ARTIST SONG ALBUM
Joe Liggins The Honeydripper Joe Liggins & The Honeydrippers
Roy Milton Milton's Boogie Roy Milton & His Solid Senders
Joe Lutcher Rockin' Boogie Joe Joe Jump
Camille Howard X-Temporaneous Boogie X-Temporaneous Boogie Vol. 2
Jimmy Liggins Teardrop Blues Jimmy Liggins & His Drops Of Joy
Roy Milton Hop, Skip & Jump Roy Milton & His Solid Senders
Jim Wynn Fat Meat The Specialty Story
Smiling Smokey Lynn State Street Boogie Specialty Legends Of Boogie Woogie
Big Maceo Do You Remember Big Maceo Vol. 2 - Big City Blues
Percy Mayfield Strange Things Happening The Specialty Story
King Perry Day & Night Blues 1950-1954
Joe Liggins Louisiana Woman Joe Liggins & The Honeydrippers
Roy Milton Playboy Blues Roy Milton Vol. 2 - Groovy Blues
Jimmy Liggins Saturday Night Boogie Woogie Man Joe Liggins & The Honeydrippers
Smokey Hogg I Want A Roller Angels In Houston
Guitar Slim Story Of My Life Sufferin' Mind
Frankie Lee Sims Long Gone Lucy Mae Blues
Bumble Bee Slim How Blue Can You Get? The Specialty Story
Jesse Thomas Jack O'Diamonds 1948-1958
Lester Williams I Can't Lose With The Stuff I Use Boogie Uproar
Lloyd Price Mailman Blues Lloyd Price Vol. 1 - Lawdy!
Floyd Dixon Hard Living Alone Marshall Texas Is My Home
Mercy Dee One Room Country Shack One Room Country Shack
Camille Howard I Ain’t Got The Spirit Rock Me Daddy Vol. 1
Honey Boy Bloodstains Bloodstains On The Wall
Little Temple Mean And Evil Bloodstains On The Wall
John Lee Hooker Everybody’s Blues Everybody’s Blues
Earl King A Mother's Love Earl's Pearls
Guitar Slim Letter to My Girlfriend Sufferin' Mind
Clifton Chenier The Things I Did For You Zodico Blues and Boogie
Big Boy Myles Who’s Been Fooling You Creole Kings Of New Orleans Vol. 1
Professor Longhair Looka No Hair Creole Kings Of New Orleans Vol. 2
Ernie Kador So Glad You're Mine Creole Kings Of New Orleans Vol. 2

Show Notes:

Art Rupe founded Juke Box Records in 1946, but changed the company’s name to Specialty the following year to indicate that, unlike the major labels, his specialized in particular kinds of music – African-American blues and gospel. The Hollywood-based firm became a leader in both fields, with a roster that included R&B artists Roy Milton, Joe Liggins, Percy Mayfield, Guitar Slim, and Lloyd Price and gospel stars like the Pilgrim Travelers, the Soul Stirrers (featuring Sam Cooke), Brother Joe May, Alex Bradford, and the Original Gospel Harmonettes. Specialty also played a key role in the development of rock ‘n’ roll upon signing Little Richard in 1955. Two years later, however, Specialty lost both Richard (to religion) and Cooke (to pop music), and Rupe’s interest in making new records quickly waned. He kept the label’s many hits in print and compiled albums of older material until 1991, when he sold the company to Fantasy, Inc. Below is some background on today’s featured artists.

Among the label’s big hits were “The Honeydripper” by Joe Liggins inn 1945 and “Pink Champagne” five years later, posting many more solid sellers in between. Inspired by the success of his brother Joe, Jimmy jumped into the recording field in 1947 on Art Rupe’s Specialty logo. His “Tear Drop Blues” hit the R&B Top Ten the next year, while “Careful Love” and “Don’t Put Me Down” hit for him in 1949. “R.M. Blues” was a million seller for Roy Mitlon in 1945 and really got Specialty off and running. Rupe knew a good thing when he saw it, recording Milton early and often-through 1953. He was rewarded with 19 Top Ten R&B hits. Camille  Howard was installed as pianist with drummer Roy Milton & the Solid Senders sometime during World War II, playing on all their early hits for Art Rupe’s Juke Box and Specialty labels (notably the groundbreaking “R.M. Blues” in 1945). Rupe began recording her as a featured artist at the end of the year. Her biggest hit was the romping instrumental “X-Temporaneous Boogie” but she was also a very fine vocalist.

Specialty signed Percy Mayfield in 1950 and he scored a solid string of R&B smashes over the next couple of years. “Please Send Me Someone to Love” was a number one R&B hit in 1950a and its equally fine flip, “Strange Things Happening” were followed in the charts by “Lost Love,” “What a Fool I Was,” “Prayin’ for Your Return,” “Cry Baby,” and “Big Question.”

Smokey Hogg scored a pair of major R&B hits in 1948 and 1950 for the Modern label. He was recorded extensively for a slew of labels including Exclusive, Modern, Bullet, Macy’s, Sittin’ in With, Imperial, Mercury, Recorded in Hollywood, Specialty, Fidelity, Combo, Federal, and Showtime.

Johnny Vincent, the New Orleans promotion man for Specialty discovered Guitar Slim and brought him to the attention of Art Rupe. The result of the session was “The Things That I Used to Do”. Vincent had used a little-known piano player named Ray Charles to arrange and play on the recording. The song was a smash hit. Unfortunately, in spite of some powerful follow-up recordings, Guitar Slim’s career faded, and he died in 1959, having drunk himself to death at the age of 32.

In 1952, Rupe made his first field trip to the south, being impressed with the music of Fats Domino on another Los Angeles-based label, Imperial. He went to Fats’ hometown of New Orleans to search for talent. He announced on a radio show that he was looking for talent and for artists to come to Cosimo Matassa’s recording studio for auditions. The auditions had not produced anything worthy of recording, and Rupe was packing up to head back to Los Angeles when a 17 year old named Lloyd Price came in and sang his own composition, “Lawdy Miss Clawdy.” Rupe canceled his plane ticket home and stayed in New Orleans to record the song. He got Fats Domino to play piano and Dave Bartholomew to assemble the other backing musicians. The record became the #1 R&B record for 1952 on both the Billboard and Cash Box charts, and Lloyd Price was the Cash Box “Best New R&B Singer of 1952.”

Bumble Bee Slim was one of the more popular and prolific blues artists of the 1930′s. He relocated to Los Angeles in the early ’40s. During the ’50s, Slim cut some West Coast blues for Specialty and Pacific Jazz, which failed to gain much interest. For the rest of his career, he kept a low profile, playing various Californian clubs. He died in 1968.

After success at Modern and Aladdin, Floyd Dixon jumped to the Specialty label, making his debut in mid-1953 with our featured track, “Hard Living Alone.” “Hole in the Wall” followed by year’s end, but neither was a hit, and when the same fate befell 1954′s “Ooh Ee, Ooh Eee,” the company terminated his contract.

Mercy Deed Walton debuted on record in 1949 with “Lonesome Cabin Blues” for the tiny Spire logo, which became a national R&B hit. Those sides were cut in Fresno, but Los Angeles hosted some of the pianist’s best sessions for Imperial in 1950 and Specialty in 1952-53. His “One Room Country Shack” was a huge R&B hit in 1953 and has become a blues standard.

Billed as Earl Johnson, Earl King, debuted on wax in 1953 on Savoy. Johnson became Earl King upon signing with Specialty the next year (label head Art Rupe intended to name him King Earl, but the typesetter reversed the names!). He had more success when he jumped to the Ace label; “Those Lonely, Lonely Nights,” proved a national R&B hit.

In 1954, Clifton Chenier signed with Elko Records.He had a regional hit single, “Cliston’s Blues” and “Louisiana Stomp.” His first national attention came with his first single for the Specialty record label, “Ay Tete Fille (Hey, Little Girl),” a cover of a Professor Longhair tune, released in May 1955. The song was one of 12 that he recorded during two sessions produced by Bumps Blackwell, best known for his work with Little Richard.

Professor Longhair made great records for Atlantic in 1949, Federal in 1951, Wasco in 1952, and Atlantic again in 1953. After recuperating from a minor stroke, Longhair came back on Lee Rupe’s (the ex-wife of Specialty Records’ owner Art Rupe) Ebb logo in 1957 which were also released on Specialty.

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