Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps A Gene Vincent Record Date With The Blue Caps (LP, 10inch, Ltd.)

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- catalog number:BAF11019
- weight in Kg 0.3
Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps: A Gene Vincent Record Date With The Blue Caps (LP, 10inch, Ltd.)
10inch LP of the 11000 series (limited edition - colored vinyl)
- Reissue of the rare Japanese 1958 Capitol 10inch LP
- Plus 2 bonus tracks!
- Reproduction of the rare original cover jacket
- Painstakingly remastered for highest fidelity
- Pressed on high quality vinyl!
Limited to 500 copies pressed on color vinyl
An exciting 1958 album featuring the snarling Gene Vincent, rock's original bad boy, the blueprint for 'The Rocker'. Behind him are the Blue Caps (the 2nd generation with the late great Johnny Meeks on guitar), a band that was arguably the toughest, excellent musician craftmanship paired with the right nose for the stage, not only a band playing, but playing a show. The musicians throw themselves into even the inferior material with a feral energy that never flags. Even Vincent's hands throwaway filler and cornball standards gain an unexpected edge. We have added 'Dance In The Streets' and 'Anna Annabelle' as bonus tracks! Yeah!
Article properties:Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps: A Gene Vincent Record Date With The Blue Caps (LP, 10inch, Ltd.)
Interpret: Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps
Album titlle: A Gene Vincent Record Date With The Blue Caps (LP, 10inch, Ltd.)
Genre Rock'n'Roll
Label Bear Family Records
- Geschwindigkeit 33 U/min
- Record Grading Mint (M)
- Sleeve Grading Mint (M)
- Vinyl record size LP (10 inch)
Artikelart LP (10 inch)
EAN: 5397102110191
- weight in Kg 0.3
Vincent, Gene - A Gene Vincent Record Date With The Blue Caps (LP, 10inch, Ltd.) LP (10 inch) 1 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
01 | The Wayward Wind | Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps | ||
02 | Hey Good Lookin' | Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps | ||
03 | Keep It A Secret | Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps | ||
04 | Five Feet Of Lovin' | Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps | ||
05 | Dance In The Street (bonus) | Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps | ||
06 | Summertime | Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps | ||
07 | Look What You Gone And Done To Me | Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps | ||
08 | I Can't Help It | Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps | ||
09 | Teen Age Partner | Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps | ||
10 | Anna Annabelle (bonus) | Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps |
Gene Vincent
Eugene Vincent Craddock was born on 11th February 1935 in Norfolk, Virginia. Actually the precise order of his forenames has been the subject of some discussion over the years, and when Gene filled out his application for a social security card, he gave his name as Vincent E. Craddock and although 11th February appears on his birth certificate, his mother continually claimed that it should have read 17th, while his sister Evelyn favoured 22nd. That was how it always was with Gene. Nothing was quite the way it seemed and even the simplest things had a habit of ending up in dispute.
He enjoyed an unremarkable childhood and never progressed beyond an eighth grade education, eventually dropping out and enlisting in the navy at nearby Richmond, Virginia on 19th February 1952 at the age of seventeen. After basic training, he was assigned as a deckhand on USS Chuckawan and in time upgraded to become a boiler man. He would fill the long hours on board by singing and strumming his guitar but only for relaxation and never with any thoughts of fame and fortune.
His one passion, other than girls, was for motorcycling. By mid 1955 he had upgraded from his first small bike to a powerful Triumph and had effected a transfer to shore duties where he was working as a despatch rider attached to the naval base in Norfolk.
The episode which changed Gene Craddock's life forever occurred in July 1955 and as usual there are several different versions of the incident. It is however generally accepted that a woman driving a Chrysler jumped a red light and a sickening collision left him with a permanent injury to his left leg which had been almost severed just above the shin.
The doctors favoured amputation and with hindsight this would have been the best option, but he always fought against the ultimate solution and consequently lived the rest of his life in various degrees of pain. For six months he was in and out of Portsmouth Naval Hospital, hobbling around on crutches with his whole leg encased in plaster. This already serious injury was made worse because of his apparent unwillingness to rest the wound and on several occasions the doctors were obliged to re-set the leg because it was not healing satisfactorily.
During the period of his recuperation another event took place which was destined to shape the future of Gene Craddock's life. For two nights on 11th and 12th September 1955, Elvis Presley came to Norfolk and Gene was among the capacity audience at the City Auditorium as teenagers rioted and mobbed him, literally tearing his clothes apart for souvenirs. The audience reaction to Presley must have had a dramatic effect on the youngster, whose own career prospects were no longer looking very promising. From then on, singing rock 'n' roll was all that Gene ever wanted to do with his life.
Presley's appearance in Norfolk, Virginia had been sponsored by a local radio station, WCMS, and when in February 1956 they called for neighbourhood talent to audition for a new show, 'Country Showtime,' Gene overcame his shyness and sang Presley's song Heartbreak Hotel, creating sufficient impact to qualify for the finals which were held at the Carnival Room in Norfolk. This time he performed an unknown song Be-Bop-A-Lula, backed by the Virginians, who were the WCMS house band and included one, Ervin Williams, in their line-up on rhythm guitar. Gene caused such a stir that he and the Virginians quickly became regulars on 'Country Showtime' and even played a few live shows at a local car lot on the weekends.
It was WCMS disc jockey Bill 'Sheriff Tex' Davis who had the foresight to really kick start young Gene Craddock's career. A few months earlier he had made brief contact with Ken Nelson of Capitol Records at the Disc Jockey Convention in Nashville. He rang through to him in California and was greeted with unexpected enthusiasm. RCA had recently purchased Presley's contract from Sun and with their greater financial muscle and superior distribution network were rapidly elevating him to stardom. Capitol did not have any rock 'n' roll singers to compete with RCA and although Ken Nelson had no personal interest in the music, he was astute enough to realise that they needed to climb aboard this latest bandwagon, and quickly.
Sheriff Tex Davis gathered together a group of local musicians which comprised Ervin 'Willie' Williams from the Virginians on rhythm guitar, lead guitarist Cliff Gallup, Jack Neal on double bass, plus fifteen year old school boy, Dickie Harrell on drums and on 9th April, they recorded a demo of Be-Bop-A-Lula which was duly dispatched to Nelson at Capitol. For three weeks they heard nothing, but when he finally called, it was an excited Ken Nelson who invited them to Nashville to make a record.
The whirlwind that became Gene's life had begun and he was totally unprepared for what was about to happen. They arrived in Nashville on 3rd May and holed up at the Andrew Jackson Hotel until the following day, when they would record one of the popular music's greatest records, an anthem of rock 'n' roll. This inexperienced gaggle of musicians who had hardly played together and really had little idea what they were doing, were about to hit the jackpot.
Ken Nelson was having second thoughts about the whole project and fearing that this unpromising looking troupe would be less than competent, had assembled a team of session musicians to accompany Gene. There was however one ace in their pack and that was guitarist, Cliff Gallup. As soon as he started to play, the session musicians were sent home and Nelson pinned all his hopes on the five of them. Cliff Gallup was something special and he would in time be recognised as one of rock music's great guitarists. It was indeed fortunate that he was at Gene's side at this vital time of his life.
Three of the four songs recorded that first day open this new collection of Vincent's greatest work. Race With The Devil was a driving rocker containing some wonderfully original guitar work from Gallup which fitted beautifully around Gene's hiccuppy vocals, while Woman In Love was an even wilder slab of rock 'n' roll, on which he literally panted his way through partially unintelligible lyrics. Ken Nelson had great difficulty in the studio because Gene's soft voice was being overpowered by the guitars and drums, so eventually he was made to sing from another room to obtain the necessary separation...
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Gene Vincent 10" red-vinyl
Great record, beautiful presentation. Bear Family is my favorite company and has been for years. Everything is quality minded up to and including professional shipment. Always arrives like the day it was sent. Thanks for being there for us audiophiles.
Überragend
die Platte klingt viel besser als die LP Nachpressungen aus Frankreich und USA
Note 1 schönes Wochenende noch
TOP Qualität in Super Ausstattung
Eine wunderschön gemachte 10" Re-Issue. Tolles Cover und wertige Aufmachung. Nur die Innenhülle sollte, wie bei den anderen G,V, 10" gefüttert sein. Ansonsten PERFEKT!
Yikes!
It's a gasser, the 2nd japanese 10", then it's only one missing: "Sounds Like Gene Vincent" ... will it come too? The four Vincents would make a great row on my wall. "... give me more more more!"

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