Medley: Ain't That A Shame/ I Got A Woman/ Tutti Frutti (Live)
Very Best Of Little Richard by Little Richard. The Original Rock'n Roller unleashes an essential collection of 25 digitally remastered greatest hits including "Tutti Frutti", 'Long Tall Sally", "Good Golly, Miss Molly" and... more » more! These are the original hits as recorded for the legendary Specialty Records label from the fabulous `50s!« less
Very Best Of Little Richard by Little Richard. The Original Rock'n Roller unleashes an essential collection of 25 digitally remastered greatest hits including "Tutti Frutti", 'Long Tall Sally", "Good Golly, Miss Molly" and more! These are the original hits as recorded for the legendary Specialty Records label from the fabulous `50s!
+1/2 - Molten earth forms info one of rock `n' roll's contin
hyperbolium | Earth, USA | 08/03/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Fifty-plus years after budding blues singer Richard Penniman transformed himself into the prototype wild man rock `n' roller Little Richard, these seminal sides on Specialty retain every bit of their invention and abandon. Recorded in New Orleans with the rock 'n' roll pillars of Earl Palmer's second-line drumming and Lee Allen's muscular, swinging saxophone, Little Richard's best singles are as good as any rock 'n' roll records ever recorded. His outlandishly raw and seductive vocals stretched the microphones to their limits, just as his hammering on the piano often threatened to shake his instrument apart.
The hits are radioactive elements of the rock 'n' roll lexicon, their radiance undimmed by fifty years of tribute, imitation and repetition. Starting with 1955's "Tutti Frutti" Richard waxed a string of scorching sides that included "Long Tall Sally," "Good Golly, Miss Molly," "Rip It Up," and "Ready Teddy," each invested with a level of vocal exuberance unmatched by his contemporaries. Even when he'd take a breath and drop the key below the top-edge of his range, as on the mid-tempo "Slipin' and Slidin' (Peepin' and Hidin')," his voice remained edgy, and his instrumental battles with Lee Allen reaped brilliant rewards. Richard wrote or chose songs whose themes matched the newly acquired independence felt by mid-50s teens. Even with the lyrics tidied up here and there, the sexuality was hard to miss, and coupled with the brazenness of Richard's vocals (and Lee Allen's sax), it's easy to see how rock 'n' roll menaced 1950s Eisenhower America.
Even with all this inventiveness, as early as 1956 some of Richard's singles began to sound repetitive. "Heeby Jeeby" and "She's Got It," for example, borrowed liberally from their predecessors. Later in the year, Richard's label head, Art Rupe, maneuvered him into the title song of "The Girl Can't Help It," written by Bobby Troup. The production retains the New Orleans phrasings and edgy vocals of Richard's earlier sides, but adds stagey background singers. Richard still had plenty of thrills in him, however, laying down "Lucille" and "Jenny Jenny" to fill out the year. In between he dropped the Lloyd Price styled ballad "Send Me Some Lovin," penned by Price's brother, adding dynamics to accommodate a bluesier tune.
The rock 'n' roll blast furnace was stoked again in 1957 with the raucous "Keep A-Knockin'," but shortly thereafter Richard quit the business to attend bible college. His vacillation between preaching and rocking (that is, the sacred and the profane) prompted Specialty to issue older sides as new singles in 1957, charting his last U.S. hits with 1955's "True Fine Mama" and 1956's "Good Golly, Miss Molly." A pair of tin pan alley standards, "Baby Face" and "By the Light of the Silvery Moon," hit the U.K. top-20 in 1959, but it wasn't until he returned to touring in 1962, and found fans in the Beatles, that he once again placed himself on the U.K. chart with 1964's "Bama Lama Lou." Filling out the CD are surprisingly sedate covers of Leiber & Stoller's "Kansas City," and one of Richard's original Specialty audition demos, the blues "Baby." Closing the disc is a live medley from 1964 that gives listeners a sense of Richard's commanding performance, even as his band played more soulful than New Orleans raw.
"Was nice to be able to listen to Little Richard's music again. I lost all my original 850 45rpm records in a house fire back in 1992. Glad because these recordings are the original cuts and not the one he released in later years."
Outstanding!
a fan | Midwest | 09/15/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"When I was finally ready to pick up a Little Richard collection, this is what I got and it rocks! Great sound quality, compared to previous collections."
Little Richard at his best
Stephen F. Maziarz Jr. | 04/08/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Wow, what memories. The song selection is great. The CD has great stereo sound and clarity. If you like Little Richard, you'll want this CD in your collection."
Ooh My Soul!
Phil S. | USA | 09/17/2008
(4 out of 5 stars)
"For a Richard fan trainee, it's what the Dr. [Rock] ordered! If one can live with the audio loss at the start of "Tutti Frutti", there's plenty here to make one's big toe shoot up in his/her boot: the full length "Ooh My Soul! (longer sax solo than on the 45rpm); one of the rough demos sent by Richard to Specialty in early 1955, "Baby" [later titled "Baby, Don't You want A Man Like Me?" and recorded professionally by Specialty and Modern, about 10 years apart]; and the rarer than rare medley from June 4th, 1964, with "Ain't That a Shame"/"I Got A Woman"/"Tutti Frutti", all showcasing great g-box work by either Dewey Terry or Glenn Willings.
The deeper-pocket deeper-afficionado might wanna spring for the Ace Box with about 90% of what a 1950s' Richard fan could dream of.
But the matter at hand is a nice package, with a great booklet, with nifty notes by Billy Vera (a few mistakes, but baby....that is R & R!)."