- Dewey Phillips
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"Daddy-O" Dewey Phillips (May 13, 1926 – September 28, 1968) was one of rock 'n' roll's pioneering disk jockeys, along the lines of Cleveland's Alan Freed, before Freed came along.[1]
Contents
Early life
Phillips spent his childhood in Adamsville, Tennessee, but he was born in Crump, Tennessee. He is buried there in the Crump Cemetery.[2][3]
Career
He started his radio career in 1949 on WHBQ/560 in Memphis, and was the city's leading radio personality for nine years and was the first to simulcast his "Red, Hot & Blue" show on radio and television.
Phillips' on-air persona was a speed-crazed hillbilly, with a frantic delivery and entertaining sense of humor. However, he also had a keen ear for music the listening public would enjoy, and he embraced both black and white music, which was abundant in post-World War II Memphis, a booming river city which attracted large numbers of rural blacks and whites (along with their musical traditions). He played a great deal of rhythm and blues, country music, boogie-woogie, and jazz as well as Sun Records artists. In July 1954, he was the first DJ to broadcast the young Elvis Presley's debut record, "That's All Right/Blue Moon Of Kentucky" (Sun 209), and got Presley to reveal his race in an interview by asking which high school the 19-year-old singer attended (knowing that, because of segregation, his audience would readily know what race attended which schools).
Phillips briefly hosted an afternoon program on WHBQ-TV/13 in the mid-1950s. It mostly consisted of Phillips playing records while he and others clowned around in front of the camera.
Though Phillips was not involved in the payola scandals of the time (as was Freed), he was fired in late 1958 when the station adopted a Top 40 format, phasing out his freeform style. He spent the last decade of his life working at smaller radio stations, seldom lasting long. A heavy drinker and longtime drug user (mainly painkillers and amphetamines, which contributed to his manic on-air behavior), Phillips died of heart failure at age 42.
The popular musical Memphis is said to be based loosely on Dewey Phillips' life and career,[4] although elements crucial in the career of Phillips' contemporary Alan Freed appear to be intermixed as well.
References
Additional sourcing
- Cantor, Lewis (2005). Dewey and Elvis. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-02981-X.
External links
- http://www.rockabillyhall.com/DeweyPhillips.html
- http://www.press.uillinois.edu/s05/cantor.html
- http://www.biwa.ne.jp/~presley/elnews-Q.htm
- http://www.wfmu.org/playlists/AC (One hour of airchecks, 1952-1960s. Broadcast August 14, 2002.)
- Photo of Phillips at Find a Grave
Categories:- American radio personalities
- 1926 births
- 1968 deaths
- DJ stubs
- American radio people stubs
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