#but confirmation that it's most likely actually 15 years after and we get teenaged triplets!!!!
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they are everything to me....
#shrek#shrek 5#please pinocchio being a weird little mf in this trailer was all i could have hoped for#but confirmation that it's most likely actually 15 years after and we get teenaged triplets!!!!#IM SO EXCITED TO SEE THE DESIGNS FOR FERGUS AND FARKLE!!!#pinocch's design though is so so cuteeeeeee they gave him a much more pear shaped head it makes him look so preciousss#i love that hes so đ
like they always consistently make him such a bothersome dandy i love it#WE MUST HAVE GINGY AND WOLFY we need the three powerful fairytail slays
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Fats Domino, the New Orleans rhythm-and-blues singer whose two-fisted boogie-woogie piano and nonchalant vocals, heard on dozens of hits, made him one of the biggest stars of the early rock ânâ roll era, has died in Louisiana. He was 89.
His death was confirmed by his brother-in-law and former road manager Reggie Hall, who said he had no other details. Mr. Domino lived in Harvey, La., across the Mississippi River from New Orleans.
Mr. Domino had more than three dozen Top 40 pop hits through the 1950s and early â60s, among them âBlueberry Hill,â âAinât It a Shameâ (also known as âAinât That a Shame,â which is the actual lyric), âIâm Walkinâ,â âBlue Mondayâ and âWalkinâ to New Orleans.â Throughout he displayed both the buoyant spirit of New Orleans, his hometown, and a droll resilience that reached listeners worldwide.
He sold 65 million singles in those years, with 23 gold records, making him second only to Elvis Presley as a commercial force. Presley acknowledged Mr. Domino as a predecessor.
âA lot of people seem to think I started this business,â Presley told Jet magazine in 1957. âBut rock ânâ roll was here a long time before I came along. Nobody can sing that music like colored people. Letâs face it: I canât sing it like Fats Domino can. I know that.â
Rotund and standing 5 feet 5 inches â he would joke that he was as wide as he was tall â Mr. Domino had a big, infectious grin, a fondness for ornate, jewel-encrusted rings and an easygoing manner in performance; even in plaintive songs his voice had a smile in it. And he was a master of the wordless vocal, making hits out of songs full of âwoo-woosâ and âla-las.â
Working with the songwriter, producer and arranger David Bartholomew, Mr. Domino and his band carried New Orleans parade rhythms into rock ânâ roll and put a local stamp on nearly everything they touched, even country tunes like âJambalayaâ or big-band songs like âMy Blue Heavenâ and âWhen My Dreamboat Comes Home.â
Antoine Dominique Domino Jr. was born on Feb. 26, 1928, the youngest of eight children in a family with Creole roots. He grew up in the Ninth Ward of New Orleans, where he spent most of his life.
Music filled his life from the age of 10, when his family inherited an old piano. After his brother-in-law Harrison Verrett, a traditional-jazz musician, wrote down the notes on the keys and taught him a few chords, Antoine threw himself at the instrument â so enthusiastically that his parents moved it to the garage.
He was almost entirely self-taught, picking up ideas from boogie-woogie masters like Meade Lux Lewis, Pinetop Smith and Amos Milburn. âBack then I used to play everybodyâs records; everybodyâs records who made records,â he told the New Orleans music magazine Offbeat in 2004. âI used to hear âem, listen at âem five, six, seven, eight times and I could play it just like the record because I had a good ear for catchinâ notes and different things.â
He attended the Louis B. Macarty School but dropped out in the fourth grade to work as an icemanâs helper. âIn the houses where people had a piano in their rooms, Iâd stop and play,â he told USA Today in 2007. âThatâs how I practiced.â
In his teens, he started working at a club called the Hideaway with a band led by the bassist Billy Diamond, who nicknamed him Fats. Mr. Domino soon became the bandâs frontman and a local draw.
âFats was breaking up the place, man,â Mr. Bartholomew told The Cleveland Plain Dealer in 2010. âHe was singing and playing the piano and carrying on. Everyone was having a good time. When you saw Fats Domino, it was âLetâs have a party!â â
He added: âMy first impression was a lasting impression. He was a great singer. He was a great artist. And whatever he was doing, nobody could beat him.â
In 1947 Mr. Domino married Rosemary Hall, and they had eight children, Antoine III, Anatole, Andre, Anonio, Antoinette, Andrea, Anola and Adonica. His wife died in 2008. A complete list of survivors was not immediately available.
In 1949 Mr. Bartholomew brought Lew Chudd, the owner of Imperial Records in Los Angeles, to the Hideaway. Mr. Chudd signed Mr. Domino on the spot, with a contract, unusual for the time, that paid royalties rather than a one-time purchase of songs.
Immediately, Mr. Domino and Mr. Bartholomew wrote âThe Fat Man,â a cleaned-up version of a song about drug addiction called âJunkers Blues,â and recorded it with Mr. Bartholomewâs studio band. By 1951 it had sold a million copies.
Mr. Dominoâs trademark triplets, picked up from âItâs Midnight,â a 1949 record by the boogie-woogie pianist and singer Little Willie Littlefield, appeared on his next rhythm-and-blues hit, âEvery Night About This Time.â The technique spread like wildfire, becoming a virtual requirement for rock ânâ roll ballads.
âFats made it popular,â Mr. Bartholomew told Rick Coleman, the author of âBlue Monday: Fats Domino and the Lost Dawn of Rock ânâ Rollâ (2006). âThen it was on every record.â
In 1952, on a chance visit to Cosimo Matassaâs recording studio in New Orleans, Mr. Domino was asked to help out on a recording by a nervous teenager named Lloyd Price. Sitting in with Mr. Bartholomewâs band, he came up with the memorable piano part for âLawdy Miss Clawdy,â one of the first rhythm-and-blues records to cross over into the pop charts.
Through the early 1950s Mr. Domino turned out a stream of hits, taking up what seemed like permanent residence in the upper reaches of the R&B charts. His records began reaching the pop charts as well.
In that racially segregated era, white performers used his hits to build their careers. In 1955, âAinât It a Shameâ became a No. 1 hit for Pat Boone as âAinât That a Shame,â while Dominoâs arrangement of a traditional song, âBo Weevil,â was imitated by Teresa Brewer.
Mr. Dominoâs appeal to white teenagers broadened as he embarked on national tours and appeared with mixed-race rock ânâ roll revues like the Moondog Jubilee of Stars Under the Stars, presented by the disc jockey Alan Freed at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn. Appearances on national television, on Steve Allen and Ed Sullivanâs shows, put him in millions of living rooms.
He did not flaunt his status as an innovator, or as an architect of a powerful cultural movement.
âFats, how did this rock ânâ roll all get started anyway?â an interviewer for a Hearst newsreel asked him in 1957. Mr. Domino answered: âWell, what they call rock ânâ roll now is rhythm and blues. Iâve been playing it for 15 years in New Orleans.â
At a news conference in Las Vegas in 1969, after resuming his performing career, Elvis Presley interrupted a reporter who had called him âthe king.â He pointed to Mr. Domino, who was in the room, and said, âThereâs the real king of rock ânâ roll.â
Mr. Domino had his biggest hit in 1956 with his version of âBlueberry Hill,â a song that had been recorded by Glenn Millerâs big band in 1940. It peaked at No. 2 on the pop charts and sold a reported three million copies.
âI liked that record âcause I heard it by Louis Armstrong and I said, âThat number gonna fit me,â â he told Offbeat. âWe had to beg Lew Chudd for a while. I told him I wasnât gonna make no more records till they put that record out. I could feel it, that it was a hit, a good record.â
He followed with two more Top Five pop hits: âBlue Mondayâ and âIâm Walkinâ,â which outsold the version recorded by Ricky Nelson.
âI was lucky enough to write songs that carry a good beat and tell a real story that people could feel was their story, too â something that old people or the kids could both enjoy,â Mr. Domino told The Los Angeles Times in 1985.
Mr. Domino performed in 1950s movies like âShake, Rattle and Rock,â âThe Big Beatâ (for which he and Mr. Bartholomew wrote the title song) and âThe Girl Canât Help It.â In 1957, he toured for three months with Chuck Berry, Clyde McPhatter, the Moonglows and others.
Well into the early 1960s, Mr. Domino continued to reach both the pop and rhythm-and-blues charts with songs like âWhole Lotta Lovinâ,â âIâm Ready,â âIâm Gonna Be a Wheel Someday,â âBe My Guest,â âWalkinâ to New Orleansâ and âMy Girl Josephine.â
He toured Europe for the first time in 1962 and met the Beatles in Liverpool, before they were famous. His contract with Imperial ended in 1963, and he went on to record for ABC-Paramount, Mercury, Broadmoor, Reprise and other labels.
His last appearance in the pop Top 100 was in 1968, with a version of âLady Madonna,â the Beatles song that had been inspired by Mr. Dominoâs piano-pounding style. In 1982, he had a country hit with âWhiskey Heaven.â
Although he was no longer a pop sensation, Mr. Domino continued to perform worldwide and appeared for 10 months a year in Las Vegas in the mid-1960s. On tour, he would bring his own pots and pans so he could cook.
His life on the road ended in the early 1980s, when he decided that he did not want to leave New Orleans, saying it was the only place where he liked the food.
He went on to perform regularly at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, and in 1987 Jerry Lee Lewis and Ray Charles joined him for a Cinemax special, âFats Domino and Friends.â He released a holiday album, âChristmas Is a Special Day,â in 1993.
Reclusive and notoriously resistant to interview requests, Mr. Domino stayed home even when he was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1986 as one of its first members. He did the same when he received a lifetime achievement Grammy Award in 1987. In 1999, when he was awarded the National Medal of Arts,he sent his daughter Antoinette to the White House to pick up the prize.
He even refused to leave New Orleans when Hurricane Katrina devastated the city on Aug. 29, 2005, remaining at his flooded home â he was living in the Lower Ninth Ward then â until he was rescued by helicopter on Sept. 1.
âI wasnât too nervousâ about waiting to be saved, he told The New York Times in 2006. âI had my little wine and a couple of beers with me; Iâm all right.â
His rescue was loosely the basis for âSaving Fats,â a tall tale in Sam Shepardâs 2010 short-story collection, âDay Out of Days.â
President George W. Bush visited Mr. Dominoâs home in 2006 in recognition of New Orleansâs cultural resilience; that same year, Mr. Domino released âAlive and Kickin,â â his first album in more than a decade. The title song began, âAll over the country, people want to know / Whatever happened to Fats Domino,â then continued, âIâm alive and kicking and Iâm where I wanna be.â
He was often seen around New Orleans, emerging from his pink-roofed mansion driving a pink Cadillac. âI just drink my little beers, do some cookinâ, anything I feel like â he told The Daily Telegraph of London in 2007, describing his retirement.
In 1953, in Down Beat magazine, the Atlantic Records producer Jerry Wexler made a bold-sounding prediction that turned out to be, in retrospect, quite timid. âCanât you envision a collector in 1993 discovering a Fats Domino record in a Salvation Army depot and rushing home to put it on the turntable?â he wrote. âWe can. Itâs good blues, itâs good jazz, and itâs the kind of good that never wears out.â
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