Thursday, 16 September 2021

Jack Hammer born 16 September 1925


Earl Solomon Burroughs (September 16, 1925 – April 8, 2016), known professionally as Jack Hammer, was an American pianist, dancer, singer, and songwriter, credited as the co-writer of "Great Balls of Fire”.

Burroughs was born in Grovetown, Georgia, but grew up in California. In the early 1950s, he moved to New York City, where he worked as an MC at the Baby Grand Theatre. He began writing songs, one of his earliest being "Fujiyama Mama", recorded by Annisteen Allen, Eileen Barton, and a few years later by Wanda Jackson. After starting to use the pseudonym Jack Hammer, he also wrote "Rock 'n' Roll Call", recorded by the Treniers and Louis Jordan. He also recorded several singles in the mid-1950s, including "Football Rock" on Decca, and "Girl Girl Girl" on Roulette.

Hammer wrote a song, "Great Balls of Fire", and submitted it to songwriter Paul Case, who liked the title but not the song itself. Case passed the idea to Otis Blackwell, and commissioned him to write a song of the same title for inclusion in the film Jamboree, with Hammer taking a half share of the songwriting royalties. The song was successfully recorded by Jerry Lee Lewis. Hammer also wrote "Peek-A-Boo", a hit for the Cadillacs. Much of Hammer's songwriting work is credited to various aliases including Earl Burrows, Early S. Burrows, George Stone, and T.T. Tyler. His song "Plain Gold Ring" appeared on Nina Simone's 1958 debut album Little Girl Blue, and was later recorded by Nick Cave, Kimbra and others.


                              

In 1960, he recorded an LP, Rebellion - Jack Hammer Sings and Reads Songs and Poems of the Beat Generation, for the Warwick label. In the same year, when the lead vocalist of the Platters left for a solo career, Jack Hammer joined the group and performed, recorded, and wrote songs for them. 

The following year he moved to Paris, where he performed impersonations of Sammy Davis Jr. and Chuck Berry in cabaret, and then to Belgium. There, he recorded a series of twist songs, including "Kissin' Twist", which became a big hit in Belgium, Germany, France and Sweden. A good dancer, Hammer became known in Europe as "The Twistin' King", and released an LP under that title. In Britain, its title was changed to Hammer + Beat = Twist, released by Oriole Records. He then moved to Germany, and performed on US military bases.

Jack was a Hall fame song writer his songs have been song by Dolly Parton, Billy Joel, Mick Jagger. He wrote songs for Nat King Cole, Nina Simone, Richie Havens and the very last song recorded by the lead singer of the Platters Tony Willliams “Obviously I love”.

Apart from "Swim"/"Color Combination", there were no new releases in the 1970s. In the mid 1970s, he moved back to the US, and at one point was scheduled to play the part of Jimi Hendrix in a movie that was never made. Jack Hammer performed in the Broadway production of Bubbling Brown Sugar from February 1976 to December 1977. 

He later lived in Hollywood. His health began to fail in 2010 and in 2014, a blog post stated that a lawyer Burroughs hired depleted him of all his income forcing him to sell the rights to over 50 songs for $ 100,000.

He died on April 8, 2016 from heart failure at a nursing home in Oakland, California.

(Edited from Wikipedia & KQED)

3 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “Jack Hammer - The Twistin' King
~ The Best Of Jack Hammer 1958-1962 (Jasmine 2019)” go here:

https://krakenfiles.com/view/1iCJ5C7OXM/file.html

1. Girl, Girl, Girl (1:53)
2. Little-Bitty Goose Pimples (1:47)
3. The Hawks and the Crowns (2:13)
4. Concrete Desert (2:29)
5. Mean and Evil Me (2:07)
6. Good Gravy (As Tommy Hawke) (2:45)
7. Juliette (2:49)
8. The Kissin' Twist (2:23)
9. Melancholy Boy (2:36)
10. Let's Twist Again (2:08)
11. The Twistin' King (2:25)
12. Boogie Woogie Twist (2:21)
13. Twist Talk (2:47)
14. Crazy Twist (2:05)
15. Don't Let Baby Know (2:25)
16. The Wiggle (2:40)
17. The Wiggling Fool (1:41)
18. Stop-Slop (3:54)
19. Can't You Do It (2:07)
20. Electricity (2:57)
21. Espana Te Quiero (3:08)
22. Ali Ben Ghazi (2:33)
23. Sugar Boy (2:24)
24. It's Good (2:01)
25. Fire Baby (2:31)
26. Number 2539 (2:44)
27. Twist and Shout (1:52)
28. Spelling Twist (1:53)
29. Twist in the Morning (2:25)
30. Twist Turn and Twirl (2:12)
31. Come Twist Around the Clock (2:11)
32. Twistin' Blues (2:15)

Earl Solomon Burroughs - aka JACK HAMMER - was one of America's most enduring and versatile talents. A multilingual singer, songwriter, poet, pianist, dancer, actor, comedian, impressionist, playwright and artist, he enjoyed success across all these fields in a long, rewarding life/career. Although remembered rather more for songwriting ('Great Balls Of Fire', 'Peek-A-Boo') than singing, Jack also, nonetheless, enjoyed success as a mainstream Pop star in Europe during the early 60s, as 'The Twistin' King'!
This compilation presents the Very Best of his record releases between 1958-1962, including a trio of sides from his 1960 jazzy 'concept album', 'Rebellion', which is nowadays a huge collectors' item. Also included are his European Twistin' successes, most notably his biggest sellers, 'The Kissin' Twist', 'Twist Talk', 'The Wiggle' and, of course, our title track. (Jasmine notes)

A big thank you to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday choice and also allmusic-wingsofdream.blog for the loan of the CD.

Bob Mac said...

Thanks for this.

Rick said...

I've waited a long time to get a CD rip of Jack Hammer to replace the various noisy vinyl rips I've accumulated over the years. Thanks a lot!!

Cheers,
Rick