The Collins Kids Hop, Skip & Jump (2-CD Deluxe Box Set)
- catalog number:BCD15537
- weight in Kg 1
The Collins Kids: Hop, Skip & Jump (2-CD Deluxe Box Set)
The 59 titles on this set include all of their classic Columbia recordings from the '50s and early '60s, like 'Beetle Bug Bop', 'I'm In My Teens', 'Hop Skip & Jump', 'Rock Boppin' Baby', 'Shortnin' Bread Rock', 'Hoy Hoy', 'Hot Rod', 'Party', as well as the ear-bending instrumental cuts with Joe Maphis, and the rare sides from Columbia's 'Country Spectacular' LP.
Article properties:The Collins Kids: Hop, Skip & Jump (2-CD Deluxe Box Set)
Interpret: The Collins Kids
Album titlle: Hop, Skip & Jump (2-CD Deluxe Box Set)
Genre Rock'n'Roll
Label Bear Family Records
- Edition 2 Deluxe Edition
- Preiscode BI
Artikelart Box set
EAN: 4000127155375
- weight in Kg 1
Collins Kids, The - Hop, Skip & Jump (2-CD Deluxe Box Set) Box set 1 | ||||
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01 | Go Away Don't Bother Me | The Collins Kids | ||
02 | Rock And Roll Polka | The Collins Kids | ||
03 | Move A Little Closer | The Collins Kids | ||
04 | My First Love | The Collins Kids | ||
05 | Hush Money | The Collins Kids | ||
06 | I Wish | The Collins Kids | ||
07 | The Cuckoo Rock | The Collins Kids | ||
08 | Beetle-Bug-Bop | The Collins Kids | ||
09 | I'm In My Teens | The Collins Kids | ||
10 | The Rockaway Rock | The Collins Kids | ||
11 | They're Still In Love | The Collins Kids | ||
12 | Make Him Behave | The Collins Kids | ||
13 | Hop, Skip And Jump | The Collins Kids | ||
14 | Shortnin' Bread Rock | The Collins Kids | ||
15 | Just Because | The Collins Kids | ||
16 | Hoy Hoy | The Collins Kids | ||
17 | Hot Rod | The Collins Kids | ||
18 | Heartbeat | The Collins Kids | ||
19 | Mama Worries | The Collins Kids | ||
20 | Party | The Collins Kids | ||
21 | Walking The Floor Over You | The Collins Kids | ||
22 | Missouri Waltz | The Collins Kids | ||
23 | You Are My Sunshine | The Collins Kids | ||
24 | Soda Poppin' Around | The Collins Kids | ||
25 | Young Heart | The Collins Kids | ||
26 | Ain't You Ever | The Collins Kids | ||
27 | What'cha Gonna Do Now | The Collins Kids | ||
28 | Waitin' And Watchin' | The Collins Kids | ||
29 | Home Of The Blues | The Collins Kids | ||
30 | The Lonesome Road | The Collins Kids | ||
31 | Early American (& LARRY & JOE MAPHIS) | The Collins Kids | ||
32 | The Rockin' Gypsy (& LARRY & JOE MAPHIS) | The Collins Kids | ||
33 | Bye, Bye (& LARRY & JOE MAPHIS) | The Collins Kids | ||
34 | Hurricane (& LARRY & JOE MAPHIS) | The Collins Kids | ||
35 | Mercy | The Collins Kids | ||
36 | Rock Boppin' Baby | The Collins Kids | ||
37 | Whistle Bait | The Collins Kids | ||
38 | Sweet Talk | The Collins Kids | ||
39 | Soda Poppin' Around (2) | The Collins Kids | ||
40 | Spur Of The Moment | The Collins Kids | ||
41 | The Rebel, Johnny Yuma | The Collins Kids | ||
42 | There'll Be Some Changes Made | The Collins Kids | ||
43 | The Fire Ball Mail | The Collins Kids | ||
44 | T-Bone | The Collins Kids | ||
45 | What About Tomorrow | The Collins Kids | ||
46 | Get Along Home Cindy | The Collins Kids | ||
47 | You've Been Gone Too Long | The Collins Kids | ||
48 | One Step Down | The Collins Kids | ||
49 | There Stands The One | The Collins Kids | ||
50 | Wild And Wicked Love | The Collins Kids | ||
51 | Hey Mama Boom-A-Lacka | The Collins Kids | ||
52 | More Than A Friend | The Collins Kids | ||
53 | The Pied Piper Poodle | The Collins Kids | ||
54 | Blues In The Night | The Collins Kids | ||
55 | Another Man Done Gone | The Collins Kids | ||
56 | Sugar Plum | The Collins Kids | ||
57 | Kinda Like Love | The Collins Kids | ||
58 | Are You Certain? | The Collins Kids | ||
59 | That's Your Affair | The Collins Kids |
The Collins Kids
From Shirley Temple to LeAnn Rimes, there has been a niche for prodigiously talented kids, yet there was always something a little curious about a tot singing adult songs and mimicking adult emotions. Thirteen year-old Brenda Lee singing All The Way, is a good example. The Collins Kids were very young when they started, but their act never quite had the same whiff of unwholesomeness because the whole point about rock ‘n’ roll was that it was for and by kids. No one made that point more explicit than the Collins Kids.
So few child prodigies manage to sustain a career into adulthood. It's true that Ricky Nelson and Michael Jackson made it, although not without scars, but in general, the public loses interest around puberty. So it’s good to report that the Collins Kids, Lawrence and Lawrencine (or Larry and Lorrie) made it into adulthood with a surprising absence of rancor. Larry even saw some of his biggest successes in the music business after he quit jumping round on-stage with his double-necked Mos-Rite. The irony they can’t unravel is that they were one of the best-known acts of the era, but didn’t have any hits.
The Collins family lived in and around Tulsa, Oklahoma. Lorrie was born in Tahlequah on May 7, 1942; Larry was born in Tulsa on October 4, 1944. They grew up in a little town called Pretty Water. Lawrence Collins Sr. was a dairy farmer for a while, then operated a crane in a steel mill. His wife, Hazel, was an amateur singer and mandolin player; she and her sister prefigured the Collins Kids' act on a small scale by performing in school and at church socials when they were in their early teens. Lawrence Sr. didn't have a musical background; when asked, his favourite line was that he played the radio real well. The Collins' oldest daughter, Sherry, briefly contemplated a career in entertainment, but opted for marriage at fifteen instead.
Lorrie’s talent was recognized from an early age. Kay Starr and Teresa Brewer were her favorites, not the hillbilly queens of the day. In 1950 she won a talent contest hosted by western swing bandleader Leon McAuliffe in a Tulsa ballroom. McAuliffe told Hazel Collins that Lorrie was good and that California was where they needed to be. In 1952, Hazel took Lorrie to Los Angeles. “We went to talent shows and agencies and they all thought they could do something with her if we lived in California,“ remembered Hazel. “At that time Jimmy Boyd was big, and a lot of kids were on television. In Oklahoma, there was nothing like that.“ After Hazel and Lorrie came back, they went to the Louisiana Hayride in Shreveport where Lorrie did a guest spot alongside Hank Williams, Johnny Horton, and Billy Walker. There were a few television shows in Oklahoma City, but California was clearly the place. Hazel started putting serious pressure on Lawrence to move.
A career for Larry (then known as 'Bubba') as part of his sister's act wasn’t even considered. He had been given a guitar and a bebe gun for Christmas 1952. “My mother showed me a G and D chord,“ he remembered,“and by the end of Christmas Day I was really whackin’ that guitar. I played a song and jumped around like a fiend. They all laughed at me so I shot the guitar in the back with the bebe gun. I thought I’d done something wrong.“
The Collins moved to California in 1953. Lorrie started entering talent contests, like the Al Jarvis Show and the Hollywood Opportunity Show. Someone called Chef Lonnie hosted a show in Redondo Beach sponsored by Lucky Strike. Larry came to that one--and won; Lorrie placed second. Separately, Larry and Lorrie were regular contestants on Squeakin' Deacon's Sunday talent show at the Riverside Rancho, broadcast over local radio. The idea that they should form a joint act came from Lawrence, Sr. “One day,“ said Hazel,“he told them to go in the bedroom and practise together--and they came out an act. They said, ‘Hey mom, dad, listen to us.’ Larry carried the high tenor part and Lorrie took the lead. They played their guitars. Larry had already taught Lorrie some basic chords.“
By this point, Hazel and Lawrence, Sr. were thinking about returning to Oklahoma, but the kids wanted to stay in California and keep performing. It was Squeakin' Deacon (a transplanted Tennessean named Carl Moore) who told Hazel to take the kids to Bill Wagnon who booked Town Hall Party. Larry and Lorrie entered a Town Hall Party talent contest one Friday night in February 1954, and were hired to perform on television the following day.
Town Hall Party had started in Compton, California in 1951. By 1954, when the Collins Kids joined, the regulars were Wesley Tuttle (the musical director) and his wife Marilyn, Johnny Bond, Tex Ritter and Freddie Hart. The show was broadcast on clear channel station KFI every Saturday night from 9:00-9:30PM, and on television station KTTV from 10:00PM 'til 1:00AM. Starting January 1, 1955, NBC radio carried a portion. Town Hall Party later went into syndication in 26 half-hour episodes as Ranch Party. Together and individually the Collins Kids were on every episode.
Excerpt from the booklet BCD16250 - The Collins Kids - The Rockin'est Read more at: https://www.bear-family.com/collins-kids-the-rockin-est.html Copyright © Bear Family Records
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This product will be released at 1 November 2024