Click on the headline to link to a Youtube film clip of Carl Perkins performing Bopping The Blues.
CD Review
The Rock and Roll Era: 1956,
various artists, Time-Life Music, 1989
Nobody in the whole wide
Western world wanted to be the be-bop max daddy king hell king of rock and roll
more than Billie (not Billy, not regular old ordinary vanilla Billy) Bradley.
Well, nobody except maybe the king himself, Elvis, but Billy was a close
second. What Billy was first at, and maybe more first than Elvis, was the
desire to use whatever musical talents he had (and they were promising) to be
the king hell king of the projects where he grew up. And so whenever Billie
(don’t spell it the other way even now, even now when he is long gone from king
hell king strivings) was not in school, was not humoring his corner boys
(including me) with some song or skit, or was not robbing some uptown Olde Saco
merchant of his earthy goods or planning to, he was before the mirror (vanity
thy name is Billie or one of thy names is Billie) singing some song but more importantly
developing that certain look that was to drive the girls wild.
And it worked for a while, a
while around the Olde Saco projects for a while with the local girls (junior
division about age twelve or under) who wanted their Elvis moment even if it
was once removed. Not that Billie’s look was anything like Elvis’ (in tense
moments Billie would call Elvis’ style pure punk, nothing , nada). Every time
Olde Saco South Elementary School put on
a charity talent show during the period from, say 1956 to 1958 Billie was
there. And for several shows running he was the be-bop king hands downs. The
girls would flock around him and his “rejects” would wind up with his corner
boys (including me) and so for all the Olde Saco days and nights of that period
we were his biggest promoters. Praise be king Billie.
Then one night one 1958 night
at a church benefit held in the basement of Sainte Brigitte’s Billie came unglued. See he had become
something of a local kid celebrity by
then and so Alabaster Records, the big label for new talent, had sent an agent
to see Billie do his stuff. Naturally Billie wanted to impress so he tore into
his best cover, Carl Perkin’s Bopping The Blues. What nobody knew, at least
nobody in the audience (except said corner boys), was that his suit, his sweet
Billie suit, had been quickly made by his mother on the fly from material
purchased at some bargain discount joint. About half way through the
performance first one arm of his suit jacket came flying off and then the
other. Needless to say the Alabaster agents wrote Billie off without a
murmur.
Here is the funny part. The
girls, those giggling teeny-bopper girls, thought that the arm gag was part of
Billie act and so for many, many months Billie was followed by a bevy (nice,
word, huh) of adoring girls from school and the neighborhood. And we, his loyal
corner boys gladly took his “rejects.” Here is the not funny part though. After
than night, after that rejection something, and I don’t know what and I was closest
to him at that point, snapped in Billie. Something about the world being fixed
a certain way, a certain not Billie way and it ate at him. From that point on
the wanna-be gangster began to take over. I stayed with him through part it and then
moved on. But when he was in his Elvis moment, yes, when he was in his Elvis
moment, he made the earth move.
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