Tuesday 19 July 2022

Preston Epps born 19 July 1930


Preston Eugene Epps (July 19, 1930 – May 9, 2019) was an American percussionist. 

Epps was born in Mangum, Oklahoma. He attended grade school in Tulsa and moved as a teenager to Oakland, where he attended junior high and high school. He learned to play percussion instruments, including the bongos, while he was stationed in Okinawa during the Korean War. When his duties ended, he forsook Northern California for Southern California, sustaining himself by working odd jobs; he hung around the emerging beatnik, hippie set by frequenting coffeehouses, and pounding the skins for the appreciative heads. 

Epps became fascinated with the drums in the early ’50s when he visited a San Francisco jazz spot called Bop City. He started as a percussionist but took to the bongos after he saw an African group perform in the City of Hope and they gave him his first drum. Epps was the main percussionist on “Earth Angel,” first recorded by the Penguins in 1954. 

DJ Art Laboe discovered Epps at a cozy, laid-back coffeehouse and signed him to his newly founded Original Sound Records. He and Barney Kessel, Rene Hall, Earl Palmer, Red Callender and Ernie Freeman recorded “Bongo Rock” at Sunset Sound in Hollywood in April 1959. It became the first hit for Laboe’s Original Sound label, spending 13 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, getting as high as No. 14 and going gold. . Laboe released a second single, "Bongo, Bongo, Bongo," in 1960 that reached #78 the following year. 

                              

Epps first album, Bongo Bongo Bongo, dropped in 1960 on the heels of the second single and did okay. However, subsequent singles, "Bongo in the Congo," "Bongo Rocket," "Bongo Boogie," "Flamenco Bongo," "Mr. Bongo," "Bongo Shuffle," and other Bongo derivatives failed to generate any interest. Two more albums, Bongola (1961) and Surfin' Bongos (1962), went unnoticed. 

Preston with Ray Charles & Jackie Wilson

He also played calypso music for Maya Angelou, and that led him to tour and perform with such artists as Ray Charles, Jackie Wilson, Little Richard, Johnny Otis, Sam Cooke, Jewel Akens, Robert “Bumps” Blackwell and Clifton “Fou Fou” Eddie. He also appeared as a headliner in Las Vegas. 

Epps also helped to establish and manage the West Hollywood nightclub Pandora’s Box, where he discovered Lou Rawls. Epps manned the bongos in the films Calypso Heat Wave (1957) and Girl in Gold Boots (1968) — the latter set in the world of go-go dancing — and appeared on American Bandstand and other dance shows.He also did extensive session work, including an appearance on Gypsys' debut LP for Metromedia Records.

In the early seventies he toured and recorded with Johnny Otis. In 1973, the Incredible Bongo Band recorded "Bongo Rock" and released it as a single. Epps continued to play at a variety of clubs in Southern California into the 1990s, including Monteleone's West, the Lozano Restaurant, and the Atlas Supper Club. 

Epps performed until he was 85, with his final gig coming in 2014 at the Tiki Oasis in San Diego before more than 3,000 people. He died of natural causes in Los Angeles on May 9, 2019 at age 88. 

(Edited from Wikipedia, The Hollywood Reporter  & All Music)

5 comments:

  1. FOR “PRESTON EPPS - BONGOS-A-GO-GO - THE COMPLETE
    PRESTON EPPS, 1958-1962 (JASMINE 2019)” GO HERE:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/kZC4L

    1. BONGO ROCK
    2. BONGO PARTY
    3. DOIN' THE CHA CHA CHA
    4. BONGOS IN PASTEL
    5. BONGO SHUFFLE
    6. BONGO IN THE CONGO
    7. BONGO BOOGIE
    8. FLAMENCO BOOGIE
    9. BONGO BONGO BONGO
    10. HULLY GULLY BONGO
    11. BONGOLA
    12. BLUE BONGO
    13. JUNGLE DRUMS
    14. BONGO ROCKET
    15. ROCKIN' IN THE CONGO
    16. SING DONNA GO
    17. MR. BONGOS
    18. B'WANA BONGOS
    19. STORMY BONGO
    20. BONGOS IN PARADISE
    21. BONGO HOP
    22. PREST BONGOS UNDER GLASS
    23. TENDERLY
    24. CARAVAN
    25. CHEROKEE
    26 FLAMINGO
    27. PERDIDO
    28. CALL OF THE JUNGLE

    Preston Epps is the only bongo player to achieve legendary status in the history of rock 'n' roll. Bongo Rock remains one of the most popular instrumentals having made America's Top 20 in 1959. This twenty-eight track compilation includes everything Preston Epps recorded between 1958 and 1962, all of his American and British single releases, and his American EP and LPs, the first of which made the Top 40 Best Selling Albums Chart in America. The compilation includes tracks written by such legendary names from the Los Angeles music scene as Sandy Nelson, Jack Nitzsche and Barney Kessel. This collection includes tracks appearing for the first time on CD.

    This release is a fitting tribute to Preston Epps, a rock 'n' roll pioneer who died in May 2019, aged 88. (Jasmine notes)

    A big thank you to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday percussionist also for the loan of the above album.

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    Replies
    1. Hi thank you for honoring my dad with this article!

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  2. Looks interesting, thank you.

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  3. I has that Bongo Rock/Bongo Party 45 when I was a kind - played the hell out of it. This is the nicest looking collection I've seen, thanks Bob!

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  4. Hello Bob, many thanks for your information and answer to The Dalys!! Preston Epps are great and posting of the Jasmine CD is wonderful.Great work and post!!!I like to read and hear about Preston Epps, because his Bongo rock is an great instrumental!!Greetings Thomas

    ReplyDelete