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Rosco Gordon

Sun Records Originals: Just Love Me Baby

Rosco Gordon

21 SONGS • 54 MINUTES • MAR 31 2023

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
Just Love Me Baby (Remastered 2022)
02:23
2
Bop With Me Baby
02:37
3
T-Model Boogie
02:25
4
Let's Get High
02:40
5
Hey, Hey Girl
02:36
6
New Orleans, LA
02:08
7
Booted
03:03
8
I'm Gonna Shake & Break It
02:00
9
Decorate The Counter
01:50
10
Tired Of Living
03:30
11
If You Want Your Woman
02:52
12
Cheese and Crackers
02:46
13
I Found A New Love
03:04
14
She's My Baby
02:43
15
Don't Take It Out On Me
03:17
16
Nineteen Years
02:34
17
Real Pretty Mama
02:07
18
Love With Me Baby
02:04
19
Mean Woman
02:04
20
That's What You Do To Me
02:49
21
Just My Memories Of You
02:50
℗ This Compilation 2023 Sun Label Group, LLC © 2023 Sun Label Group, LLC

Artist bios

Rosco Gordon was best known for being one of the progenitors of a slightly shambolic, loping style of piano shuffle called "Rosco's Rhythm." The basic elements of this sound were further developed after Jamaican musicians got a hold of 45s Gordon recorded in the early '50s -- which were not available to Jamaicans until 1959 -- and created ska, which took its name for the sound of this particular shuffle as it sounded being played on an electric guitar (ska-ska-ska).

No less an authority than Chris Blackwell -- he was the founder/president of Island Records who produced Bob Marley, the Wailers, and Peter Tosh, to name a few -- has cited Gordon's importance to reggae and ska music and championed the sound he helped create.

Gordon had originally been a member of the famed Beale Streeters, a Memphis, TN-based group that also featured the considerable talents of Johnny Ace, B.B. King, and Bobby "Blue" Bland, in the late '40s. They were scouted by none other than Ike Turner for Modern Records, who recorded the Beale Streeters' first single in 1951.

Gordon was soon recording sides for Sam Phillips and his Sun Records label. Phillips later sold the master of Gordon's own "Bootin'" to two competing labels, Chess and RPM, both of whom released it as a single. This "mix-up" did not, however, prevent the song from hitting number one on the R&B chart in 1952.

The follow-up to "Bootin'," called "No More Doggin'," was the first song to feature the now-familiar shuffle rhythm of Gordon's design, with a strong accent on the off-beat that repeated the oft-monotonous guitar phrasing. Though Gordon had recorded the song in the living room of a friend's home, in fact, the sound was fully developed and unique for its time. On July 11, 2002, Gordon died of a heart attack at his home in Queens, New York. He was 74. ~ Bryan Thomas

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Language of performance
English
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