Wednesday 20 July 2022

Laura Lee Perkins born 20 July 1939

Laura Lee Perkins (July 20, 1939 – April 6, 2018) was a rockabilly musician who was once billed as "the female Jerry Lee Lewis." 

Laura Lee Perkins was born Alice Faye Perkins, and she grew up in a coal mining town about fifty miles outside of Charleston, West Virginia. Perkins learned to play the guitar and sing at home, and her family was gifted a piano when she was a child. She never took lessons, but taught herself to play proficiently. She also learned to play guitar and piano in her youth and when she attended Stoco High School, she also learned to play the trumpet.

When she graduated from high school in 1957, she decided to move to Cleveland, Ohio, where she had heard there were a lot of factories where she might get a job. She was overwhelmed by the big city and moved to the nearby town of Elyria. She got a job as a waitress, and while out driving with friends she met at the diner where she worked, happened to meet local disc jockey Jeff Baxter. Baxter was playing a lot of rock and roll records at the time on WEOL. When he heard her play the piano, he made some demo tapes and sent them to fellow disc jockey Bill Randle—who was well connected in the industry and known for helping to break new rock and roll artists. In 1958 Randle helped Perkins to secure an opportunity to record for Imperial records in California, all expenses paid. 

Perkins cut several sides there, where she was backed by the same band that accompanied Ricky Nelson (she was thrilled that she also got to meet Nelson). The songs produced during these sessions include Don't Wait Up and Kiss Me Baby. The label did some publicity for her—though they appeared to have listed her under several different stage names, finally opting for Laura Lee Perkins—and apparently tried to bill her as the “female Jerry Lee Lewis” because of her skill at the piano. 

                    

Perkins returned to Cleveland, where she had difficulty promoting her recordings. She recalls that being single and working as a waitress, she couldn’t muster the payola required to break through in some markets. She would play record hops where she would lip sync to her Imperial sides. Some of the other acts at the hops she played included Connie Francis, the Everly Brothers, and Fabian. 

Perkins returned to Ohio and later moved to Detroit in 1959 where her aunt took an interest in a career—even marching into radio stations and identifying herself as Perkins’s “press agent.” Perkins played a lot in the Detroit area and also toured with a band called Tony Thomas and the Tartans. She traveled nearly the entire country and Canada, driving herself and wowing audiences with wild live shows. She also appeared with Frank Sinatra and Bobby Darin in New York. 

After her marriage on June 9, 1963 to tool salesman Neal Kitts, and the birth of her first son James in 1965, she chose to end her professional work as entertainer. Two other sons, Charles and Nick, followed. From then on she took care of her family, hung up her rockin’ shoes and helped with the family business “Kitts Industrial Tools”. However, in the ‘80s she wrote and sang jingles for radio and television for Kitts Tools, Cessna Pilot Center or Blackwell Ford. She also recorded a single about John DeLorean's famous DMC12 sport car. 

Her inclusion on the Imperial Rockabillies LP issued in Europe by United Artists made her a legend. But while European fans had the good fortune to see performances by Wanda Jackson, Janis Martin or Barbara Pittman in the early ‘80s, there was nothing about Laura Lee until recognition came in 2003 with Laura Lee’s nomination into the International Rockabilly Hall of Fame. In 2006 she released the album I’m Back and Here We Go. In 2008 she performed at the Viva Las Vegas Rockabilly Festival. She died in 2018. 

(Edited from Women In Rock Project, Tales From The Woods &Wikipedia)

 

4 comments:

boppinbob said...


For “Laura Lee Perkins- Don't Wait Up (Juke Box Pearls Expanded) (2012)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/eQSFB

1. Laura Lee Perkins - Don't Wait Up (2:36)
2. Laura Lee Perkins - Oh La Baby (2:16)
3. Laura Lee Perkins - I Just Don't Like This Kind of Livin' (2:01)
4. Laura Lee Perkins - Kiss Me Baby (2:02)
5. Laura Lee Perkins - Gonna Rock My Baby Tonight (2:11)
6. Laura Lee Perkins - Come on Baby (2:06)
7. Laura Lee Perkins - Hound Dog (1:13)
8. Laura Lee Perkins - No One Will Ever Know (2:01)
9. Laura Lee Perkins - My Babe (1:36)
10. Laura Lee Perkins - Remember Me (I'm the One Who Loves You) (1:24)
11. Laura Lee Perkins - Oh La Baby (Undubbed) (1:55)
12. Laura Lee Perkins - Mountain Dew (2:00) (live 1961)
13. Laura Lee Perkins - You Don't Know (3:36) (live 1961)
14. Laura Lee Perkins - I Enjoy Being A Girl (2:22) (live 1961)

BONUS TRACKS

15. Laura Lee Perkins - Here We Go! (0:31)
16. Laura Lee Perkins - A Better Life (2:11)
17. Laura Lee Perkins - A Little Tear (3:36)
18. Laura Lee Perkins - Jambalaya (2:11)
19. Laura Lee Perkins - The Wrong Kind (3:09)
20. Laura Lee Perkins - Everybody Rock And Roll (2:34)
21. Laura Lee Perkins - Johhny B. Goode (3:08)
22. Laura Lee Perkins - Oh La Baby (1:57)

Tracks 1 – 14 collects together the six songs recorded by Imperial plus five demos from 1957 and three live recordings made in 1961 when Faye, as Laura Lee, was touring with the Tartans band led by Tony Thomas. This gives us three fascinating musical snapshots: the youngster just having fun with some rock and country demos; the budding recording star backed by some seriously rocking session musicians; and the established lounge singer running through a range of styles. What we get from all the recordings, though, is a real sense of commitment to the moment. It's the whole-hearted, full-throated, no-nonsense approach on those old Imperial records that accounts for the enduring legend of Laura Lee Perkins.

Tracks 15 – 22 are taken from I’m Back And Here We Go, which was subsequently released in May 2006. That self-produced CD offered six brand new plus some vintage recordings.
I have spliced the two albums together but have omitted 5 tracks which were duplicated on the Bear Family CD.

A big thank you goes to the Rockin’ Bandit for the loan of the two albums.

Aussie said...

beautiful thank you

jcbhyde33 said...

Could You Put This On Back Up Please. Thanks Jcb.

boppinbob said...

Hello JCB, Here's Laura lee...
https://www.imagenetz.de/mAgaa