clear if
Billy himself played on the record ; according to Joel Whitburn, the Wildcats
were a trio (discovered by Mure) But
there is also a Wildcats LP, "Bandstand Record Hop" (United Artists
UAL 3031), which is credited to "The Wildcats featuring Billy Mure".
Another chart success was "String Of Trumpets" by the Trumpeteers, a
big-band styled group directed by Billy Mure. Also released in the UK was
"Jambalaya"/"Kaw-Liga" on Top Rank Two fine guitar
instrumentals.
In 1963 he left RCA, where he had been on the A&R
staff, and formed his own independent production company, BM Productions. He
worked with a variety of pop and rock and roll acts, most of them minor, but
achieved at least one Top 3 hit with Marcie Blane's "Bobby's Girl"
(1962). He also recorded later albums, on MGM, Kapp, Everest and the budget
label Strand.
Billy Mure passed away from natural causes on September
25, 2013 at the age of 97. (Compiled and edited from various sources mainly
Black Cat Rockabilly & Vintage Guitar)
For “Billy Mure - Super Top Hits” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.upload.ee/files/9677669/BM_SU_TO_HI_SS.rar.html
01 - Billy Mure - Limehouse Blues
02 - Billy Mure - Tiger Guitars
03 - Billy Mure - High Tide Boogie
04 - Billy Mure - Pagan Love Song
05 - Billy Mure - For Me And My Gal
06 - Billy Mure - Jealous
07 - Billy Mure - Lover's Guitar
08 - Billy Mure - Granada
09 - Billy Mure - Marie
10 - Billy Mure - Crackerjack
11 - Billy Mure - Guitars In Space
12 - Billy Mure - Dancing Guitars
13 - Billy Mure - They Can't Take That Away From Me
14 - Billy Mure - Hindustan
15 - Billy Mure - I Wonder I Wonder
16 - Billy Mure - El Cumbanchero
17 - Billy Mure - Linger Awhile
18 - Billy Mure - April In Portugal
19 - Billy Mure - Peg O' My Heart
20 - Billy Mure - Guitar Theme
21 - Billy Mure - Peanut Vendor
22 - Billy Mure - Pennies From Heaven
23 - Billy Mure - By The Beautiful Sea
24 - Billy Mure – Firecracker
A big thank you to Summer Souvenir @ Rock Hall for active link.
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