Roy Hall

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Three Alley Cats 02:28 Tools
Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On 02:59 Tools
See You Later Alligator 02:34 Tools
Diggin' The Boogie 00:00 Tools
Off-Beat Boogie 00:00 Tools
Don't Stop Now 02:35 Tools
All By Myself 02:48 Tools
Blue Suede Shoes 00:00 Tools
Move On 02:22 Tools
I Lost My Baby 02:23 Tools
Christine 02:24 Tools
You Ruined My Blue Suede Shoes 02:37 Tools
Dirty Boogie 02:56 Tools
She Sure Can Rock Me 02:36 Tools
Orange Blossom Special 00:00 Tools
Knock Knock Rattle 00:00 Tools
Go Go Little Queenie 00:00 Tools
Flood Of Love 00:00 Tools
Rockin' The Blues 00:00 Tools
Mule Boogie 02:42 Tools
My Girl and His Girl 00:00 Tools
Don’t Stop Now 00:00 Tools
Sweet Love On My Mind 00:00 Tools
Luscious 02:41 Tools
Three Alley Cats (1956) 00:00 Tools
One Monkey Can't Stop the Show 00:00 Tools
Bed Spring Motel 00:00 Tools
Whole Lotta Shakin´ Goin´ On 00:00 Tools
Christine - Original 00:00 Tools
Okee Doaks 00:00 Tools
Sweet Love On My Mind - Alternate - Original Re-Mix (Fast) 00:00 Tools
Sweet Love On My Mind (alt.) 00:00 Tools
i do like girls 00:00 Tools
dig everybody dig that boogie 00:00 Tools
You Ruined My Blue 00:00 Tools
I Lost My Baby - Original 00:00 Tools
Diggin' the Boogie (1956) 00:00 Tools
Three Ally Cats 00:00 Tools
Whole Lotta Shaking Going On 00:00 Tools
Wabash Cannonball 00:00 Tools
Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin´ On 00:00 Tools
One Monkey Don't Stop The Show 00:00 Tools
Never Marry A Tennessee Gal 00:00 Tools
Ko Ko Mo (I Love You So) 00:00 Tools
Whole Lot Of Shakin' Going On 00:00 Tools
Dig Everything Dig That Boogie 00:00 Tools
Diggin´ the Boogie 02:38 Tools
Polecat Blues 00:00 Tools
See You Later Alligator (1956) 00:00 Tools
Lucious 00:00 Tools
Put Your Cat Clothes On 00:00 Tools
Bed Spring Motel (23 Spring St.) 00:00 Tools
Don’t Stop Now 00:00 Tools
A Day At The Pines 00:00 Tools
Little Queenie 00:00 Tools
No Rose In San Antone 00:00 Tools
Whole Lotta Shakin' Going' On 00:00 Tools
Diggin The Boogie 00:00 Tools
Rock 'N' Roll Granpa 00:00 Tools
bed spring motel (23 spring street) 00:00 Tools
Go Ahead, Baby (Sunlp1019 Version 1) 00:00 Tools
Diggin' The Mule - Alt 00:00 Tools
Christine [vers. 2] 00:00 Tools
Christine -Alt 00:00 Tools
Blue Spring Motel (23 Spring Street) 00:00 Tools
Bedspring Motel 00:00 Tools
Miss Pearl 00:00 Tools
Dig, Everybody, Dig That Boogie 00:00 Tools
Whole Lotta Shakin'Goin'On 00:00 Tools
Three Alley Cats (1958) 00:00 Tools
Sweet Love On My Mind (Alt) 00:00 Tools
Constant Sorrow 00:00 Tools
My Girl And His Girl (2005) 00:00 Tools
My Girl and His Girl - Original 00:00 Tools
Old Folks Jamboree 00:00 Tools
Christine (1984) 00:00 Tools
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James Faye "Roy" Hall was born on May 7, 1922, in Big Stone Gap, Virginia. An old colored man taught him to play piano, and to drink. By the time Roy turned twenty-one, he knew that he was the best drunken piano-player in Big Stone Gap, and armed with the pride and confidence that this knowledge gave him, he departed the town of his birth to seek fame. Roy made it to Bristol and farther, pumping boogie-woogie in every Virginia, Tennessee, or Alabama beer-joint that had a piano. He played those pianos fast and hard and sinful, like that colored man who had taught him back in Big Stone Gap; but he sang like the hillbilly that he was. He organized his own band, Roy Hall and His Cohutta Mountain Boys (Cohutta was part of the Appalachians, in the shadows of whose foothills he had been raised up). It was a five-piece band, with Tommy Odum on lead guitar, Bud White on rhythm guitar, Flash Griner on bass, and Frankie Brumbalough on fiddle. Roy pounded the piano and did most of the singing; but everybody else in the band sang too. In 1949 Roy and the band cut their first records, for Fortune, a small, independent label located on 12th Street in Detroit. Over the next year Fortune released six sides by Roy Hall: "Dirty Boogie," "Okee Doaks," "Never Marry a Tennessee Girl," "We Never Get Too Big to Cry," "Five Years in Prison," and "My Freckle Face Gal." Most of these recordings were slick hillbilly blues, similar to the sort of music with which Hank Williams had recently risen to fame. But the most successful of the bunch, "Dirty Boogie" was a wild, nasty rocker which foreshadowed much of what was to come to be musically in the South during the next few years. In 1950 Roy traveled on to Nashville alone. He cut two records there that year for Bullet, one of Nashville's most active independent labels. Both of these Bullet singles, "Mule Boogie" and "Ain't You Afraid," were fine hard-driving things, but they failed to sell. After Bullet, he recorded for Tennessee, a small local company that had a national hit in 1951 with Del Wood's piano instrumental "Down Yonder"; but Roy Hall's piano brought no hits. He opened a joint in Nashville called the Music Box (later renamed the Musicians Hideaway). There he played piano and drank. One of Roy Hall's most loyal customers was Webb Pierce, who, following Hank Williams's death on NewYear's Day 1953, became the undisputed king of the country singers. Pierce hired Roy as his piano-player, using him on most of his recordings in 1954-55. During this time, Roy also recorded with Marty Robbins and Hawkshaw Hawkins. In the summer of 1954 Elvis Presley came to Roy Hall's club looking for work. Roy recalled; "I fired him after just that one night. He weren't no damn good." Towards the end of that same year another young man came to the club looking for work. He was Jerry Lee Lewis, and Roy kept him on for a few weeks. Roy hired Jerry for $15 a night. They did a lot of duets together. It was also in 1954 that Roy Hall and a black musician named Dave Williams took a trip to the Everglades that resulted in one of the classic rock 'n' roll songs; Twenty-one drums and an ol' bass horn Somebody beatin' on a ding-dong Come on over baby, whole lotta shakin'goin' on Come on over baby, baby, you can't go wrong There ain't no fakin', whole lotta shakin'goin' on Webb Pierce arranged for Hall to sign a contract with Decca, and on September 15, 1955, Hall went into the studio and cut three songs for the label, including "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On." The record was released three weeks later. Roy Hall continued to record for Decca until the summer of 1956. While a few of these recordings, such as his cover of Carl Perkins's "Blue Suede Shoes," were plainly uninspired, most of them were among the most fiery rockabilly records of the midfifties. His "Diggin' the Boogie" contained one of the toughest and most unrelenting rhythms that had ever been recorded in the South. But none of this amounted to a hit record. Bad luck seemed to follow Roy Hall. "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On," which he had co-written under the pseudonym of Sunny David, became a huge hit for Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy's ex-employee, in 1957, and Roy stood to make a good deal of money in royalties. But when the time came to collect he was sued by his ex-wife, and the court awarded her his share of the royalties from the song. But Roy Hall kept on pumping his rockabilly music, and he kept playing around Nashville and wherever else he could find a piano and a paycheck. Roy died on March 2, 1984, in Nashville. He was sixty-one years old. Nick Tosches, 1984 Source: Unsung Heroes of Rock 'n' Roll by Nick Tosches Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.