FATS DOMINO - BIOGRAPHY |
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The most popular exponent of the classic New Orleans
R&B sound, Fats Domino sold more records than any
other Black rock & roll star of the 1950s. His relaxed,
lolling boogie-woogie piano style and easygoing, warm
vocals anchored a long series of national hits from the
mid-'50s to the early '60s. Through it all, his basic
approach rarely changed. He may not have been one of
early rock's most charismatic, innovative, or threatening
figures, but he was certainly one of its most consistent. Domino's first single, "The Fat Man" (1949), is one of the dozens of tracks that have
been consistently singled out as a candidate for the first rock & roll record. As far as
Fats was concerned, he was just playing what he'd already been doing in New Orleans
for years, and would continue to play and sing in pretty much the same fashion even
after his music was dubbed "rock & roll." The record made number two on the R&B charts, and sold a million copies. Just as
important, it established a vital partnership between Fats and Imperial A&R man Dave
Bartholomew. Bartholomew, himself a trumpeter, would produce Domino's big hits,
co-writing many of them with Fats. He would also usually employ New Orleans session
greats like Alvin Tyler on sax and Earl Palmer on drums -- musicians who were vital in
establishing New Orleans R&B as a distinct entity, playing on many other local
recordings as well (including hits made in New Orleans by Georgia native Little
Richard). Domino didn't cross over into the pop charts in a big way until 1955, when "Ain't That a
Shame" made the Top Ten. Pat Boone's cover of the song stole some of Fats' thunder,
going all the way to number one (Boone was also bowdlerizing Little Richard's early
singles for pop hits during this time). Domino's long-range prospects weren't damaged,
however; between 1955 and 1963, he racked up an astonishing 35 Top 40 singles.
"Blueberry Hill" (1956) was probably his best (and best-remembered) single; "Walking
to New Orleans," "Whole Lotta Loving," "I'm Walking," "Blue Monday," and "I'm in Love
Again" were also huge successes. After Fats left Imperial for ABC-Paramount in 1963, he would only enter the Top 40 one
more time. The surprise was not that Fats fell out of fashion, but that he'd maintained his
popularity so long while the essentials of his style remained unchanged. This was during
an era, remember, when most of rock's biggest stars had their careers derailed by
death or scandal, or were made to soften up their sound for mainstream consumption.
Although an active performer in the ensuing decades, his career as an important artist
was essentially over in the mid-'60s. He did stir up a bit of attention in 1968 when he
covered the Beatles' "Lady Madonna" single, which had been an obvious homage to
Fats' style. |
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