Janis Martin

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
My Boy Elvis 00:00 Tools
Bang Bang 00:00 Tools
Let's Elope Baby 00:00 Tools
Love and Kisses 00:00 Tools
Barefoot Baby 00:00 Tools
Ooby Dooby 00:00 Tools
Cracker Jack 00:00 Tools
Two Long Years 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock 'n' Roll 00:00 Tools
Good Love 00:00 Tools
Little Bit 00:00 Tools
Will You Willyum 00:00 Tools
All Right, Baby 00:00 Tools
Hard Times Ahead 00:00 Tools
Love Me to Pieces 00:00 Tools
Here Today and Gone Tomorrow 00:00 Tools
Teen Street 00:00 Tools
William 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock'n'roll 00:00 Tools
Blues Keep Calling 00:00 Tools
Love Me Love 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy, My Billy Boy 00:00 Tools
Cry Guitar 00:00 Tools
I'll Never Be Free 00:00 Tools
I Don't Hurt Anymore 00:00 Tools
One More Year to Go 00:00 Tools
Half Loved 00:00 Tools
My Confession 00:00 Tools
Please Be My Love 00:00 Tools
Will You, Willyum 00:00 Tools
Just Squeeze Me 00:00 Tools
All Right Baby 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock'n Roll 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock and Roll 00:00 Tools
Love Me Love (Cha Cha) 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock & Roll 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy, Billy Boy 00:00 Tools
Just Squeeze Me (But Don't Tease Me) 00:00 Tools
DRUGSTORE 00:00 Tools
As Long As I'm Movin' 00:00 Tools
Billi Boy, My Billi Boy 00:00 Tools
Wham Bam Jam 00:00 Tools
Wild One (Real Wild Child) 00:00 Tools
It'll Be Me 00:00 Tools
Long White Cadillac 00:00 Tools
Find Out What's Happening 00:00 Tools
Let´s Elope Baby 00:00 Tools
Roll Around Rockin' 00:00 Tools
I Believe What You Say 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock`n Roll 00:00 Tools
Oh Lonesome Me 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock n Roll 00:00 Tools
Sweet Dreams 00:00 Tools
Walk Softly On This Heart Of Mine 00:00 Tools
Crackerjack 00:00 Tools
All Right 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock `n` Roll 00:00 Tools
Mama He Treats Your Daughter Mean 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy My Billy Boy 00:00 Tools
Love Me Love (Version 2) 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock 'n Roll 00:00 Tools
Old Time Rock and Roll 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock n' Roll 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rok`n Roll 00:00 Tools
Dumas Walker 00:00 Tools
Will you Will Yum 00:00 Tools
Here I Am 00:00 Tools
Just Squeeze Me (Don't Tease Me) 00:00 Tools
My Boy Elvis - "Famous People" 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock 00:00 Tools
Too Long Years 00:00 Tools
Walk Softly On This Heart Of 00:00 Tools
Aprende a Ser Infiel 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy 00:00 Tools
Drugstor Rock 'N' Roll 00:00 Tools
Barefoot Babye 00:00 Tools
Hard Rocking Mama 00:00 Tools
drugstore r'n'r 00:00 Tools
Love Me Love Cha Cha 00:00 Tools
Drugstores Rock And Roll 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock ´n´ Roll 00:00 Tools
"Johohoe! Traft ihr das Schiff im Meere an!" 00:00 Tools
Alright Baby 00:00 Tools
Cracker Jack (Live) 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy, My Billy Boy (take 1) 00:00 Tools
Bang Bang (1958) 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy, My Billy Boy (take 3) 00:00 Tools
Barefoot Baby (The Female Elvis) 00:00 Tools
Good Love (take 2) 00:00 Tools
Drug Store Rock'n Roll 00:00 Tools
Bout That 00:00 Tools
All Right Baby (take 2) 00:00 Tools
Cracker Jack (take 1) 00:00 Tools
My Baby Left Me 00:00 Tools
Bang Bang (Remastered) 00:00 Tools
Love Me Love (Alternate Version) 00:00 Tools
I Don't Hurt Anymore (take 6) 00:00 Tools
Love And Kisses (take 1) 00:00 Tools
I'll Never Be Free (take 1) 00:00 Tools
Little Bit (take 7) 00:00 Tools
I´ll Never Be Free 00:00 Tools
Just Squeeze Me - But Don't Tease Me 00:00 Tools
Dugstore Rock 'n' Roll 00:00 Tools
Half Loved (take 5) 00:00 Tools
Just Squeeze Me (But Don't Tease (take 2) 00:00 Tools
Billy Boy, My Billy Boy - 1957 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock’n’Roll 00:00 Tools
Let's elope 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock'N Roll (1956) 00:00 Tools
Love And Kisses (take 6) 00:00 Tools
Just Squeeze Me (But Don’t Tease Me) 00:00 Tools
I Don’t Hurt Anymore 00:00 Tools
13 Billy Boy, My Billy Boy 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock Roll 00:00 Tools
Ooby Dooby (1956) 00:00 Tools
Crackerjack - Live 00:00 Tools
Will You,Willyum 00:00 Tools
Cracker Jack (1958) 00:00 Tools
Love Me to Pieces - Live 00:00 Tools
12 All Right, Baby 00:00 Tools
11 two long years 00:00 Tools
23 One More Year To Go 00:00 Tools
Drug Store Rock 'n' Roll 00:00 Tools
24 Blues Keep Calling 00:00 Tools
30 Love Me, Love 00:00 Tools
billy boy, my billy boy (1957) 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock´N´Roll 00:00 Tools
01 Drugstore Rock'n Roll 00:00 Tools
Let s Elope Baby 00:00 Tools
halfed loved 00:00 Tools
Cracker Jack (The Female Elvis) 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock 'n' Roll (1956) 00:00 Tools
Will You Willyum (1956) 00:00 Tools
28 My Confession 00:00 Tools
My Boy Elvis (n-128) 00:00 Tools
Eres para Mí (feat. Henry Méndez) 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock n'Roll 00:00 Tools
Love Me, Love - Alternate Version 00:00 Tools
Two Long Years - Live 00:00 Tools
Bout That (feat. The Prodigy) 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock And Roll {56} 00:00 Tools
As Long As I'm Moving 00:00 Tools
My Boy Elvis (1956) 00:00 Tools
Drugstore Rock ' Roll 00:00 Tools
Love And Kisses (1957) 00:00 Tools
Oobie Doobie 00:00 Tools
Billy Bob, Billy Boy 00:00 Tools
Barefoot Baby (1956) 00:00 Tools
Good Love (1958) 00:00 Tools
Get Hot or Go Home 00:00 Tools
Hard Rockin' Mama 00:00 Tools
My Confession (1957) 00:00 Tools
Allright Baby 00:00 Tools
Little Bit (v 2) 00:00 Tools
Let's Hope Baby 00:00 Tools
Blues Keep Callin' 00:00 Tools
DRUGSTORE R&R 00:00 Tools
Love Me Two Pieces 00:00 Tools
Love Me, Love Baby 00:00 Tools
Free Arr. over the Piece "Alborada" 00:00 Tools
Bare Foot Baby 00:00 Tools
House of Leaves 00:00 Tools
I Don´t Hurt Anymore 00:00 Tools
William (48) 00:00 Tools
Little Bit (1956) 00:00 Tools
Crackerjack (Live) 00:00 Tools
Janis Martin - My Boy Elvis 00:00 Tools
Barefoot 00:00 Tools
Medley: My Baby Left Me/C.C. Rider/That's Allright Mama 00:00 Tools
Drugstore R+R 00:00 Tools
Let's Elope, Baby 00:00 Tools
Drugstro Rock'n'Roll 00:00 Tools
Let's Elope Ba 00:00 Tools
08-Janis Martin-Drugstore Rock 00:00 Tools
As Long As I'm Moving from The Blanco Sessions 00:00 Tools
Hard Times Ahead. 00:00 Tools
13 - My Boy Elvis 00:00 Tools
  • 322,926
    plays
  • 44,043
    listners
  • 322926
    top track count

Janis Darlene Martin (March 27, 1940 – September 3, 2007) was an American rockabilly and country singer. With a distinctive country twang to her voice, she was one of the few women performing rockabilly music during the period of the genre's infancy, and a pioneering female innovator on the country music scene. Nicknamed "The Female Elvis" due to her vivacious on-stage dancing, she was the only female rocker given this title who was acknowledged by Elvis Presley himself. She is among the best-selling female rock acts, her 1956 single "Drugstore Rock 'n' Roll" having sold 750,000 copies. Born in Sutherlin, Virginia, Martin was raised by a stage mother and a musician father. Before she was six, Martin could already play guitar and sing, modeling her vocal style after Eddy Arnold and Hank Williams. In time, she came to participate in statewide talent contests, beating out 200 participants. As a result, Martin was asked to play on the same bill as Cowboy Copas and Sunshine Sue, the latter being the host of the Old Dominion Barn Dance radio show, which was regularly broadcast on one of Virginia's most influential radio stations, on which Martin was now granted a spot. As time went on, Martin tired of country music, and aspired instead to assign herself to a new, raucous style of music, which would come to be known as rockabilly. By chance, WRVA station announcer Carl Stutz had composed a song, "Will You Willyum", and asked Martin to record the song live as a demo for RCA Records. Suitably impressed with Martin's performance, RCA signed Martin, a mere two months after Elvis Presley had transferred to RCA from Sun Records. Backed with Martin's own composition, "Drugstore Rock 'n' Roll", "Will You Willyum" became a smash hit, the first in a series of country and rock hits such as "Barefoot Baby", a cover of Roy Orbison's "Ooby Dooby", and "My Boy Elvis". Her initial success had garnered her appearances on nationwide television, as well the attention of Presley's manager, Colonel Tom Parker, and she was billed the official "Female Elvis". There were plans of a Martin/Presley double-bill, but wary of such a taxing tour -- Presley had recently collapsed on stage as a result of exhaustion -- Martin's parents rejected Parker's offer, and she instead toured as the top name of a series of Old Dominion Barn Dance shows. Her last single of 1956 was "Let's Elope Baby"; in 1957, Martin did indeed elope with her boyfriend, a paratrooper, and got married. They kept their marriage secret from Martin's parents until the paratrooper was shipped off to Germany; as she was only fifteen at the time, her father attempted to have the marriage annulled. Although this did not come to pass, they aimed to keep the marriage a secret for the sake of their daughter's career. Upon her husband's return on leave, Martin became pregnant, causing RCA to drop her from the label. Though other major labels expressed interest, Martin signed with the Belgian Palette label, recording a series of downbeat love songs. In 1960, Martin's second husband demanded that she leave the music business, an easy decision for a weary and somewhat disillusioned Martin. However, over the years, her love of music began to flourish once again, and come her husband's second such ultimatum, she chose music over him, performing with her new band, The Variations. In 1975, Martin told her untold story of teenage love in Goldmine magazine; at the time, there was a resurgence of rockabilly interest in Europe, and Martin departed on a tour of the region. With a revived career, several previously unreleased cuts were released as singles, and Bear Family released a nigh-comprehensive compilation of her '50s singles. Martin died from cancer in 2007, only half a year after the death of her only son. Before her death, she had recorded an album with Rosie Flores, whom she had earlier worked together with alongside Wanda Jackson. These recordings were released as The Blanco Sessions in 2012. In 2010, the Library of Virginia recognized Martin as an influential Virginian, naming her one of the "Virginia Women in History". Martin's legacy endures to this day, remaining one of the most influential and beloved women of rockabilly. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.