Tutti Frutti (song)

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Template:Short description Template:Use mdy datesScript error: No such module "other uses". Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main other "Tutti Frutti" (Italian for "all fruits") is a song written by Little Richard and Dorothy LaBostrie, recorded in 1955, which was Richard's first major hit. With its energetic refrain, often transcribed as "A-wop-bop-a-loo-mop-a-lop-bam-boom!" (a verbal rendition of a drum pattern that Little Richard had imagined),[1] and its hard-driving sound and wild lyrics, it became not only a model for many future Little Richard songs, but also for rock and roll itself.[2] The song introduced several of rock music's most characteristic musical features, including its loud volume, powerful vocal style, and distinctive beat and rhythm.[3]

In 2007, an eclectic panel of renowned recording artists ranked "Tutti Frutti" at No. 1 on Mojo's "The Top 100 Records That Changed The World" and hailed the recording as "the sound of the birth of rock and roll". In 2009, the U.S. Library of Congress National Recording Registry added the recording to its registry, claiming the "unique vocalizing over the irresistible beat announced a new era in music".[4][5] In April 2012, Rolling Stone magazine declared the refrain "the most inspired rock lyric ever recorded".[6] It was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1998.[7]

Original recording by Little Richard

Although "Little Richard" Penniman had recorded for RCA and Peacock Records since 1951, his records had been relatively undistinguished and did not result in the commercial success for which his producers hoped. In February 1955, he sent a demo tape to Specialty Records, which was heard by Specialty owner Art Rupe. Rupe heard promise in the tapes and arranged a recording session for Little Richard at Cosimo Matassa's J & M Studio in New Orleans in September 1955, with Robert "Bumps" Blackwell as producer and Fats Domino's backing band. The band included Lee Allen and Alvin "Red" Tyler on saxophones, Huey Smith on piano, Frank Fields on double bass, Justin Adams on guitar and Earl Palmer on drums.[8][9]

As the session wore on, Little Richard became frustrated that his anarchic performance style was not being fully captured on tape. During a lunch break, he started pounding a piano and singing a ribald song that he wrote and composed, and which he had been performing live for a few years.[10] According to some accounts, he first wrote and performed the song while working as a janitor in a bus station.[11] The song that he sang was a piece of music that he "had polished in clubs across the South."[12] Little Richard sang:[13] Template:Poemquote After this lively performance, Blackwell knew the song was going to be a hit, but recognized that the lyrics, with their "minstrel modes and sexual humor", needed to be revised for lyrical purity.[12]

Blackwell contacted local songwriter Dorothy LaBostrie to revise the lyrics, with Little Richard still playing in his characteristic style. According to Blackwell, LaBostrie "didn't understand melody" but she was definitely a "prolific writer".[14]

The original lyrics, in which "Tutti Frutti" verses contained descriptions of anal sex,[15] were: Template:Poemquote These were replaced with: Template:Poemquote

"Aw rooty" was a slang expression meaning "All right". According to Charles Connor, Little Richard's drummer, the original lyrics were: Template:Poemquote

In addition to Penniman and LaBostrie, a third name—Lubin—is credited as co-writer. Some sources considered this a pseudonym used by Specialty label owner Art Rupe to claim royalties on some of his label's songs,[8] but others refer to songwriter Joe Lubin.[16]

As possible evidence that the "sexual song" theory was created later, songwriter LaBostrie was quoted as saying, "Little Richard didn't write none of 'Tutti Frutti'. I'll tell you exactly how I came to write that. I used to live on Galvez Street and my girlfriend and I liked to go down to the drug store and buy ice cream. One day we went in and saw this new flavor, Tutti Frutti. Right away I thought, 'Boy, that's a great idea for a song'. So I kept it in the back of my mind until I got to the studio that day. I also wrote the flip side of 'Tutti Frutti', 'I'm Just A Lonely Guy', and a spiritual, 'Blessed Mother', all in the same day." However, Phil Walden, co-founder of Capricorn Records, said that as a teenager, he had seen Little Richard perform an "off-color" version of "Tutti Frutti" before the song was recorded.[17] LaBostrie was still receiving royalty checks on the average of $5,000 every three to six months from the song in the 1980s.[18]

Blackwell said time constraints prevented the development of a new arrangement, so Little Richard recorded the revised song in three takes, taking about 15 minutes, with the original piano part. The song was recorded on September 14, 1955.[8] Released on Specialty 561, the record entered the Billboard Rhythm and Blues chart at the end of December 1955 and rose to No. 2 early in February 1956. It also reached No. 13 on the Billboard pop chart.[19] In the UK, it only scraped into the top 30 in 1957, as the B-side of "Long Tall Sally". The song, with its twelve-bar blues chord progression,[20] provided the foundation of Little Richard's career. It was seen as a very aggressive song that contained more features of African American vernacular music than any other past recording in this style.[9]

Richard's contract with Peacock had been purchased by Specialty Records owner Art Rupe, who also owned the publishing company that bought Richard's songs. Specialty's deal with Richard was typical of most record companies' dealings with their artists.[21][22]

Impact

Combining elements of boogie, gospel and blues, the song introduced several of rock music's most characteristic musical features, including its loud volume, its vocal style emphasizing power, and its distinctive beat and rhythm. The beat has its roots in boogie-woogie, but Richard departed from its shuffle rhythm and introduced a new distinctive rock beat. He reinforced the new rock rhythm with a two-handed approach, playing patterns with his right hand, with the rhythm typically popping out in the piano's high register. The song's new rhythm became the basis for the standard rock beat, which was later consolidated by Chuck Berry.[3]

In 2007, an eclectic panel of renowned recording artists voted "Tutti Frutti" No. 1 on Mojo's "The Top 100 Records That Changed The World,"[23] hailing the recording as "the sound of the birth of rock and roll."[24] In 2009, the US Library of Congress National Recording Registry added the recording to its registry, stating that the hit, with its original a cappella introduction, heralded a new era in music.[25] The song was No. 43 on Rolling Stone's list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[26] In April 2012, Rolling Stone magazine declared that the song "still has the most inspired rock lyric on record."[27] Bob Dylan writing about the song opined "Little Richard was speaking in tongues across the airwaves long before anyone knew what was happening. He took speaking in tongues right out of the sweaty canvas tent and put it on the mainstream radio, even screamed like a holy preacher-which is what he was."[28]

The B-side

"I'm Just a Lonely Guy," the B-side ballad credited to LaBostrie-Penniman, has rarely appeared on albums or compilations in its original, undubbed mix, as heard on the single. A remix featuring overdubbed female backing vocals appeared on Little Richard's third album, The Fabulous Little Richard.

Personnel

Additional personnel

Certifications

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Early cover versions

The song has been covered by many musicians.[29] After Pat Boone's success with "Ain't That a Shame", his next single was "Tutti Frutti", markedly toned down from the already reworked Blackwell version. Boone's version made No. 12 on the national pop chart, with Little Richard's trailing behind reaching only No. 21 in February 1956.[30][31] Boone himself admitted that he did not wish to do a cover of "Tutti Frutti" because "it didn't make sense" to him; however, the producers persuaded him into making a different version by claiming that the record would generate attention and money.[32] Bob Dylan said of Boone's cover, "Of all the people who sang 'Tutti Frutti,' Pat Boone was probably the only one who knew what he was singing about."[28]

Little Richard admitted that though Boone "took [his] music", Boone made it more popular due to his high status in the white music industry.[33] Nevertheless, a Washington Post Staff Writer, Richard Harrington, quoted Richard in an article:

Template:Quote

Elvis Presley version

Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main other Elvis Presley recorded the song[34] and it was included in his first RCA album Elvis Presley, released March 23, 1956. Presley's version uses "A-wop-bop-a-loo-bop-a-lop-bam-boom!" for every verse,[34] finishing the phrase with "bam-boom" instead of "bom-bom". Elvis' cut of "Tutti Frutti" was also released as part of a four track EP (RCA EPA-747) and as the b-side of "Blue Suede Shoes" (RCA 47–6636) which reached #20 on the Billboard chart.

The Beatles versions

According to author Mark Lewisohn in The Complete Beatles Chronicles (p. 365) The Beatles performed "Tutti Frutti" live from at least 1960 through 1962 (in Hamburg, Liverpool and elsewhere). Reportedly the lead vocal was always by Paul McCartney, but it is unknown whether their version was actually based on the one by Elvis or that of Little Richard. No recorded version is known to survive. However, according to author Allen J. Weiner in The Beatles – The Ultimate Recording Guide (p. 225) during the massive Get Back sessions a version of "Tutti Frutti" was recorded. A few months later George Harrison played on a live version which was recorded in Copenhagen with Delaney and Bonnie and Eric Clapton which came out on an unauthorized release, though a legitimate version was also recorded in concert in England (and released in 1970). In 1972 Ringo Starr drummed on, and produced a brief version with Elton John on piano and T. Rex singer Marc Bolan on lead vocal. Lastly, in the 1990s Paul McCartney did a (professionally recorded) soundcheck singing "Tutti Frutti" but not like Elvis or Little Richard but instead like an extremely laid-back Pat Boone of 1956 (Boone's real version was more lively). The McCartney version came out on an unauthorized release, Soundcheck Songs Vol. 1.

Johnny Hallyday versions

Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main other In 1961, French singer Johnny Hallyday (who is considered the French version of Presley) first covered the song live during a set at the Premier festival international de rock (meaning "First international rock festival"), which was held at the Dôme de Paris on February 24 that year, which is credited for having a great impact and truly launching rock and roll in France, which Hallyday performed at.[35] Two months later, Hallyday's gig at the festival would be released by Disques Vogue on April 5 as "Johnny Hallyday et ses fans au festival de rock 'n' roll" ("Johnny Hallyday and his fans at the rock 'n' roll festival"), being Hallyday's first live album,[36] and Hallyday's live rendition of "Tutti Frutti" would be released as the album's only single nine days later, being Hallyday's first single to feature both an English-language song and Foreign-language song on the A-side as well as his first live single.[37] Hallyday's 1961 live version peaked at Number 8 on the French charts[38][39] and Number 13 on the French Belgian charts.[40][38] 14 years later, Hallyday would later record a studio version for his 1975 studio album "Rock à Memphis" but was not released as a single nor charted.[41]

Personnel[42]

  • Jean-Pierre Martin: guitar
  • Alf Masselier: double bass
  • Teddy Martin: drums
  • Georges Grenu: saxophone

Charts

Chart (1961) Peak
position
France (SNEP)[38][39] 8
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Wallonia)[40][38] 13

Later recordings

Little Richard re-recorded the song in 1964 for Vee Jay Records' Little Richard's Greatest Hits and again in 1976 for a K-tel compilation titled Little Richard Live. Queen played the song live in their Magic Tour in 1986, and it appears on their live recordings Live at Wembley '86[43] and Hungarian Rhapsody.

References

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  1. White, Charles (2003), pp. 49–51 The Life and Times of Little Richard: The Authorised Biography. Omnibus Press.
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  8. a b c Jim Dawson and Steve Propes, What Was The First Rock'n'Roll Record, 1992, Template:ISBN
  9. a b Penniman, Richard Wayne. "Little Richard." Little Richard 24 Jan 2008. GroveMusic.com (subscription only)
  10. White, Charles (2003), p. 55 The Life and Times of Little Richard: The Authorised Biography. Omnibus Press.
  11. Cox, Michael (1997). Mind-Blowing Music Scholastic Press. Template:ISBN
  12. a b Lhamon, W.T. (1990). Deliberate Speed: The Origins of a Cultural Style in the American 1950s. The Smithsonian Institution Template:ISBN?
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  14. Brackett, David. The Pop, Rock, and Soul Reader: Histories and Debates. New York: Oxford, 2004
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  16. AllMusic ((( Joe Lubin > Overview )))
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  21. The Life and Times of Little Richard: The Quasar of Rock. Charles White. Contributor Paul McCartney. Edition: 2, illustrated. Da Capo Press. 1994. p. 57. Template:ISBN
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  29. The Blue Moon Boys – The Story of Elvis Presley's Band. Ken Burke and Dan Griffin. 2006. Chicago Review Press. p. 87. Template:ISBN
  30. Smothers, Robert. "Macon Journal; Georgia's Very Own: a Wop Bam Boom." The New York Times 08 Jan. 1990, Late ed., sec. A10
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  32. Harrington, Richard. "VIDEOS; 'the Early Days,' When Rock Began to Roll." The Washington Post, 19 May 1985, Final ed., sec. G12
  33. O'connor, John J. "Television Review: Rock's Story as Told by Rockers." The New York Times 08 Mar. 1995, Late ed., sec. C20
  34. a b Template:Gilliland
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