Wynonie Harris - All She Wants To Do Is Rock (1949)

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US R&B Charts No. 1 (27.08.1949) 18 Weeks

Wynonie Harris (August 24, 1915, Omaha, Nebraska – June 14, 1969), was an American blues shouter and rhythm-and-blues singer of upbeat songs, featuring humorous, often ribald lyrics. He had fifteen Top 10 hits between 1946 and 1952. Harris is attributed by many music scholars to be one of the founding fathers of rock and roll.

His dirty blues repertoire included "Lolly Pop Mama" (1948), "I Like My Baby's Pudding" (1950), "Sittin on It All the Time" (1950), "Keep On Churnin'" (1952 and "Wasn't That Good" (1953).
Harris's mother, Mallie Hood Anderson, was fifteen and unmarried at the time of his birth. His paternity is uncertain. His wife, Olive E. Goodlow, and daughter, Patricia Vest, said that his father was a Native American named Blue Jay. Wynonie had no father figure in his family until 1920, when his mother married Luther Harris, fifteen years her senior.

In 1931, at age 16, Harris dropped out of high school in North Omaha. The following year, his first child, a daughter, Micky, was born to Naomi Henderson. Ten months later his son, Wesley, was born to Laura Devereaux. Both children were raised by their mothers. Wesley became a singer in the Five Echoes and in the Sultans and later was a singer and guitarist in Preston Love's band.

In 1935 Harris, age 20, started dating 16-year-old Olive E. (Ollie) Goodlow, of Council Bluffs, Iowa, who came to neighboring Omaha to watch him perform. On May 20, 1936, Ollie gave birth to a daughter, Adrianne Patricia (Pattie). Harris and Ollie were married on December 11, 1936. Later they lived in the Logan Fontenelle projects in North Omaha. Ollie worked as a barmaid and nurse; Harris sang in clubs and took odd jobs. His mother was Pattie's main caretaker. In 1940, Wynonie and Ollie Harris moved to Los Angeles, California, leaving Pattie with her grandmother in Omaha.

Harris formed a dance team with Velda Shannon in the early 1930s.[8] They performed in North Omaha's flourishing entertainment community, and by 1934, were a regular attraction at the Ritz Theatre. In 1935, Harris, having became a celebrity in Omaha, was able to earn a living as an entertainer, in the depths of the Great Depression.

While performing at Jim Bell's Club Harlem nightclub with Shannon, he began to sing the blues. He began traveling frequently to Kansas City, where he paid close attention to blues shouters, including Jimmy Rushing and Big Joe Turner. His break in Los Angeles was at a nightclub owned by Curtis Mosby. It was here that Harris became known as "Mr. Blues".

During the 1942–44 musicians' strike, Harris was unable to pursue a recording career, relying instead on personal appearances. Performing almost continuously, in late 1943 he appeared at the Rhumboogie Club in Chicago.

Wynonie „Mr. Blues“ Harris (* 24. August 1915 in Omaha, Nebraska; † 14. Juni 1969 in Los Angeles, Kalifornien) war ein US-amerikanischer Blues- und R&B-Sänger.

Wynonie Harris war zunächst Schlagzeuger und begann seine Karriere in den Clubs von Los Angeles und Chicago als Sänger und MC; in Chicago hörte ihn 1944 der Bandleader Lucky Millinder in einer Show im Rhumboogie Club und verpflichtete ihn als Sänger für seine Band. Harris war sowohl mit Millinders Big Band als auch mit Lionel Hamptons Orchester unterwegs. Seinen ersten Solohit hatte er 1945 mit „Who Threw the Whiskey in the Well“, das unter Millinders Namen auf Decca erschien. Harris verließ die Band im selben Jahr, ging nach Los Angeles zurück und nahm zahlreiche Platten unter eigenem Namen auf, begleitet von Johnny Otis (als Schlagzeuger), Illinois Jacquet, Oscar Pettiford, Lucky Millinder und anderen. Aufnahmen entstanden für die Label Philo („Baby Look at You“, 1945) und 1946 für Apollo die Hits „Wynonie's Blues“ und „Playful Baby“ in den „Race Records“ Charts. In Nashville nahm er mit Jimmie Jackson und Herman Blount (später als Sun Ra bekannt) auf.
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