[Dixielandjazz] You have to see this....Little Richard Penniman

Marek Boym marekboym at gmail.com
Mon Mar 26 15:03:54 PDT 2012


Well, I did wrtie "true or false," didn't I?  And now that you mention
it, I know where I've seen it before, together with a whole bunch of
other performacnes.
Cheers

On 26 March 2012 22:39, Bob Romans <cellblk7 at comcast.net> wrote:
> Sorry Marek...it ain't Little Richard...I saw Little Richard live in Chattanooga when he-temporarily-became a Seventh-Day Adventist and was a high school trying his best to save souls! What a JOKE!
> I looked it up on Google and came up with Sugar Chile Robinson...
> Sugar Chile Robinson
> >From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
>
> For other people named Frank Robinson, see Frank Robinson (disambiguation).
> Frank Isaac Robinson (born 28 December 1938),[1] known in his early career as a musician as Sugar Chile Robinson, is anAmerican blues and boogie-woogie pianist, singer, and later psychologist, whose career began as a child prodigy.
>
> Robinson was born in Detroit, Michigan. At an early age he showed unusual gifts singing the blues and accompanying himself on thepiano. He won a talent show at the Paradise Theatre in Detroit at the age of three, and in 1945 played guest spots at the theatre withLionel Hampton, who was prevented by child protection legislation from taking him on tour with him. However, he performed on radio with Hampton and Harry "The Hipster" Gibson, and also appeared as himself in the Hollywood film No Leave, No Love, starring Van Johnsonand Keenan Wynn. In 1946, he played for President Harry S. Truman at the White House, shouting out "How'm I Doin', Mr President?" - which became his catchphrase - during his performance of "Caldonia". He began touring major theatres, setting box office records in Detroit and California. In 1949 he was given special permission to join the American Federation of Musicians and record, his first releases on Capitol Records, "Numbers Boogie" and "Caldonia", both reaching the Billboard R&B chart. In 1950, he toured and appeared on television with Count Basie, and appeared in a short film 'Sugar Chile' Robinson, Billie Holiday, Count Basie and His Sextet. The following year, he toured the UK, appearing at the London Palladium. He stopped recording in 1952, later explaining:[1]
>
>  "I wanted to go to school... I wanted some school background in me and I asked my Dad if I could stop, and I went to school because I honestly wanted my college diploma."
>
> Until 1956 he continued to make occasional appearances as a jazz musician, billed as Frank Robinson, and performed on one occasion with Gerry Mulligan, but then gave up his musical career entirely. Continuing his academic studies, he earned a degree in history fromOlivet College and one in psychology from the Detroit Institute of Technology. In the 1960s, he worked for WGPR-TV, and also helped set up small record labels in Detroit and opened a recording studio.[1]
>
> In recent years he has made a comeback as a musician with the help of the American Music Research Foundation. In 2002, he appeared at a special concert celebrating Detroit music, and in 2007 he traveled to Britain to appear at a rock and roll weekend festival.[1]
>
> Warm regards,
> Bob Romans,
> 209-747-1148
> 1617 Lakeshore Dr.
> Lodi, CA, 95242
> A woman drove me to drink...
> and I didn't even have the decency
> to thank her!
> W.C.Fields
> www.cellblock7.biz
>
>
>
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