Chanteur US né Joseph E. Baugh le 25 juillet 1932 à Helena (Arkansas). Joe Baugh fut pianiste et covocaliste des "Snearly Ranch Boys" du batteur Clyde Leoppard. Au milieu des années cinquante, Joe a enregistré à la Sun Records de Memphis (Tennessee) où il n'eut aucun succès. Pourtant Sam Phillips, le directeur de la Sun, avait avec Joe Baugh, un blanc qui chantait comme un noir. Mais la musique de cet écliptique artiste était trop policée pour devenir commerciale. Chanteur aux intonations rugueuses parfois proche de Louis Prima. Joe Baugh, en tout, nous a laissé que deux singles chez Sun Records. Dans les années 1970, il se produisait à Waco (Texas), avec les "Midnite Cowboys" et Buddy Holobaugh. Smokey Joe Baugh est décédé le 19 novembre 1999 à Monterey (Californie) One of the more shadowy figures at Sun, Smokey Joe Baugh was around the Memphis music scene from an early stage. Born in Helena, AK, he embarked on a musical career in 1947 working as a pianist in Memphis and West Memphis. Around 1952 he joined the Shelby Follin Band, and for a few months he and bandmate Paul Burlison performed with Howlin' Wolf on radio KWEM in West Memphis, Arkansas. Subsequently he joined Clyde Leoppard's Snearly Ranch Boys, with whom he recorded, appeared on local radio and toured with many of the Sun package tours. The record they made for Sam Phillips was "Split Personality"/"Lonely Sweetheart" (Flip 502), released in the spring of 1955. On the A-side, credit goes to "Bill Taylor & Smokey Jo" (in capitals), "Clyde Leoppard's Snearly Ranch Boys" (in smaller print). Baugh had a gravelly voice which was the result of a natural condition, rather than a conscious attempt to sound black. He cut four sessions for Sun as Smokey Joe in 1955-56 and had one single released, "The Signifying Monkey"/"Listen To Me Baby" (Sun 228, also released as Flip 228). "The Signifying Monkey" was recorded on August 25, 1955, and its lyrics have a long history in black music. In fact, the story is such a central part of black culture that an entire book has been written on the subject : "The Signifying Monkey : A Theory of African-American Literary Criticism", by Henry Louis Gates (New York : Oxford University Press, 1989). (For a review of the book see: http://www-english.tamu.edu/pers/fac/myers/signifying.html ). Hundreds of versions of the song have been recorded, among them a version by Chuck Berry, "Jo Jo Gunne" (Chess 1709, 1958). With Johnny Bernero on drums, Smokey Joe's "Signifying Monkey" was assured of a fine shuffle rhythm, and it enjoyed some local chart action after its release in mid-September 1955. Sales were strongest in black markets that had no idea Smokey Joe was very blond and very white. This confusion reached its zenith when Joe was invited to perform at New York's Apollo Theatre in Harlem. The flipside "Listen To Me Baby" is a solid outing in the jump blues mode (with a powerful piano solo) that did little to dispel the notion that Smokey Joe was black. Surprisingly, "The Signifying Monkey"/"Listen To Me Baby" was reissued on Sun 393 in May 1964. Two factors might have led Sun to dust it off. First Sam the Sham had recorded it (this was pre-Woolly Bully, but it was a local hit) and second, it had a prototypical ska beat, popularized at that time by Millie Small's "My Boy Lollipop". Other songs recorded at Sun were "She's A Woman" (three versions), "Hula Bop" (two versions, recorded at the same session as "Signifying Monkey"), "The Midnight Ride of Paul Revere" and two songs that are still unissued, "Only You" and "Tell It Like It Is". "Hula Bop" - the first Hawaiian bop record, predating Buddy Knox by a couple of years - was not released by Phillips at the time, and Jimmy Knight, a member of the Snearly Ranch Boys, profited by recording a version of it on Crystal in 1956. There is also a mysterious 45 by Baugh on the Fonovox label, "Perfect Girl'/"Start All Over Again". As a session pianist, Baugh can be heard on the tracks from the first Barbara Pittman session from April 1956 (I Need A Man, Sentimental Fool, No Matter Who's To Blame). In the sixties, Baugh worked extensively with the Bill Black Combo and in 1970 started up a country band called the Midnite Cowboys with Buddy Holobaugh in Waco, Texas. Colin Escott writes: "Smokey was a pillhead and a prolific drinker, and eventually left Memphis for Texas when he owed everyone he knew." (Liner notes for "That'll Flat Git It, Vol. 14.)Talents : Singer, Piano Style musical : Rockabilly, Rock 'n' Roll
HULA BOP (unissued) LISTEN TO ME BABY SHE'S A WOMAN (unissued)
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Sujet: Re: Smokey Joe BAUGH Mar 26 Mai 2009, 22:47
DISCOGRAPHIE Singles
12/1955
SP FLIP 228 (US)
SMOKEY JOE / Clyde LEOPPARD BAND - Listen To Me Baby / The Signifying Monkey
12/1955
SP SUN 228 (US)
SMOKEY JOE / Clyde LEOPPARD BAND - Listen To Me Baby / The Signifying Monkey
195?
SP FONOVOX 45-100 (US)
SMOKEY JOE - Perfect Girl / Start All Over Again
1964
SP SUN 393 (US)
SMOKEY JOE - Listen To Me Baby / Signifying Monkey
Sujet: Re: Smokey Joe BAUGH Mar 26 Mai 2009, 22:49
Smokey Joe
Full Name Joe Baugh. Born in Helena, Ark. Original Releases
Date & Source
Label & Number
V
Titles {& References to LP/CD List}
As By
Matrix Numbers
1955/Dec. or earlier (est.)
Flip 228
Listen To Me Baby The Signifying Monkey
2 2
U-171 U-170
1955/Dec. (Bb est.)
Sun 228
Listen To Me Baby {c,d,f,h,m,o,p} The Signifying Monkey {a,f,h,n,p}
1 1
U-171 U-170
Fonovox 45-100
Perfect Girl {e,g} Start All Over Again {e,g}
1 1
FR-1172 FR-1173
1964 or later (Bb est.)
Sun 393
Listen To Me Baby Signifying Monkey
1 1
U-348 U-349
Additional Tracks on Comps
1955 (Sun Rec.)
Sun unissued
Hula Bop {b,f,i,j,o,p} The Midnight Ride Of Paul Revere {f,p} She's A Woman {b,f,k,l,p}
References in "As By" Column:
as by Smokey Joe
as by Smokey Joe / Clyde Leoppard Band
Other Notes:
SEE ALSO: Taylor, William Tell
Collector-Oriented Compilation LPs and CDs Containing Tracks
1976
a.
Charly CR 30101 (lp)
Sun - The Roots Of Rock, Vol. 1: Catalyst
1977
b.
Charly CR 30116 (lp)
Sun - The Roots Of Rock, Vol. 9: Rebel Rockabilly, Vol. 2
1978
c.
Charly CR 30147 (lp)
Raunchy Rockabilly
d.
Sun (England) SUN 1010 [1st] (lp)
Sun Rockabillies; Vol. 1
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Sujet: Re: Smokey Joe BAUGH Mar 26 Mai 2009, 22:50
1980
e.
Flyright 556 (lp)
Get With It!: Memphis-Style Rockabilly & Country
1985
f.
Sun (England) SUN 1021 (lp)
Rock Bop Boogie
1986
g.
Redita [2nd series] RLP 130 (lp)
Step It Up And Go-Memphis Rockabilly
1988
h.
Sun (England) 3 (cd)
Rock 'N' Roll Original, Vol. 1
1997
i.
Bear Family BCD 16210 (cd)
That'll Flat Git It, Vol. 14
j.
Charly CPCD 8277 (cd)
Sun Rock & Roll
1998
k.
Charly CPCD 8318 (cd)
Sun Rock 'N' Roll, Vol. 2
2000
l.
SAAR [RR1] (cd)
The Best Of Sun Rock 'N' Roll, Vol. 1
2002
m.
Charly SNAJ 713 (cd)
The Sun Records Story
2005
n.
Emusic/Sun 10860388 (mp3)
Sun Spots, Vol. 2: Oddities and Obscurities
2006
o.
El Toro ETCD 1011 (cd)
Tennessee Rock'n Billy 1955
Year Unknown
p.
Blues Interactions PLP- 336 (lp)
The Pumpin' Piano Rock
Dernière édition par FRANK DAYMON le Mer 27 Mai 2009, 10:22, édité 1 fois
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Sujet: Re: Smokey Joe BAUGH Mer 27 Mai 2009, 00:11
Smokey à enregistré lui aussi au 706 union avenue en 1955 plusieurs morceaux sont sorties chez DING DONG en 1985 dont ce superbe LISTEN TO ME à noter que Smokey Joe était le pianiste de la formation de Clyde LEOPARD il est sur les deux premières sessions de Warren SMITH en 1956 Les musiciens Smokey Joe BAUGH (vocal & piano) Buddy HOLOBAUGH (lead guitar)- Stan KESLER (steel guitar)-Johnny BERNERO (drums) et Bill TAYLOR (trompette)
Dernière édition par FRANK DAYMON le Ven 18 Déc 2009, 23:03, édité 1 fois
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Sujet: Re: Smokey Joe BAUGH Ven 18 Déc 2009, 22:54
Le superbe "HULA BOP" enregistré pour SUN Records en 1955