Mojo (UK)

JANUARY 1955

...Rock’n’roll takes over

- Fred Dellar

JANUARY 14

It was the month when old-fashioned pop and its carefully groomed stables of light entertaine­rs finally surrendere­d to the rampant forces of R&B and rock’n’roll.

In the USA, Billboard proclaimed, “The swinging infectious and melodic tunes that have come out of the R&B field have, in the past year, swept all before them… R&B records are the pop records of the day.” The magazine confirmed its belief by printing a 14-page spotlight on the genre, which included a full-page ad for New York radio station WINS and its leading daily show – DJ Alan Freed’s Rock’n’Roll Party.

Freed, who once actually attempted to copyright the term “Rock and Roll”, had previously staged successful live R&B shindigs in Cleveland. Having gained financial support from Mob-linked NY jazz club owner Morris Levy, he set out to make his mark in the Big Apple, hosting two R&B shows at the St Nicholas Arena, a 6,000 capacity, run-down ex-ice rink off Broadway that had been converted to a boxing hall.

Freed was so sure of high demand that he insisted one night was not enough. Levy increasing­ly felt that his original suspicion that Freed was “a little nuts” was correct, but went along with the plan for two shows, one on Friday, January 14, plus another scheduled the following evening, each running from 8pm to 2am. Significan­tly, both would be pure R&B, though Freed sold the event as a “Rock’n’Roll Ball”.

The DJ made just six on-air announceme­nts plugging advance tickets sales, yet the response was phenomenal. WINS, who were grabbing 10 per cent of the show’s profits, boasted the selling of “over 15,000 paid admissions – the greatest advance sale in the history of American dance promotions.”

Media magazine Cashbox described the show as “something that had to be seen to be believed… seen from above, the enthusiast­ic teenagers seemed to be jelled into one swaying body with thousands of heads. That they adore Freed was evident from the uproarious welcome with which they greeted his appearance.”

The talent was also stellar, with Joe Turner, Fats Domino, The Clovers, Dakota Staton, Ruth Brown, Varetta Dillard, Danny Overbea, Clyde McPhatter and The Drifters, The Moonglows, The Moonlighte­rs, The Harptones, The Buddy Johnson Orchestra with Ella Johnson and Nolan Lewis, plus bootin’ tenor saxman Red Prysock and his band, providing five hours of charging R&B. The finale, said Cashbox, resembled “a revival meeting with Joe Turner at the mike and Fats Domino at the piano and the entire cast returning to the stage for a closing that was without parallel. Singers and instrument­alists danced, dancers and singers grabbed instrument­s and instrument­alists and dancers sang. Alan Freed and his lovely wife Jackie jitterbugg­ed and the kids went wild.”

“The ceiling was actually dripping from the moisture,” noted Levy.

“It was raining inside the St Nicholas Arena, I’m not exaggerati­ng.” Somewhere amid the

“Enthusiast­ic teenagers… one swaying body with thousands of heads.” CASHBOX

chaos, Joe Turner was awarded the Cashbox Jukebox Operators trophy for being the nation’s top R&B male performer of 1954.

“In a way,” Freed recalled, “those St Nick dances were the turning point. You see, those Cleveland affairs appealed most to coloured people… but at the St Nick the audiences were about 70 per cent white and 30 per cent Negro [sic]. This was the first inkling I had that white people enjoyed rhythm and blues. Rock’n’roll had moved out of the limited ‘race’ classifica­tion into big business.”

In the wake of the St Nick’s show, Freed’s influence soared further. His radio show, declared manager Lew Platt, was even responsibl­e for thousands of would-be juvenile delinquent­s deciding to stay off the streets of the greater New York area. On January 26, in Billboard’s final Most Played By Jockeys chart of the month, top of the heap was Sincerely, a song penned by Freed and Harvey Fuqua, and recorded by The Moonglows, who were managed by Freed.

Such successes would ultimately prove double-edged, setting Freed up for a tragic downfall. In 1960, he would be consumed by payola and conflict-of-interest scandals; a pariah, he would die of alcoholism in 1965. Morris Levy, whose 1986 arrest was broadcast on US TV, would die before he could be imprisoned for conspiracy to extort. Yet these undoings were in the future. Twelve months after the triumph at St Nick’s, Elvis Presley would explode rock’n’roll into the mass white market for good, and there was no going back. Alan Freed had been right all along.

 ??  ?? Let it R&B: (main) at St. Nick’s Arena, New York City, January 14, 1955, with Buddy Johnson (back row, far left), his sister Ella with Big Joe Turner behind her, and (front, from left) Jerry Wexler, Alan Freed, Ahmet Ertegun; (far right) The Moonglows and their hit; (right) Big Joe sings; (bottom) Morris Levy.
Let it R&B: (main) at St. Nick’s Arena, New York City, January 14, 1955, with Buddy Johnson (back row, far left), his sister Ella with Big Joe Turner behind her, and (front, from left) Jerry Wexler, Alan Freed, Ahmet Ertegun; (far right) The Moonglows and their hit; (right) Big Joe sings; (bottom) Morris Levy.
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