[On March 21st, 1952, Cleveland Arena hosted the Moondog Coronation Ball, an event widely considered the first major rock and roll concert. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that concert and other groundbreaking rock and roll figures and stories, leading up to a special weekend post on 21st century rockers carrying the legacies forward!]
On a few iconic
moments in the career of a pioneering, legendary rock ‘n roller.
1)
“The Fat Man”: Domino’s first hit under his
debut recording contract with Lew Chudd’s Imperial
Records, co-written with his frequent producer and collaborator (and an influential artist
in his own right) Dave Bartholomew and recorded at Cosimo Matassa’s J&M
Recording Studios on Rampart Street, wasn’t just the first rock record to
sell a million copies (although it did hit
that groundbreaking number by 1951). It also embodies rock’s profoundly
cross-cultural origins, on so many levels: from Domino’s own French Creole
heritage (his first language was Louisiana Creole) to Matassa’s
multi-generational Italian American New Orleans legacy, from Chudd’s childhood
in Toronto and Harlem as the son of Russian Jewish immigrants to African
American artist Bartholomew’s time in the US Army Ground Forces Band (an
integrated band despite the army’s segregation in the era) during WWII. It took
all those individuals and all those legacies to make “Fat Man” and get American
rock music rolling.
2)
“The King”: Over the next couple decades Domino
would record many more hit records and albums, with “Ain’t That a Shame”
(1955) and “Blueberry
Hill” (1956) the two biggest smashes. A February
1957 Ebony magazine feature
dubbed him (on the cover no less) the “King of Rock ‘n Roll.” But it was an
offhand line from another “King,” more than a decade later, that most potently
reflects Domino’s status and influence. On July
31, 1969, Domino attended Elvis Presley’s first concert at the Las Vegas
International Hotel; during a post-concert press conference, a reporter
referred to Presley as “The King,” and he responded by pointing at Domino and
noting, “No, that’s the real king of rock and roll.” At the same event Elvis took an
iconic picture with Domino, calling him “one of my influences from way
back.” I’ll have a bit more to say about Elvis and his influence in a couple
days; but regardless of any other factors, this recognition for Domino from one
of the most famous American rockers in history illustrates just how iconic Fats
was within (and beyond) the industry.
3)
Katrina: Domino was known to be one of the most
humble and grounded rock stars, and he and his wife Rosemary continued to live
in their home
in New Orleans’ Lower Ninth Ward throughout the late 20th
century and into the first decade of the 21st. Because of Rosemary’s
ailing health they did not evacuate in the days before Hurricane Katrina hit
the city, and in the storm’s chaotic aftermath their home was flooded and Domino
and Rosemary were feared dead for a couple long days. But it turned out
they had been rescued by a Coast Guard helicopter, and in 2006 and 2007 Domino
made triumphant returns to the city and the music world: first with his 2006
album Alive and Kickin’, the proceeds from which benefitted
Tipitina’s Foundation; and then with his last public performance (and first in many
years), a legendary May
19, 2007 concert at Tipitina’s. If there had been any doubt that Domino
represented New Orleans just as much and as well as he does rock ‘n roll, these
culminating iconic moments laid them forever to rest.
Next rock and
roll remembrance tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other rock and roll pioneers you’d highlight?
No comments:
Post a Comment