Friday, October 28, 2016

Friday Night Jukebox, Vol. XCVI--Buddy Holly: Oh Boy

Pop quiz:  What do the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton, Bruce Springsteen, Elton John, and the Grateful Dead all share in common (other than being superstar rock and roll performers, of course)?

They all cite Buddy Holly as a major influence on their careers.

As is sometimes the case here on Friday Night Jukebox, there are some performers who transcend my mini biographies, and Buddy Holly is one such artist.  Suffice it to say that the pride of Lubbock, Texas may have been the first rock and roll artists to write, perform, and produce his own material, as well as paving the way for the two guitars, bass, and drums band arrangement that has defined thousands of bands since rock and roll's inception,  Holly was in the first class inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and was listed at #13 on Rolling Stone's 100 Greatest Artists.  And perhaps most amazing is that Holly accomplished this in a little more than three years before the plane crash that took his life all too soon at the age of 23 (and immortalized in Don McLean's "American Pie").

Released in 1957 (yup, older than even me) on his The "Chirping" Crickets LP, "Oh Boy" would go on to reach #10 (most assuredly with a bullet!) on The Billboard Hot 100.  The flip side of the 45 was "Not Fade Away" which makes it one of the greatest, if not the greatest, two-sides of a single in the history of rock and roll.

Oddly enough, I might not have become all that familiar with "Oh Boy" had it not been for my two oldest children's adoration of the Ritchie Valens biopic La Bamba.  There's a scene in the movie where Valens and his brother play it at a concert (actually done by Los Lobos) and it's hard not to fall right in love with the song after seeing it.  While the Los Lobos version is a raucous and loving tribute, it's not the original.  Holly busts out maybe his most vibrant vocals in this paean to the joys of spending time with your baby.  The guitars have that jangly sound that has been copied by too many bands to count since, and the drums thump, thump, thumps their way through the song in such a way as to make it all but impossible not to shake your body at least a little while it's playing.  And all of this in two minutes, five seconds.  In simplicity is beauty, he said to no one in particular...

And did I mention the cherry on the top of the Crickets echoing Holly every time he sings the words "Oh Boy"?

Lyric sheet:  "All of my life, I've been waitin'?Tonight there'll be no hesitatin', oh boy (Oh Boy!)..."

Enjoy:




Peace,
emaycee

No comments:

Post a Comment