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HOME arrow Jimmy Clanton (Mini-MP3-Player v2.2 (c) Ute Jacobi - unregistered version - Only Free for NonCommercial Website)

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Jimmy performs "Venus In Blue Jeans" at Legends Of Louisiana 4-14-2007                                       

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Jimmy Clanton & Mike Shepherd

 

Born on September 2, 1940, Jimmy Clanton entered his teen years just as white audiences were

beginning to discover rhythm & blues music.  He formed the Dixie Cats in 1956 while still a student at Baton Rouge

High School and quickly became one of the few whites who could emulate the sounds of Little Richard,

Johnny Ace, and Fats Domino.  His early contemporaries included fellow Baton Rouge musicians John Fred,

more than a decade away from his own number one hit Judy in Disguise, and Johnny Ramistella, who

would become famous in his own right eight years later as Johnny Rivers.   Clanton eventually teamed

with Dick Holler, the leader and pianist of another band, The Rockets.  Holler would later write

Abraham, Martin, and John, which was not only a huge hit (number four on the pop charts), but one

that resurrected the moribund career of singer Dion DiMucci.  Clanton and Holler received recording contracts

with Cosimo Matassa’s studio in New Orleans in 1957 and the following year, Clanton wrote and recorded

Just a Dream that was released on Johnny Vincent’s Ace Records.

 

It’s unfortunate that Clanton, a dedicated R&B enthusiast, is identified with other bland, cookie cutter teen

idols.  It’s also a curious paradox that with his great voice and his genuine feel for the New Orleans sound,

he was artistically restricted to syrupy ballads.  Still, it’s difficult to argue with success: Just a Dream reached

number four on the Top 100 chart.  Ironically, it did even better on the R&B chart, going all the way to number one. 

It remained on the two charts eighteen and seventeen weeks, respectively.  Clanton also charted with

A Part of Me, (number 38) and A Letter To An Angel (number 25), both in December of 1958;

My Own True Love (Tara’s Theme from Gone With The Wind, number 33), September 1959; Go, Jimmy, Go

(number five pop and number nine R&B), February 1960; Come Back (number 63) and Wait (number 91),

October 1960; Another Sleepless Night (number 22), June 1960; What Am I Gonna Do (number 50),

February 1961; Venus in Blue Jeans (number seven), October 1962, and Curly (number 97), November 1969. 

Just a Dream, Venus in Blue Jeans, and Go, Jimmy Go, released on Ace Records, each earned Clanton a gold record.

 

At first it didn’t appear that Just a Dream would ever take off.  Ace Records executive Johnny Vincent

was on a roll with Huey “Piano” Smith who was on fire with his Rockin Pneumonia and the Boogie Woogie Flu

and his follow up hit Don’t You Just Know It.  But Clanton’s tender ballad gradually gained air play

not only in Louisiana but in other parts of the country as well, and suddenly the Baton Rouge teenager was

one of the hottest acts in the country.  His first bookings outside the south quickly followed, along with an

appearance on Dick Clark’s American Bandstand, and even a performance at the Hollywood Bowl. 

He was also booked for performances on Alan Freed’s package tours and in 1959 appeared in Freed’s

jukebox movie Go Johnny Go along with Chuck Berry, Jackie Wilson, the Flamingos, the Cadillacs,

Eddie Cochran, and Ritchie Valens.  On February 3, 1959, Buddy Holly, Valens, and J.P. Richardson

(The Big Bopper) died tragically in a plane crash in Clear Lake, Iowa, en route to the next stop on their

“Winter Dance Party.”  Clanton and Frankie Avalon were quickly signed to the headlining spots for the

remainder of the tour.  S.J. Montalbano, who served as Clanton’s manager early in his career,

accompanied his new star on the tour.

 

Clanton inadvertently gave one local teenager a thrill of a lifetime while playing for the Pineville High

School junior-senior prom and banquet in 1957 at Alexandria’s Bentley Hotel.  Hubert Lincecum was a

Pineville High student and was at the prom with his date when Clanton’s girl friend arrived and she and

Clanton took a break that lasted nearly two hours.  Lincecum, who considered himself a pretty decent

singer in his own right, approached bandleader Dave Bartholomew (yes, that Dave Bartholomew,

Fats Domino’s bandleader).  Lincecum, who was far from shy, asked a skeptical Bartholomew

if he could sing with the band.  “What songs do you know?” he asked the teenager.

 

“I know anything Fats Domino sings,” was Lincecum’s brassy reply.

 

Bartholomew remained reluctant but finally agreed.  “Okay, let’s hear you sing Blueberry Hill,” he said.

 

Lincecum, who today lives in Baton Rouge and works for the State of Louisiana, sang Domino’s

signature song.  “When I finished, Bartholomew told me, ‘You can stay up here and sing as long as you want,’”

Lincecum said.  “I ended up singing for an hour and a half while my date sat all alone at a table. 

She wasn’t a very happy camper, but I had a lot of fun.”  When Ace Records folded, Clanton continued

recording for Phillips, Mala, Laurie, and Imperial Records but the British Invasion effectively spelled

the end of his string of hits just as it had for Dale & Grace and scores of other American artists. 

He became a disc jockey in the 1970s and continues to perform, sometimes teaming with onetime

Ace label mate Frankie Ford in oldies shows.

 

On April 14, 2007 at the LMHOF "Legends of Louisiana Celebration & Inductions" concert in Mandeville, Lousiiana,

Jimmy Clanton was inducted into The Louisiana Music Hall Of Fame.

 

To learn and experience more, please visit Jimmy Clanton's Inductees (Photo & Memorabalia) Gallery and his 

Inductees Video Gallery under "GALLERIES MUSIQUE" on this site.   

 

Bio courtesy of Tom Aswell - Author of "Louisiana Rocks - The True Genesis Of Rock and Roll"

More info on Jimmy Clanton is available at www.jimmyclanton.com

Be sure to visit Jimmy Clanton's Video Gallery and Inductee's Photo & memorabalia Gallery under "GALLERIES MUSIQUE" on this site.

 
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