Rock Awhile

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"Rock Awhile"
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A-side
Single by Goree Carter & His Hepcats
B-side"Back Home Blues"
Released1949
RecordedApril 1949
StudioACA Studios
Genre
Length2:38
LabelFreedom Recording Company
SongwriterGoree Carter
Goree Carter & His Hepcats singles chronology
"Rock Awhile"
(1949)
"I'll Send You"
(1949)

"Rock Awhile" is a song by American singer-songwriter Goree Carter, recorded in April 1949 for the Freedom Recording Company in Houston, Texas.

The song was released as the 18-year-old Carter's debut single (with "Back Home Blues" as the B-side) shortly after recording. The track is considered by many sources to be the first rock and roll song,[1][2][3][4] and has been called a better candidate than the more commonly cited "Rocket 88", which was released two years later.[1][2][5] The song features an over-driven electric guitar style similar to that of Chuck Berry years later.[1][2][3]

The former New York Times pop critic, Robert Palmer,[6] made this comment about the recording in 1995:

"The clarion guitar intro differs hardly at all from some of the intros Chuck Berry would unleash on his own records after 1955; the guitar solo crackles through an overdriven amplifier; and the boogie-based rhythm charges right along. The subject matter, too, is appropriate -- the record announces that it's time to 'rock awhile,' and then proceeds to show how it's done."[7] 

Personnel

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  • Goree Carter – vocals, electric guitar
  • Lonnie Lyons – piano
  • Louis "Nunu" Pitts – bass
  • Allison Tucker – drums
  • Conrad O. Johnson – alto saxophone
  • Sam Williams – tenor saxophone (rhythm)
  • Nelson Mills – trumpet (rhythm)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Robert Palmer, "Church of the Sonic Guitar", pp. 13-38 in Anthony DeCurtis, Present Tense, Duke University Press, 1992, p. 19. Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value)..
  2. ^ a b c John Nova Lomax (December 2014), Roll Over, Ike Turner, Texas Monthly
  3. ^ a b Roger Wood (2003), Down in Houston: Bayou City Blues, pages 46-47, University of Texas Press
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