Gulf Today

Lloyd Price, singer and early rock influence, dies at 88

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NEW YORK: Singer-songwriter Lloyd Price, an early rock ’ n roll star and enduring maverick whose hits included such up-tempo favourites as “Lawdy Miss Clawdy,” “Personalit­y” and the semi-forbidden “Stagger Lee,” has died. He was 88. Price died on Monday at a long-term care facility in New Rochelle, New York, of complicati­ons from diabetes, his wife, Jacqueline Price, told The Associated Press on Saturday. Lloyd Price, inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1998, was among the last survivors of a post-world War II scene in New Orleans that anticipate­d the shits in popular music and culture leading to the rise of rock in the mid-1950s. Along with Fats Domino and David Bartholome­w among others, Price fashioned a deep, exuberant sound around the brass and swing of New Orleans jazz and blues that placed high on R&B charts and eventually crossed over to white audiences.

Price’s nickname was “Mr. Personalit­y,” fiting for a performer with a warm smile and a tenor voice to match. But he was far more than an engaging entertaine­r. He was unusually independen­t for his time, running his own record label even before such stars as Frank Sinatra did the same, holding on to his publishing rights, and serving as his own agent and manager. He would oten speak of the racial injustices he endured, calling his memoir “sumdumhonk­ey” and writing on his Facebook page during the 2020 Black Lives Mater protests that behind his “affable exterior” was “a man who is seething.”

Born in Kenner, Louisiana, one of 11 siblings,

Price had been singing in church and playing piano since childhood. He was in his late teens when a local DJ’S favorite catchphras­e, “Lawdy Miss Clawdy,” helped inspire him to write his boundary-breaking first hit, which he worked on in his mother’s fried fish restaurant. Featuring Domino’s trademark piano trills, “Lawdy Miss Clawdy” hit No. 1 on the R&B charts in 1952, sold more than 1 million copies and became a rock standard, covered by Elvis Presley and Litle Richard among others. But Price would have mixed feelings about the song’s broad appeal, later rememberin­g how local officials in what was still the Jim Crow South resisted leting both blacks and whites atend his shows. Price was drated and spent the mid-1950s in military service in Korea. He began a career restart with the 1957 ballad “Just Because,” and hit the top with the brassy, pop-oriented “Stagger Lee,” one of the catchiest, most celebrator­y songs ever recorded about a barroom murder.

Writen by Price, “Stagger Lee” was based on a 19th century fight between two Black men — Lee Shelton, sometimes known as Stag Lee, and Billy Lyons — that ended with Shelton shooting and killing his rival. Their ever-changing legend was appearing in songs by the 1920s, and has inspired artists ranging from Woody Guthrie and Duke Ellington to Bob Dylan and the Clash. Price’s version opened with a few spoken words that had the understate­d tension of a crime novel: “The night was clear, the moon was yellow, and the leaves came tumbling ... down.” The band jumps in and Price shouts out the story of Stagger Lee and Billy fighting over a game of dice, concluding with a bullet from Stagger Lee’s 44 passing through Billy and breaking the bartender’s glass. “Go Stagger Lee!” a chorus chants throughout.

The song reached No. 1 on the Billboard pop chart early in 1959, but not everyone was entertaine­d. “American Bandstand” host Dick Clark worried the song was too violent for his teen-centered show and pressed Price to revise it: For “Bandstand” watchers and some future listeners, Stagger Lee and Billy peacefully resolve their dispute.

“I had to go make up some lyrics about Stagger Lee and Billy being in some kind of squabble about a girl,” Price told Billboard in 2013. “It didn’t make any sense at all. It was ridiculous.” Price followed with the top 10 hits “Personalit­y” and “I’m Going To Get Married” and the top 20 songs “Lady Luck” and “Question.” He fared no beter than many of his contempora­ries once the Beatles arrived in the U.S. in 1964, but he found his way into other profession­s through a wide range of friends and acquitance­s.

 ?? File/associated Press ?? In this March 14, 2011, photo Lloyd Price appears backstage at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in New York.
File/associated Press In this March 14, 2011, photo Lloyd Price appears backstage at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in New York.

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