We lost our Thrill...
The recent passing of a rock'n'roll legend reveals a life well lived
At the top of the house, in a room doubling as Extraudionary HQ, is a box of vinyl parked next to the record player. It’s a modest stash (for now anyway - there are long term commitments to building it), the majority of which I inherited with long players and singles covering a period from the 50s to the 80s. I love the slightly musty-smelling covers and occasional scribbles - someone’s name or a brief message – evoking a time when it was spinning on another’s turntable. You just don’t get that with MP3s.
In this collection is a 7” which Dad had recorded on to a cassette back in the late 70s, creating mixtapes before they were fashionable. Rubbing shoulders with Shirley Bassey, Boney M and The Beatles was ‘Blueberry Hill’ by Fats Domino, and all of these formed the soundtrack to long car journeys and also some of my earliest musical memories.
Fats Domino was also the first of six tracks chosen by Emma who I interviewed in London last month (most Extraudionary programmes recorded to date feature people talking about their life-defining moments and the music most associated with these). Like myself, Emma was introduced to Fats from an early age so it was completely by chance that, just weeks later, his death in New Orleans was announced.
I’m sure I wasn’t the only one who had wrongly assumed that he’d already passed away, maybe because age and increasing ill health made his public appearances rarer. Sadly it’s often in death we that only really discover someone, and so this was for me with Fats Domino. There was plenty for the obituary writers to go at – it was a life well lived that spanned the creation of ‘popular’ music – and of his 89 years four things caught my attention:
- Unbelievably, for all his reputation, he only ever achieved one UK #1 single (Blueberry Hill), and even by his creative peak in the early 60s had never broken into the US mainstream billboard Top 20. However, by the mid-70s, only Elvis and The Beatles - the very same artists heavily influenced by Domino - outsold him in the US.
- Fats Domino was ahead of his time on so many levels. Long before The Who were regularly smashing up their instruments on stage, Fats Domino had his own trademark approach to ending a show. He used to push the piano off stage with his stomach.
- Domino was a victim of Hurricane Katrina, his home ruined by the devastating storm of 2005. Despite being rescued by the US Coastguard, he was thought missing until a relative recognised him in a newspaper photograph. All but 3 of his many gold discs were lost.
Finally, and perhaps most significantly given the social climate then and now, Fats Domino crossed the cultural divide and was one of the first R&B artists to gain popularity with a white audience (in 1950s America that was some achievement). He blazed a trail for all those that followed right up to the present day.
For all the accolades as a founding father of rock’n’roll, Fats Domino’s attitude towards his achievements was as easy-going as the city of his birth and final resting. As the BBC reported he once said of himself: " I guess it was an interesting life. I didn't pay much attention, and I never thought I'd be here this long ."
Now feels like a good time to dust off that 7" again...










