Description: A CLASSIC LLOYD PRICE ROCKING 78 STAGGER LEE b/w YOU NEED LOVE Lloyd Price is widely known as “Mr. Personality,” a nickname copped from one his best-known songs, “Personality,” from 1959. Among the premier rhythm & blues singers of the Fifties and Sixties, the Louisiana native can also claim a host of other talents: musician, bandleader, songwriter, producer, record-company executive and booking agent. In his prime he recorded for the Specialty and ABC-Paramount labels. The bulk of his R&B sides were cut for Specialty and bear the hallmark of the New Orleans sound. His biggest hit, “Lawdy Miss Clawdy,” was an original song produced by Dave Bartholomew and featuring Fats Domino on piano. Based on a commercial jingle he’d written, “Lawdy Miss Clawdy” topped the R&B charts for seven weeks in 1952. It was also widely covered, both in the Fifties and beyond, by the likes of Elvis (who performed it on his 1968 NBC-TV special), the Buckinghams, John Lennon and Elvis Costello. “Lawdy Miss Clawdy” is a rhythm & blues classic that helped give birth to rock and roll. Price recorded more hits during his early-Fifties tenure at Specialty, but his career was interrupted by the Korean War. Upon returning from three years of service, he launched KRC (Kent Record Company) with Harold Logan, a longtime friend and collaborator. A shrewd businessman, Price leased his recordings to ABC-Paramount, thereby retaining control of his music while receiving national distribution. His most renowned recording came with “Stagger Lee,” an R&B remake of the folk-blues standard “Stack-o-Lee” that topped the pop and R&B charts. Recorded versions of the song date back to the Twenties, but Price’s “takes the prize,” according to Greil Marcus in a detailed analysis of the song’s roots and evolution. “Price’s record was hard rock, driven by a wailing sax, and in retrospect his manic enthusiasm seems to be what many earlier versions lacked,” wrote Marcus. Price’s biggest year was 1959, during which he released four hits: “Personality,” “Where Were You (On Our Wedding Day),” “I’m Gonna Get Married” and “Come Into My Heart.” His entrepreneurial skill led to the helming of more labels (Double-L and Turntable), as well as a New York City nightclub (Lloyd Price’s Turntable). Double-L launched the recording career of Wilson Pickett in 1963. Price continued to place his own recordings on the R&B charts into the Seventies. Meanwhile, he performed around the country with a nine-piece band while keeping a resourceful hand in various other entrepreneurial pursuits and ventures. DISC DETAILS:- UK HMV POP 580 10" 78rpm SHELLAC CONDITION - E- HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO PICK UP THIS GREAT 1958 ROCKING 78 GETTING HARD TO FIND NOW - SO DON'T MISS OUT BUY NOW! 10" 78 RPM RECORDS NEED CAREFULLY PACKING, AND I CLAIM TO HAVE THE BEST PACKAGING IN THE WORLD FOR DISPATCHING THEM! THE GREG'S GREAT'S SYSTEM CONSISTS OF A SPECIALLY DESIGNED INNER BOX MADE OUT OF 1" THICK POLYSTYRENE, WHICH THEN GOES INSIDE A DOUBLE CORRUGATED STIFF OUTER CARDBOARD CARTON. THE BOXES CAN TAKE UP TO 21 RECORDS, I SEND OUT ON AVERAGE ABOUT 30 PARCELS A WEEK AND DISPATCH IS NORMALLY DONE ONCE A WEEK
Price: 50 GBP
Location: Cambridge
End Time: 2025-02-08T14:04:47.000Z
Shipping Cost: 31.24 GBP
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Item Specifics
Return postage will be paid by: Buyer
Returns Accepted: Returns Accepted
After receiving the item, your buyer should cancel the purchase within: 30 days
Non-Domestic Product: No
Artist: Lloyd Price
Speed: 78 RPM
Record Label: HMV
Release Title: stagger lee
Custom Bundle: No
Sub-Genre: Doo Wop/50s R 'n R
Material: Shellac
Modified Item: No
Format: Record
Release Year: 1956
Language: English
Era: 1950s
Record Size: 10"
Genre: Rock, Rock 'n' Roll
Country/Region of Manufacture: United Kingdom