Fats Domino
Fats Domino came out of New Orleans in the 50's with a rockin'
piano to become one of rock-and-roll's earliest and best stars.
He was born Antoine Domino in 1928 in New Orleans. As a child he
played piano and sang, and the first language he learned to speak
was French. He first performed in public at age 10. He continued
with music into the 40's and was heard by Dave Bartholomew, who
would become his writing partner on many of Fats' hit songs. Fats
joined the Dave Bartholomew Band in the mid-40's. He was
influenced by Albert Ammons and Fats Waller, among others.
He signed a contract with Imperial in 1949 and at his first
recording session he made sure that he recorded the traditional
Hey La Bas. "La Bas" was originally a voodoo god of
luck, was identified with St. Peter in French-Catholic Louisiana
and finally became La Bas. The record indicated a coming together
of many years of New Orleans history and musical influence. It
was not, however, his first record to be released. A song about
drugs called The Fat Man was cleaned up a bit for his first
commercial release, and it reached the R&B chart in 1950.
Acccording to some reports, the song was a million seller. The
Fat Man also became a nickname for Fats Domino. Another song that
made the R&B chart for him, Every Night About This Time, used
a piano triplet for which Fats was to become famous. It showed
how his music had been influenced by that of Little Willie
Littlefield. Fats had another R&B hit with Goin' Home in
1952.
Fats Domino exploded onto the rock-and-roll scene in 1955 when
his song, Ain't That A Shame, was covered by white recording
artist Pat Boone. Boone's version went to number one, and
Domino's version on Imperial went to number ten. The song
established both artists as stars. Fats could be heard in the
background on the records of other artists, such as Joe Turner
and Lloyd Price. He continued to write songs with Dave
Bartholomew, many of which became hits. In 1956 he put five songs
in the top forty, including I'm In Love Again and Fats' rendition
of a song that had reached number one for Glenn Miller in 1940,
Blueberry Hill. The latter went to number two and was Domino's
highest charting record ever.
Fats Domino was very popular. In 1957 he appeared in a movie that
many consider to be the best rock-and-roll film ever made, The
Girl Can't Help It, singing his hit Blue Monday. Another Fats
Domino hit, I'm Walkin', was covered by Ricky Nelson in 1957 and
helped to launch the teenage singing sensation's career. Other
top ten songs followed in the late 50's for Domino: Whole Lotta
Loving, I Want To Walk You Home, and Be My Guest. The last song
had a curious origin -- a teenager had been told by his father to
get a job or get out of the house, so he wrote Be My Guest and
waited in line for a chance to pass it on to Fats Domino. He was
able to do so, and heard from Domino's agent some time later;
thus was begun the songwriting career of Tommy Boyce.
Fats has a smoky voice with a bit of a New Orleans-style accent,
and he is very likeable. Fats made music that was fun to listen
to, and in addition to his pounding piano you could hear a sax
riff, or maybe a great tenor solo from Herb Hardesty or Lee
Allen. Fats' piano style is described as rolling boogie-woogie,
with lots of triplets. This was party music. There was always a
heavy backbeat and his band rocked hard, but made things look
easy. Fun, fun, fun.
Fats Domino had his final top ten song in 1960 with Walking To
New Orleans. He recorded some old Hank Williams songs such as
Jambalaya [On The Bayou] and You Win Again and he did old
standards such as Red Sails In The Sunset, which was his final
top forty song, in 1963. In 1968, he even did a cover of the
Beatles' Lady Madonna.
He also made some more films along the way, including Shake,
Rattle and Roll, The Big Beat, and Jamboree. Fats played Las
Vegas frequently, and at the Royal Festival Hall in London in the
80's. He had to leave a tour of Great Britain in the 90's due to
health problems.
Fats Domino still lives in New Orleans with his wife Rosemary,
with whom he has had eight children. His awards have been many,
including Grammy's Lifetime Achievement and Hall Of Fame Awards.
In 1986, Fats Domino took his place in the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame.
The hits in the Billboard Hot 100 :
| record | position | weeks | year |
| Goin' home | 30 | 1 week | 1952 |
| Goin' to the river | 24 | 2 weeks | 1953 |
| Ain't that a shame | 10 | 13 weeks | 1955 |
| Bo Weevil | 35 | 9 weeks | 1956 |
| I'm in love again | 3 | 23 weeks | 1956 |
| My blue heaven | 21 | 20 weeks | 1956 |
| When my dreamboat comes home | 14 | 16 weeks | 1956 |
| So long | 44 | 13 weeks | 1956 |
| Blueberry hill | 2 | 27 weeks | 1956 |
| Blue monday | 5 | 18 weeks | 1957 |
| What's the reason I'm not pleasing you | 50 | 10 weeks | 1957 |
| I'm walkin' | 4 | 25 weeks | 1957 |
| Valley of tears | 6 | 18 weeks | 1957 |
| It's you I love | 22 | 12 weeks | 1957 |
| When I see you | 29 | 10 weeks | 1957 |
| What will I tell my heart | 64 | 6 weeks | 1957 |
| Wait and see | 23 | 13 weeks | 1957 |
| I still love you | 79 | 4 weeks | 1957 |
| The big beat | 26 | 9 weeks | 1957 |
| I want you to know | 48 | 11 weeks | 1957 |
| Yes, my darling | 55 | 7 weeks | 1958 |
| Sick and tired | 22 | 11 weeks | 1958 |
| No, no | 55 | 7 weeks | 1958 |
| Little Mary | 48 | 6 weeks | 1958 |
| Young school girl | 92 | 1 week | 1958 |
| Whole lotta loving | 6 | 15 weeks | 1958 |
| Coquette | 92 | 1 week | 1958 |
| Telling lies | 50 | 9 weeks | 1959 |
| When the saints go marching in | 50 | 8 weeks | 1959 |
| I'm ready | 16 | 11 weeks | 1959 |
| Margie | 51 | 8 weeks | 1959 |
| I want to walk you home | 8 | 13 weeks | 1959 |
| I'm gonna be a wheel some day | 17 | 13 weeks | 1959 |
| Be my guest | 8 | 14 weeks | 1959 |
| I've been around | 33 | 9 weeks | 1959 |
| Country boy | 25 | 10 weeks | 1960 |
| If you need me | 98 | 1 week | 1960 |
| Tell me that you love me | 51 | 7 weeks | 1960 |
| Before I grow too old | 84 | 2 weeks | 1960 |
| Walking to New Orleans | 6 | 14 weeks | 1960 |
| Don't come knockin' | 21 | 11 weeks | 1960 |
| Three nights a week | 15 | 11 weeks | 1960 |
| Put your arms around me honey | 58 | 6 weeks | 1960 |
| My girl Josephine | 14 | 15 weeks | 1960 |
| Natural born lover | 38 | 9 weeks | 1960 |
| What a price | 22 | 9 weeks | 1961 |
| Ain't that just like a woman | 33 | 8 weeks | 1961 |
| Shu rah | 32 | 7 weeks | 1961 |
| Fell in love on Monday | 32 | 6 weeks | 1961 |
| Itkeeps rainin' | 23 | 11 weeks | 1961 |
| Let the four winds blow | 15 | 11 weeks | 1961 |
| What a party | 22 | 8 weeks | 1961 |
| Rockin' bicycle | 83 | 1 week | 1961 |
| Jambalaya | 30 | 7 weeks | 1961 |
| I hear you knocking | 67 | 2 weeks | 1961 |
| You win again | 22 | 10 weeks | 1962 |
| Ida Jane | 90 | 2 weeks | 1962 |
| My real name | 59 | 7 weeks | 1962 |
| Nothing new | 77 | 5 weeks | 1962 |
| Dance with mr. Domino | 98 | 1 week | 1962 |
| Did you ever see a dream walking | 79 | 5 weeks | 1962 |
| There goes my heart again | 59 | 7 weeks | 1963 |
| Red sails in the sunset | 35 | 8 weeks | 1963 |
| Who cares | 63 | 5 weeks | 1964 |
| Lazy lady | 86 | 2 weeks | 1964 |
| Sally was a good old girl | 99 | 2 weeks | 1964 |
| Heartbreak hill | 99 | 2 weeks | 1964 |
| Lady Madonna | 100 | 2 weeks | 1968 |
| Fats Domino has 63 entries in the Rhythm
and Blues charts, 39 of them reached the top-10, 9 of them hit the Number 1 position. |
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