- Piano Red
Infobox musical artist
Name = Piano Red
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Background = solo_singer
Birth_name = William Lee Perryman
Alias = Dr. Feelgood
Born =October 19 ,1911 , nearHampton, Georgia
Died =July 25 ,1985
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Genre =Blues , R&B
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Years_active = 1930s–1980s
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Notable_instruments =William "Willie" Lee Perryman (
October 19 1911 -July 25 1985 ), who was usually known professionally as Piano Red and later in life as Dr. Feelgood, was an Americanblues musician , the first to hit thepop music charts. He was a self-taughtpianist who played in thebarrelhouse blues style. His simple, hard-pounding left hand and his percussive right hand, coupled with his cheerful shout brought him considerable success over three decades.Life
Willie Perryman was born on a farm near Hampton, Georgia. He was an
albino African American , as was his older brother Rufus, who also had a blues piano career as "Speckled Red". Rufus, 19 years older than Willie, had left home before his little brother and took up the piano. They never recorded together. However, the family had a piano originally bought to give Rufus a musical education, and as a child Willie watched Rufus play on it. In 1918 the family moved to Atlanta.Perryman cited
Fats Waller as his main influence. By the early 1930s, he was playing at house parties, juke joints, and barrelhouses in Georgia, Alabama, and Tennessee, often working with other Georgia bluesmen, includingBarbecue Bob ,Curley Weaver , andBlind Willie McTell . He also began performing before white audiences in the resort town ofBrevard, North Carolina , and by 1934 had begun to play at white clubs in Atlanta, developing a repertoire of pop standards. Around 1936 he began to be billed as "Piano Red", and made his first recordings with McTell in Augusta forVocalion Records , although these were never released. He also began working as an upholsterer, a trade which he occasionally maintained through later years. [ [http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-1660 New Georgia Encyclopedia: Willie Lee Perryman (1911-1985) ] ]In 1950 after spending the last 14 years upholstering and playing music on weekends, Red recorded "Rockin' with Red" and "Red's Boogie" at the
WGST radio studios in Atlanta forRCA Victor . Both songs became national hits, reaching # 5 and # 3 respectively on the BillboardR&B chart, and "Rockin' with Red" has since been covered many times under many titles. This success, and further hits "The Wrong Yo Yo" (allegedly written by Speckled Red), "Laying The Boogie" and "Just Right Bounce", allowed him to resume an active performing schedule. He also recorded sessions in New York and Nashville during the early 1950s.In the mid 1950s he also worked as a
disc jockey onradio station sWGST andWAOK in Atlanta, broadcasting "The Piano Red Show", later "The Dr. Feelgood Show", directly from a small shack in his back yard. A youngJames Brown made an appearance on his show in the late 1950s. His involvement had him appearing on a flatbed truck in many parades, which led to his song "Peachtree Parade". From the mid 1950s until the late 1960s, he recorded for several companies, including Columbia, for which he made several records, Checker, for whom he recorded 8 sides withWillie Dixon on bass, andGroove Records ,a subsidiary of RCA Victor, producing the first hit for that label.cite book
first= Arnold
last= Shaw
year= 1978
title= Honkers and Shouters
edition=
publisher=Macmillan Publishing Company
location= New York
pages= pp 460-462
id= ISBN 0-02-061740-2] OnOkeh Records , in 1961, he began using the name Dr. Feelgood and the Interns, releasing several hits, including the much-covered "Doctor Feel-Good". The persona was one he had initially adopted on his radio shows. The new career was short-lived, though, and Piano Red was never able to regain his former stature. In 1966, the popular folk-rock groupThe Lovin' Spoonful , recorded his song "Bald Headed Lena" on their second album, "Daydream".He continued to be a popular performer in
Underground Atlanta , and had several European tours late in his career, including appearances at theMontreux Jazz Festival ,Berlin Jazz Festival , ChancellorHelmut Schmidt 's inauguration, and onBBC Radio .He was diagnosed with cancer in 1984 and died the following year. Among those who attended his funeral were the
Governor of Georgia and theMayor of Atlanta . [Liner notes by Norbert Hess for "The Doctor's In" (Bear Family; 1993)]References
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