For the movie named after the song, see Rock Around the Clock (film). For the 1955 record album by Haley, see Rock Around the Clock (album).
"Rock Around the Clock
" is a 12-bar-blues-based song written by Max C. Freedman and James E. Myers (the latter under the pseudonym "Jimmy De Knight") in 1952. The best-known and most successful rendition was recorded by Bill Haley and His Comets in 1954.
Although it was not the first rock and roll record, nor was it the first successful record of the genre (Bill Haley had American chart success with "Crazy Man, Crazy" in 1953, and in 1954, "Shake, Rattle and Roll" reached #1 on the Billboard R&B chart), Haley's recording became an anthem for rebellious Fifties youth [1] and is widely considered to be the song that, more than any other, brought rock and roll into mainstream culture in the United States and around the world. The song is ranked #158 on the Rolling Stone
magazine's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
Although first recorded by Italian-American band Sonny Dae and His Knights, the more famous version by Bill Haley & His Comets is not, strictly speaking, a cover version. Myers claimed the song had been written specifically for Haley but, for various reasons, Haley was unable to record it himself until April 1954.
The original full title of the song was "We're Gonna Rock Around the Clock Tonight!"
. This was later shortened to "(We're Gonna) Rock Around the Clock"
, though this form is generally only used on releases of the 1954 Bill Haley Decca Records recording ; most other recordings of this song by Haley and others (including Sonny Dae) shorten this title further to "Rock Around the Clock"
.
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ROCK AROUND THE CLOCK TICKETS
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False starts
Many sources indicate that "Rock Around the Clock" was written in 1953, but documents uncovered by historian
Jim Dawson indicate it was in fact written in late 1952. The original arrangement of the song bore little resemblance to the version recorded by Haley and was in fact closer to a popular instrumental of the day called "
The Syncopated Clock" (written by
Leroy Anderson).
The song was credited to Myers (as "Jimmy DeKnight") and
Max C. Freedman although its exact authorship is disputed, with many feeling that Freedman wrote the song on his own. There were several earlier songs of the title "Rock Around the Clock" (by
Hal Singer and
Wally Mercer) but they are unrelated to the Freedman/Myers song. In addition, it is sometimes erroneously stated that "Rock Around the Clock" is copied from a late-1940s
Big Joe Turner recording, "Around the Clock Blues". Aside from title similarity, however, the two songs bear little resemblance. There are many
blues songs with the theme of partying or making love "round the clock" with various actions specified at various hours.
However, the verse melody of "Rock Around The Clock" does bear a very close similarity to that of
Hank Williams' first hit, "
Move It On Over", from 1947. Williams' song was very similar to
Charley Patton's "Going To Move To Alabama", recorded in 1930 - which itself was at least partly derived from
Jim Jackson's "Kansas City Blues" from 1927. The song also uses
phrases from
Count Basie's "Red Wagon", first recorded in 1939.
[2]
According to the Haley biographies
Bill Haley
by
John Swenson and
Rock Around the Clock
by Dawson, the song was offered to Haley in the wake of his first national success "
Crazy Man, Crazy" in 1953, after being copyrighted with the U.S. Library of Congress on March 31.
[3] Haley and his Comets began performing the song on stage (Comets bass player
Marshall Lytle and drummer
Dick Richards say the first performances were in
Wildwood, New Jersey), but
Dave Miller, his producer, refused to allow Haley to record it for his
Essex Records label (Swenson suggests a feud existed between Myers and Miller).
Haley himself claimed to have taken the sheet music into the recording studio at least twice, with Miller ripping up the music each time. Nonetheless, rumors of a 1953 demo recording by Haley persist to this day, although surviving members of the Comets deny this, as did Haley himself (quoted in the Swenson biography) ; a late-1960s
bootleg single of the Decca Records version of "Rock Around the Clock", with "Crazy Man, Crazy" on the B-side and carrying the Essex label, occasionally turns up for sale with the claim that it is the demo version.
Myers next offered the song to Sonny Dae & His Knights, a novelty all-white musical group led by
Italian-American Paschal Vennitti. The group's subsequent recording, on the
Arcade Records label (owned by Haley's manager,
Jack Howard), was a regional success, although it once again sounded very different from what Haley would later record.
Decca recording session
After leaving Essex Records in the spring of 1954, Bill Haley signed with the then-important
Decca Records label, and the band's first recording session was set for
12 April 1954 at the
Pythian Temple studios in
New York City. The recording session almost failed to take place because the band were traveling on a ferry that got stuck on a
sandbar en route to New York from
Philadelphia. Once at the studio, producer
Milt Gabler (Uncle of actor
Billy Crystal, who had produced
Louis Jordan as well as
Billie Holiday), insisted the band work on a song entitled "Thirteen Women (and Only One Man in Town)" (previously written and recorded by
Dickie Thompson), which Gabler wanted to promote as the
A-side of the group's first single for Decca.
Near the end of the session, the band finally recorded a take of "Rock Around the Clock," but Haley's vocals were drowned out by the band. A second take was quickly made with minimal accompaniment while
Sammy Davis, Jr. waited outside the studio for his turn behind the
microphone. Decca engineers later combined the two versions together into one version. (Comets piano player
Johnny Grande tells a slightly different version, claiming that the only reason a second take was recorded was that the drummer made an error.)
Many musicians have claimed that they performed on the recording session for "Rock Around the Clock." The song's co-writer, James E. Myers, once claimed he had played drums on the piece, although he also claimed to have been advising the sound mixer in the recording booth.
[4] According to the official record sheet from the session, however, the musicians on the famous recording are :
- Bill Haley - vocals and rhythm guitar
- Marshall Lytle - string bass
- Joey Ambrose (aka Joey D'Ambrosio) - tenor saxophone
- Billy Williamson - steel guitar
- Johnny Grande - piano
- Billy Gussak - drums
- Danny Cedrone - electric guitar
Despite not being members of Bill Haley and His Comets, Gussak and Cedrone were trusted session players that Haley had used before. Cedrone's guitar solo was one that he used before on Bill Haley And The Saddlemen's version of "
Rock the Joint" in 1952, is considered one of the classic rock and roll guitar solos of all time. (Cedrone died in a fall down a stairway on June 17, 1954 and never lived to see his contribution become famous and legendary.) The second instrumental break recreates a popular
rhythm and blues "out chorus" with tenor sax and guitar emulating the rhythm section.
In a 2005 retrospective on his uncle Milt Gabler's work (
The Milt Gabler Story
),
Billy Crystal identifies Haley's 1954 recording of "Rock Around the Clock" as the single most important song Gabler ever produced. Gabler had previously been responsible for the highly successful string of
R&B and
jump blues recordings by Louis Jordan in the late 1940s, which were characterised by their strong beat, clearly enunciated lyrics and high production values, all features which Gabler sought to repeat in Haley's recordings. Also significantly, "Rock Around The Clock" was recorded in the very same month that
Atlantic Records issued
Big Joe Turner's "
Shake, Rattle and Roll". In relation to "Rock Around The Clock", Gabler said: "I was aware that rock was starting. I knew what was happening in the Philadelphia area, and "Crazy Man, Crazy" had been a hit about a year before that. It already was starting and I wanted to take it from there."
[5]
Slow road to classic hit status
As Gabler intended, "Rock Around the Clock" was first issued in the spring of 1954 as a
B-side to "Thirteen Women (and Only One Man in Town)." While the song did make the American
Billboard
music charts (contrary to popular opinion that it was a flop), it was considered a commercial disappointment. It was not until 1955, when "Rock Around the Clock" was used under the opening credits of the film
Blackboard Jungle
, that the song truly took off. It was strong, simple, and loud, and you could dance to it.
Many versions of the story behind how "Rock Around the Clock" was chosen for
Blackboard Jungle
circulated over the years. Recent research, however, reveals that the song was chosen from the collection of young
Peter Ford, the son of
Blackboard Jungle
star
Glenn Ford and dancer
Eleanor Powell. The producers were looking for a song to represent the type of music the youth of 1955 was listening to, and the elder Ford borrowed several records from his son's collection, one of which was Haley's "Rock Around the Clock" and this was the song chosen.
[6]
On 9 July 1955, "Rock Around the Clock" became the first rock and roll recording to hit the top of Billboard's Pop charts, a feat it repeated on charts around the world.
[7] The song stayed at this place for eight weeks. The record was also no.1 for seven weeks on the Cashbox pop singles chart in 1955. The Bill Haley version also hit number three on the R&B charts
.
In the UK, Haley's "Rock Around the Clock" reached number 17 on the pop charts in January 1955, four months before it first entered the US pop charts. (Coincidentally, it reached the same position as was reached by the Beatles' first single, "Love Me Do", in 1962). The song re-entered the UK charts to reach number one in November 1955, and after a three-week break returned there for a further three weeks in January 1956. It re-entered the charts again in September 1956, reaching number 5. The song was re-issued in 1968, when it made number 20, and again in 1974, when it reached number 12.
"Rock Around the Clock" became wildly popular with teenagers around the world. The single, released by independent label
Festival Records in Australia, was the biggest-selling recording in the country at the time.
Columbia Pictures cashed in on the new craze by hiring Haley and his band to star in two quickie movies,
Rock Around the Clock
(1956) and
Don't Knock the Rock
(1957). In 1957, Haley toured Europe, bringing rock 'n' roll to that continent for the first time.
Haley would re-record "Rock Around the Clock" many times over the years (even scoring a substantial hit with a version recorded for
Sonet Records in 1968), but never recaptured the magic. In 1974, the original version of the song returned to the American charts when it was used as the theme for the movie
American Graffiti
and a re-recorded version by Haley was used as the opening theme for the TV series
Happy Days
. The original version was also featured in the 1978 film
Superman
; it is heard playing on a car radio just prior to
Glenn Ford's final scene in the film ; Ford, as noted earlier, had starred in
Blackboard Jungle
. (However, when
ABC broadcast the film on TV for the first time, they were unable to obtain the rights to "Rock Around the Clock" and it was replaced by another piece of music; the song remains in all subsequent VHS, DVD and television versions of the film.)
During the 1970s Haley shortened his performances of "Rock Around the Clock", dropping one verse and the second instrumental break from most performances. However, his last known recorded performance of the song, at a November 1979
command performance for
Queen Elizabeth II, was a complete version.
Following Haley's death in February 1981, a number of major tributes involving "Rock Around the Clock" occurred. That fall, a TV special marking the 30th anniversary of
American Bandstand
saw an all-star "supergroup" perform the song (accompanied by 1950s-era footage of Haley and the Comets). In 1982, Haley's original recording was given the
Grammy Hall of Fame Award. An excerpt from the recording was included in "Haley's Golden Medley", a hastily-compiled single in the "
Stars on 45" mould which made the UK record charts in 1982, reaching number 50. In 1989, Haley's original Decca recording was incorporated into the "dance mix" single "
Swing The Mood", credited to
Jive Bunny and the Mastermixers, but legal considerations forced the album version to substitute a patchwork of re-recordings from the 1950s and 1960s (in Haley's case, a 1968 version of "Rock Around the Clock" recorded for Sonet Records). Since "Swing the Mood" was still on the sales charts going into 1990, this means that Haley's "Rock Around the Clock", in one way or another, appeared on UK or US sales charts in five consecutive decades.
"Rock Around the Clock" is often cited as the biggest-selling vinyl rock and roll single of all time. The exact number of copies sold has never been audited; however, a figure of at least 25 million was cited by the
Guinness Book of World Records
in its category "Phonograph records: Biggest Sellers" from the early 1970s until the 1990s, when the advent of
compact discs led to Guinness discontinuing the category. Guinness consistently listed "Rock Around the Clock" as having the highest claim of any
pop music recording, coming second in sales only to
Bing Crosby's 1942 recording of "
White Christmas", which was also listed as having sold 25 million copies with a further estimated 100 million copies sold in other versions. Sales figures as high as 35 to 40 million have been cited in various reference books and by media, as have lower numbers in the 15-22 million range, whilst a "more than 30 million copies" figure was quoted by Star, as early as 1983, on back cover page of Swenson's book. A frequently used piece of promotion regarding the song is that it is said to be playing somewhere in the world every minute of the day.
Length variation
Although originally released to vinyl at a running time of 2 minutes and 8 seconds, most digital/CD releases of the original 1954 recording clock in at 2:10. This is due to the inclusion of a "count-in" by one of the Comets (saying, "One...two") at the very start of the song. This was never included in the original single or album releases of the song. (All of Haley's subsequent studio rerecordings of the song run longer than 2:10 with the exception of the abbreviated version recorded for
Happy Days
.) Versions of Haley's song that run longer than 2:10 will lack the electric guitar sound of Danny Cedrone and the double bass lines of Marshall Lytle. Any version recorded after the 1950s will also feature an electric bass player. It is these versions that are most commonly commercially available, especially on compilations.
Tributes
In tribute to the influence of the song and the movie that launched its popularity, the
March 29,
2005 50
th anniversary of the opening of
Blackboard Jungle
was marked by several large celebrations in the United States organized by promoter
Martin Lewis under the blanket title .
[8] Rock Is Fifty also hosted additional celebrations in
Los Angeles in July, 2005, as part of a "Rock Around the Clock-a-Thon" to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the date the song reached the No. 1 spot on the American charts, as well as to observe what would have been Haley's 80th birthday. These events included numerous appearances and performances by surviving members of the original Comets, including the band's induction into the
Rock Walk hall of fame, a performance at the
Viper Room club on the
Sunset Strip, and a special performance for employees of
NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena to celebrate the success of the
Deep Impact space probe. A special video of "Rock Around the Clock" was created to mark the occasion and was featured on NASA's website during July and August 2005. The anniversary was also marked by the publication of a book on the history of the song,
Rock Around the Clock: The Record That Started the Rock Revolution
, by
Jim Dawson.
The
United States House of Representatives also recognized the 40th anniversary of the composing of "Rock Around the Clock" with a special statement by Rep.
Robert A. Borski of Pennsylvania, which was read into the
Congressional Record on March 31, 1993.
[9]
Albums
As Bill Haley's best-known recording, there have been dozens of compilation album releases over the years entitled
Rock Around the Clock
. The most notable of these compilations was the 1955 Decca Records album
Rock Around the Clock
(Decca DL 8225) which contained most of the tracks Haley recorded as singles for the label in 1954 and 1955.
Another notable album release entitled
Rock Around the Clock
was the 1970
Hallmark Records UK release
Rock Around the Clock
(SHM 668) which was the first British release of a 1968 album entitled
Bill Haley's Biggest Hits
which had been released in
Sweden by
Sonet Records. The album consisted of newly recorded renderings of Haley classics from the 1950s, along with some previously unrecorded songs.
Trivia
- The song was used as the theme song to the 1970s sitcom Happy Days
, which was set in the 1950s. However, after the second season, it was changed to a custom-written song.
- The original Bill Haley & His Comets recording features in the film "American Graffiti" (1973).
- In 1974, Harry Nilsson covered the tune on his album, Pussy Cats
, produced by John Lennon.
- In 1964, Bill Haley and His Comets recorded a sequel song entitled "Dance Around the Clock". Haley actually recorded this song on five occasions (a Spanish language version for Orfeon Records of Mexico City and an English version for the US label Newtown Records (both in 1964), two live versions for Buddah Records recorded in New York in 1969 (neither of which were released for 25 years), and once more in Nashville, Tennessee for the Swedish Sonet Records label in 1970). Despite these efforts, the song was not a commercial success.
- In 1979, the Belgian group Telex covered the song in an ultra-slow version. It reached number 34 on the UK singles chart.
- Also in 1979, the song was featured in the Sex Pistols' album and film "The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle" with Edward Tudor Pole on vocals.
- The song is mentioned in Billy Joel's history-themed song "We Didn't Start the Fire".
- Children's entertainers, Sharon, Lois & Bram sang a version of this song on their 1987 album Stay Tuned (album).
- On January 1, 2005, Bill Haley's 1954 recording of the song entered into the public domain in Europe.
- The song plays a notable role in the 1975 science fiction trilogy The Illuminatus! Trilogy
by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson. It is "performed" in the book by a group called Clark Kent and His Supermen at key points in the story. Another character in the book, George Dorn, is said to have been inspired to become a counter-culture journalist after hearing the song.
- In 2006 the German label Hydra Records released The Story of Rock Around the Clock: Bill Haley & Friends Vol. 3
which contains 60 versions of the song—30 by Haley (mostly live performances), and 30 more by a variety of artists including Pat Boone, Chubby Checker, Eddie Cochran, John Lennon, Buddy Knox, Isley Brothers, The Platters, Carl Perkins, and Mae West.
- In 2008, Stone Gossard of Pearl Jam spearheaded a project to record a version of the song with the lyric "rock around the clock" changed to "rock around Barack", to coincide with the campaign for Barack Obama to be the Democratic Party's 2008 Presidential candidate.
- One of the last commercials for the Zayre chain used the song in a Christmas ad.
Quotation
- "No matter how bad a show might be going some night, I know that song will pull us through. It's my little piece of gold." - Bill Haley
See also
- Billboard Top Rock'n'Roll Hits: 1955
Notes
References
- Rock and Roll Hall of Fame citation
- Peter Gammond, The Oxford Companion to Popular Music, 1991, p.495
- Dawson, Jim. ''Rock Around the Clock : The Record that Started the Rock Revolution'' (Backbeat Books, 2005, p. 62), ISBN 0-87930-829-X
- Swenson, John. ''Bill Haley''. (Star Books, 1983).
- Dawson, Jim, and Steve Propes, ''What Was The First Rock 'n' Roll Record ?'' (Faber and Faber, 1992), ISBN 0-571-12939-0.
- Dawson, Jim. ''Rock Around the Clock : The Record that Started the Rock Revolution'' (Backbeat Books, 2005).
- Dawson (2005).
- Gundersen, Edna (March 18, 2005). "Rock 'Clock' strikes 50". ''USA Today'', p. E1.
- Congressional Record Vol. 139, No. 43, March 31, 1993; E841.