Music 'just a Little Bit Old Fashioned'

1959 single past Rosco Gordon

"Just a Little Flake"
Just a Little Bit single cover.jpg
Single by Rosco Gordon
B-side "Goin' Home"
Released 1959 (1959)
Recorded 1959
Genre Dejection, R&B
Length 2:05
Label Vee-Jay
Songwriter(south) Disputed
Rosco Gordon singles chronology
"A Fool in Love"
(1959)
"Just a Footling Bit"
(1959)
"Surely I Love You"
(1960)

"Simply a Picayune Bit" is an R&B-style dejection song recorded by Rosco Gordon in 1959. It was a striking in both the R&B and pop charts. Called "one of the standards of contemporary blues,"[1] "Simply a Footling Scrap" has been recorded past various other artists, including Little Milton and Roy Caput, who too had record chart successes with the vocal.

Background [edit]

"Merely a Picayune Flake" was developed when Rosco Gordon was touring with W Coast blues artist Jimmy McCracklin. According to Gordon, McCracklin started to write the vocal and agreed that Gordon could finish it, with both of them sharing the credit.[2] Gordon later presented a demo version to Ralph Bass at King Records, who was reportedly uninterested in the song.[2] Gordon then approached Calvin Carter at Vee-Jay Records, who agreed to tape it.

Meanwhile, Federal Records, a King Records subsidiary, released a version of "Only a Lilliputian Bit" by R&B vocaliser Tiny Topsy,[3] with songwriting credit given to Ralph Bass and several others unknown to Gordon.[ii] The Tiny Topsy vocal, featuring a pop-style organisation with background singers and flute, did not attain the record charts.[iv]

Rosco Gordon song [edit]

Rosco Gordon'due south "Just a Little Scrap" was released in belatedly 1959 and entered the Billboard R&B chart in Feb 1960. An early review described the song as "a rhymba [rhumba] blues",[5] a reference to Gordon'southward "slightly shambolic, loping style of piano shuffle called 'Rosco's Rhythm'".[half dozen] The original Vee-Jay single lists Gordon as the songwriter, although some later problems (and versions past other artists) list Bass and others every bit the writers.[7]

"Just a Picayune Fleck" was Rosco Gordon'south fourth (and concluding) single to enter the R&B chart, where information technology reached number two during a stay of seventeen weeks in 1960.[viii] "Just a Fiddling Bit" also appeared on Billboard 's Hot 100 at number 64, making it Gordon's simply vocal to enter the broader chart.

Renditions and influence [edit]

Several musicians have recorded "Only a Little Scrap". In 1965, a version by American singer Roy Head reached numbers 39 on the Hot 100[nine] and 18 on the Canadian singles chart.[x] When soul blues artist Little Milton recorded it in 1969, it peaked at number xiii on Billboard 's Hot R&B Sides chart and number 97 on the Hot 100.[11]

According to music writer Steve Turner, the opening horn line of the original Roscoe Gordon version influenced Paul McCartney during the writing of the 1968 Beatles song "Birthday".[12]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Herzhaft, Gerard (1992). "But a Picayune Bit". Encyclopedia of the Blues . Fayetteville, Arkansas: University of Arkansas Press. p. 456. ISBN1-55728-252-8.
  2. ^ a b c Dallas, Karl (July thirty, 2002). "Rosco Gordon (obituary)". The Independent . Retrieved May ane, 2011.
  3. ^ Gordon recalled this as taking identify in 1958, Billboard shows the releases in 1959.
  4. ^ Whitburn, Joel (1988). Top R&B Singles 1942–1988 . Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin: Record Inquiry. ISBN0-89820-068-seven.
  5. ^ "Reviews of This Week'southward Singles: Rosco Gordon – Just a Petty Fleck". Billboard. Vol. 71, no. 49. November 23, 1959. p. 39. ISSN 0006-2510.
  6. ^ Thomas, Bryan. "Rosco Gordon: Biography". AllMusic . Retrieved May 1, 2011.
  7. ^ "But a Little Bit (Legal title) – BMI Work #782502". BMI. Archived from the original on Baronial 17, 2014. Retrieved May 1, 2011.
  8. ^ Whitburn 1988, p. 170.
  9. ^ "Roy Head: The Billboard Hot 100". Billboard.com . Retrieved February 27, 2022.
  10. ^ "R.P.M. Play Canvass" (PDF). RPM. December 20, 1965.
  11. ^ Whitburn 1988, p. 259.
  12. ^ Turner, Steve (1994). A Hard Day's Write: The Stories Behind Every Beatles Song. HarperCollins. ISBN0062736981.

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