The Specialty Story with Billy Vera Interview
by Ric Stewart
This attractive 4 cd box set holds almost 6 hours of
stompin', joyous, exuberant rhythm & blues. Specialty exemplifies the
post World War II independent labels which sprang up to record the hot
new musical styles emanating from America's inner cities. Specialty's
owner Art Rupe-- like the founders of Chess, Atlantic, Sun, Imperial,
and other indies -- was a small-time white entrepreneur with a love
for black music, an adventurous, pragmatic approach to recording, and
a shrewd sense for finding and marketing the hot artists which ghetto
audiences loved but major labels were ignoring. Building their rosters
on the jumping new small band R&B sound, Rupe and the other independents
ushered in a new era in the mid- '50's, when the music, shifting gears
only slightly, found a huge new audience of white teenagers, and became
known as rock & roll.
Rupe was based in Los Angeles, and recorded primarily
in L.A. and also, significantly in New Orleans. As this fact suggests,
the bands and artists he found and showcased represent, not the raw,
gritty, Mississippi-based styles which attracted the Chess brothers
in Chicago and Sam Phillips in Memphis, but rather the more polished,
swing-based, "jump" blues sound which emigrated to the West Coast from
Texas, Kansas City, New Orleans. With rollicking boogie-woogie piano
weaving through tight riffing horn sections, Rupe's artists represented
the good-humored, upbeat new music which dominated the R&B charts in
the late '40's and early '50's.
Specialty's most successful artist in this period was
the veteran drummer-singer Roy Milton, and this box includes the nineteen
R&B hits he charted, all displaying his hearty, straight-ahead vocal
style, inventive horn arrangements, driving rhythm, and the marvelous
Camille Howard's incendiary piano playing, which soars and swoops delightfully
through the band, adding the magic touch to all of these sides. There
are also a few numbers by Howard as a vocalist; and five wonderful sides
each by the bands of brothers Joe Liggins and Jimmy Liggins, who are
actually better singers and inventive writer-arrangers than Milton even
though they didn't match his track record on the charts. The unique
and deeply soulful blues poet Percy Mayfield makes his debut with 7
cuts here, including his original recording of "Please Send Me Someone
to Love." And there are numerous individual entries, some by artists
better known on other labels (Clifton Chenier, Floyd Dixon, Earl King),
others the only hit by obscure talents such as Li'l Millet, Johnny Fuller,
and the now-legendary Guitar
Slim
To make the transition to rock'n'roll superhit status
in the '50's, the R&B indies needed wild, charismatic, younger stars
whose charm and individuality would make them irresistible to the expanding
white audience. Specialty found its greatest star in the magical Little
Richard, and the later discs of this set are dominated by the 19 hits
he blasted out for the label from 1955 to '57, before (temporarily)
abandoning rock & roll for the ministry. The rock and roll period also
brought Specialty the amazing duo of Don & Dewey, whose razor-sharp
duet vocals were the model for both the Righteous Brothers and Sam &
Dave, and whose music ("Koko Joe", "Big Boy Pete," etc.) is if anything
even wilder and harder-driving than Richard's -- too wild (and too black),
in fact, to be accepted on white radio at the time. Rupe also scored
several solid and influential pop hits each by New Orleans singers Lloyd
Price and Larry Williams,among others. And there is a hint of the soul
music era to come: we hear the wonderfully fluid, affecting vocal style
of Sam Cooke dominating two gospel outings by the Soul Stirrers, and
the same style translated effortlessly into one of his first secular
pop numbers. Specialty's chronology essentially ends here, as Art Rupe,
disenchanted with payola practices and other changes in the music industry,
quit recording to pursue other business interests by around 1960.
The Specialty Story includes an attractive 44-page booklet
with cool period photos and ads, thorough discographical documentation,
and well-written, informative notes by compiler Billy Vera. Some of
the selections might be debatable, featuring a name performer not at
his peak, a Vera fave, or a novelty song which does not fit equally
well in this context. However, many of the obscurities in the set are
indeed under-recognized classics. A case could also be made in favor
of more outstanding gospel from the outstanding Specialty vaults than
this set includes. You can find many of these fine gospel tracks on
Specialty's Greatest Gospel Gems, a 70 minute single cd. Overall,
the total value and impact of The Specialty Story is enormous; it provides
a snapshot of a crucial period in 20th Century music, and dozens upon
dozens of rich classic performances which are soulful, rockin', and
indispensable.
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