#paul burlison
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Johnny Burnette Trio - Train Kept A-Rollin'
#johnny burnette trio#train kept a rollin#tiny bradshaw#cover#johnny burnette#dorsey burnette#paul burlison#buddy harman#rock'n'roll#rockabilly#protopunk#7'' single#1956#Youtube
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Johnny Burnette & The Rock 'n' Roll Trio - Please Don't Leave Me (1956) (Alternate Version) Antoine Dominique Domino Jr. (Fats Domino) from: "All by Myself" / "Please Don't Leave Me" (Single) "Johnny Burnette and The Rock 'n' Roll Trio" (LP) (1993 CD Reissue) "Johnny Burnette & The Rock 'n' Roll Trio …Plus" (2006 Compilation)
Rockabilly | 1st Wave Rock and Roll | Fats Domino Cover
JukeHostUK (left click = play) (320kbps)
Personnel: Johnny Burnette: Vocals / Rhythm Guitar Paul Burlison: Lead Guitar Dorsey Burnette: Stand-Up Bass
Grady Martin: Guitar Bob Moore: Bass Farris Coursey: Drums
Produced by Henry Jerome
Recorded: @ The Bradley Film and Recording Studio in Nashville , Tennessee USA between 1:45PM and 4:45PM on Wednesday July 4, 1956
Album Released: December, 1956
Coral Records
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The band's recordings have exerted a strong influence over subsequent rockabilly artists, although the band did not themselves enjoy broad success at the time. The Encyclopedia of Recorded Sound indicates an ever more widespread influence, suggesting that "the sheer verve and energy communicated by the Burnette Brothers' recordings influenced the aesthetics of British and American rock stars in the 1960s and 1970's" - Wikipedia
#Johnny Burnette & The Rock 'n' Roll Trio#Johnny Burnette#Rockabilly#Paul Burlison#Coral Records#1950's#Fats Domino#Dorsey Burnette#1st Wave Rock and Roll#Grady Martin#Bob Moore
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Johnny Burnette & the Rock 'n Roll Trio : Honey Hush
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Paul Burlison is a guitar hero!
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These are the 21 Republicans who voted against the measure:
ANDY BIGGS(Ariz.)
Dan Bishop (N.C.)
Lauren Boebert (Colo.)
Ken Buck (Colo.)
Tim Burchett (Tenn.)
Eric Burlison (Mo.)
Michael Cloud (Texas)
Eli Crane (Ariz.)
Matt Gaetz (Fla.)
Paul Gosar (Ariz.)
Marjorie Taylor Greene (Ga.)
Wesley Hunt (Texas)
Nancy Mace (S.C.)
Mary Miller (Ill.)
Cory Mills (Fla.)
Alex Mooney (W.Va.)
Barry Moore (Ala.)
Troy Nehls (Texas)
Andy Ogles (Tenn.)
Matt Rosendale (Mont.)
Keith Self (Texas).
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So the Republicans are trying to shut down the government to damage their own states so that they make the Democrats look bad before the election… Is that the game plan they’re going with?
Here is the full list of Republicans who voted against the stopgap bill to prevent a government shutdown in September 2024:
Indiana: James R. Baird, Jim Banks, Rudy Yakym III, Victoria Spartz
Ohio: Troy Balderson, Warren Davidson, Jim Jordan, Max L. Miller
Florida: Aaron Bean, Gus M. Bilirakis, Kat Cammack, Byron Donalds, Matt Gaetz, Anna Paulina Luna, Cory Mills, Bill Posey, Michael Waltz, Daniel Webster
Texas: Michael Cloud, Tony Gonzales, Lance Gooden, Morgan Luttrell, Nathaniel Moran, Chip Roy, Keith Self, Randy Weber Sr., Beth Van Duyne, Roger Williams
Arizona: Andy Biggs, Elijah Crane, Paul A. Gosar, Debbie Lesko, David Schweikert
North Carolina: Dan Bishop
Colorado: Lauren Boebert
Illinois: Mike Bost, Mary E. Miller, Darin LaHood
Oklahoma: Josh Brecheen
Tennessee: Tim Burchett, John W. Rose, Andrew Ogles
Missouri: Eric Burlison
Georgia: Andrew S. Clyde, Mike Collins, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Richard McCormick
Utah: John R. Curtis
South Carolina: Jeff Duncan, Russell Fry, Nancy Mace, Ralph Norman, William R. Timmons IV
Kansas: Ron Estes, Tracey Mann
Mississippi: Mike Ezell, Michael Guest, Trent Kelly
Iowa: Randy Feenstra
Minnesota: Brad Finstad, Michelle Fischbach
Idaho: Russ Fulcher
Virginia: Bob Good, H. Morgan Griffith
Wyoming: Harriet M. Hageman
Maryland: Andy Harris
Louisiana: Clay Higgins
Pennsylvania: John Joyce, Scott Perry
West Virginia: Alexander X. Mooney
California: Tom McClintock
Kentucky: Thomas Massie
Montana: Matthew M. Rosendale Sr.
New York: Claudia Tenney
Wisconsin: Thomas P. Tiffany, Derrick Van Orden
New Jersey: Jefferson Van Drew
Alabama: Barry Moore, Gary J. Palmer
Arkansas: Bruce Westerman
Why is this important to me? I would have been out of a job. Government contractors would rather cut you and rehire you for less pay or benefits. Also, if I miss 1 or 2 paychecks I will be homeless.
#history#white history#us history#am yisrael chai#jumblr#republicans#black history#democrats#israel#palestine#James R. Baird#Jim Banks#Rudy Yakym III#Victoria Spartz#Troy Balderson#Warren Davidson#Jim Jordan#Max L. Miller#Aaron Bean#Gus M. Bilirakis#Kat Cammack#Byron Donalds#Matt Gaetz#Anna Paulina Luna#Cory Mills#Bill Posey#Michael Waltz#Daniel Webster#Michael Cloud#Tony Gonzales
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23 Republican Senators & 124 Congressmen signed an amicus brief to the Supreme Court asking for a 50 state ban on mifepristone, a drug safer than tylenol that is standard treatment for abortion & miscarriages, "due to safety concerns". The brief DARES to argue that banning the life saving drug would save women from 'reproductive control'. (x) These 147 people would rather have women die of sepsis than let women control their own bodies. If your representatives are on this list, call them and tell their office you will be voting against them in the next election because they asked SCOTUS to throw the US medical drug system into chaos at the cost of American lives.
United States Senate
Lead Senator: Cindy Hyde-Smith (MS) John Barrasso (WY) Mike Braun (IN) Katie Britt (AL) Ted Budd (NC) Bill Cassidy (LA) Kevin Cramer (ND) Mike Crapo (ID) Ted Cruz (TX) Steve Daines (MT) Josh Hawley (MO) John Hoeven (ND) James Lankford (OK) Mike Lee (UT) Cynthia Lummis (WY) Roger Marshall (KS) Markwayne Mullin (OK) James Risch (ID) Marco Rubio (FL) Rich Scott (FL) John Thune (SD) Tommy Tuberville (AL) Roger Wicker (MS)
United States House of Representatives
Lead Representative: August Pfluger (TX–11) Robert Aderholt (AL–04) Mark Alford (MO–04) Rick Allen (GA–12) Jodey Arrington (TX–19) Brian Babin (TX–36) Troy Balderson (OH–12) Jim Banks (IN–03) Aaron Bean (FL–04) Cliff Bentz (OR–02) Jack Bergman (MI–01) Andy Biggs (AZ–05) Gus Bilirakis (FL–12) Dan Bishop (NC–08) Lauren Boebert (CO–03) Mike Bost (IL–12) Josh Brecheen (OK–02) Ken Buck (CO–04) Tim Burchett (TN–02) Michael Burgess, M.D. (TX–26) Eric Burlison (MO–07) Kat Cammack (FL–03) Mike Carey (OH–15) Jerry Carl (AL–01) Earl L. “Buddy” Carter (GA–01) John Carter (TX–31) Ben Cline (VA–06) Michael Cloud (TX–27) Andrew Clyde (GA–09) Mike Collins (GA–10) Elijah Crane (AZ–02) Eric A. “Rick” Crawford (AR–01) John Curtis (UT–03) Warren Davidson (OH–08) Monica De La Cruz (TX–15) Jeff Duncan (SC–03) Jake Ellzey (TX–06) Ron Estes (KS–04) Mike Ezell (MS–04) Pat Fallon (TX–04) Randy Feenstra (IA–04) Brad Finstad (MN–01) Michelle Fischbach (MN–07) Scott Fitzgerald (WI–05) Mike Flood (NE–01) Virginia Foxx (NC–05) Scott Franklin (FL–18) Russell Fry (SC–07) Russ Fulcher (ID–01) Tony Gonzales (TX–23) Bob Good (VA–05) Paul Gosar (AZ–09) Garret Graves (LA–06) Mark Green (TN–07) Marjorie Taylor Greene (GA–14) H. Morgan Griffith (VA–09) Glenn Grothman (WI–06) Michael Guest (MS–03) Harriet Hageman (WY) Andy Harris, M.D. (MD–01) Diana Harshbarger (TN–01) Kevin Hern (OK–01) Clay Higgins (LA–03) Ashley Hinson (IA–02) Erin Houchin (IN–02) Richard Hudson (NC–09) Bill Huizenga (MI–04) Bill Johnson (OH–06) Mike Johnson (LA–04) Jim Jordan (OH–04) Mike Kelly (PA–16) Trent Kelly (MS–01) Doug LaMalfa (CA–01) Doug Lamborn (CO–05) Nicholas Langworthy (NY–23) Jake LaTurner (KS–02) Debbie Lesko (AZ–08) Barry Loudermilk (GA–11) Blaine Luetkemeyer (MO–03) Tracey Mann (KS–01) Lisa McClain (MI–09) Dr. Rich McCormick (GA–06) Patrick McHenry (NC–10) Carol Miller (WV–01) Mary Miller (IL–15) Max Miller (OH–07) Cory Mills (FL–07) John Moolenar (MI–02) Alex X. Mooney (WV–02) Barry Moore (AL–02) Blake Moore (UT–01) Gregory F. Murphy, M.D. (NC–03) Troy Nehls (TX–22) Ralph Norman (SC–05) Andy Ogles (TN–05) Gary Palmer (AL–06) Bill Posey (FL–08) Guy Reschenthaler (PA–14) Mike Rogers (AL–03) John Rose (TN–06) Matthew Rosendale, Sr. (MT–02) David Rouzer (NC–07) Steve Scalise (LA–01) Keith Self (TX–03) Pete Sessions (TX–17) Adrian Smith (NE–03) Christopher H. Smith (NJ–04) Lloyd Smucker (PA–11) Pete Stauber (MN–08) Elise Stefanik (NY–21) Dale Strong (AL–05) Claudia Tenney (NY–24) Glenn Thompson (PA–15) William Timmons, IV (SC–04) Beth Van Duyne (TX–24) Tim Walberg (MI–05) Michael Waltz (FL–05) Randy Weber, Sr. (TX–14) Daniel Webster (FL–11) Brad R. Wenstrup, D.P.M. (OH–02) Bruce Westerman (AR–04) Roger Williams (TX–25) Joe Wilson (SC–02) Rudy Yakym (IN–02)
If your representatives are on this list, call them and tell their office you will be voting against them in the next election because they asked SCOTUS to throw the US medical drug system into chaos at the cost of American lives.
Help to patients who have to cross state lines to get medical care by donating to your local abortion fund here. (x)
#scotus#abortionpill#state of the uterus#abortion rights are human rights#us politics#miscarriage#vote blue#nnaf#yellowhammer
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In The Rock 7/2/1956: Johnny Burnette and the Rock and Roll Trio roll in to Bradley’s Barn in Nashville and record their rocked up version of “Train Kept a Rollin’”. Guitarist Paul Burlison, dropped his amp beforehand, dislodging a tube, causing one of the first intentional records featuring distorted guitar. And rock is saved.
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For those who can't (or don't have the time to) read the article, here is a list of all the GOP members who have voted against redirecting funds to natural disaster relief (due to the reasons above).
In BOLD and ITALICS are those from impacted states (Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia)
House
Representative James Baird of Indiana
Representative Troy Balderson of Ohio
Representative Jim Banks of Indiana
Representative Aaron Bean of Florida
Representative Andy Biggs of Arizona
Representative Gus Bilirakis of Florida
Representative Dan Bishop of North Carolina
Representative Lauren Boebert of Colorado
Representative Mike Bost of Illinois
Representative Josh Brecheen of Oklahoma
Representative Tim Burchett of Tennessee
Representative Eric Burlison of Missouri
Representative Kat Cammack of Florida
Representative Michael Cloud of Texas
Representative Andrew Clyde of Georgia
Representative Mike Collins of Georgia
Representative Eli Crane of Arizona
Representative John Curtis of Utah
Representative Warren Davidson of Ohio
Representative Byron Donalds of Florida
Representative Jeff Duncan of South Carolina
Representative Ron Estes of Kansas
Representative Mike Ezell of Mississippi
Representative Randy Feenstra of Iowa
Representative Brad Finstad of Minnesota
Representative Michelle Fischbach of Minnesota
Representative Russell Fry of South Carolina
Representative Russ Fulcher of Idaho
Representative Matt Gaetz of Florida
Representative Tony Gonzales of Texas
Representative Bob Good of Virginia
Representative Lance Gooden of Texas
Representative Paul Gosar of Arizona
Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia
Representative Morgan Griffith of Virginia
Representative Michael Guest of Mississippi
Representative Harriet Hageman of Wyoming
Representative Andy Harris of Maryland
Representative Clay Higgins of Louisiana
Representative Jim Jordan of Ohio
Representative John Joyce of Pennsylvania
Representative Trent Kelly of Mississippi
Representative Darin LaHood of Illinois
Representative Laurel Lee of Florida
Representative Debbie Lesko of Arizona
Representative Greg Lopez of Colorado
Representative Anna Paulina Luna of Florida
Representative Morgan Lutrell of Texas
Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina
Representative Tracey Mann of Kansas
Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky
Representative Tom McClintock of California
Representative Rich McCormick of Georgia
Representative Mary Miller of Illinois
Representative Max Miller of Ohio
Representative Cory Mills of Florida
Representative Alex Mooney of West Virginia
Representative Barry Moore of Alabama
Representative Nathaniel Moran of Texas
Representative Ralph Norman of South Carolina
Representative Andy Ogles of Tennessee
Representative Gary Palmer of Alabama
Representative Scott Perry of Pennsylvania
Representative Bill Posey of Florida
Representative John Rose of Tennessee
Representative Matt Rosendale of Montana
Representative Chip Roy of Texas
Representative David Schweikert of Arizona
Representative Keith Self of Texas
Representative Victoria Spartz of Indiana
Representative Claudia Tenney of New York
Representative William Timmons of South Carolina
Representative Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey
Representative Beth Van Duyne of Texas
Representative Derrick Van Orden of Wisconsin
Representative Mike Waltz of Florida
Representative Randy Weber of Texas
Representative Daniel Webster of Florida
Representative Bruce Westerman of Arkansas
Representative Roger Williams of Texas
Representative Rudy Yakym of Indiana
Senate
Senator Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee
Senator Mike Braun of Indiana
Senator Katie Britt of Alabama
Senator Ted Budd of North Carolina
Senator Mike Crapo of Idaho
Senator Deb Fischer of Nebraska
Senator Bill Hagerty of Tennessee
Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri
Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin
Senator Mike Lee of Utah
Senator Roger Marshall of Kansas
Senator Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma
Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky
Senator Pete Ricketts of Nebraska
Senator James Risch of Idaho
Senator Eric Schmitt of Missouri
Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina
Senator Tommy Tuberville of Alabama
Hold them accountable. Make it known to them and their offices that you won't stand by this shit.
Remember that this is why elections outside of the Presidential are important!
Don't rely on a single figurehead to advocate for you, because they won't. Work with your community to not only save one another, but to elect people who will actually represent you and your needs.
A bunch of republicans voted AGAINST giving people hurricane relief money and are trying to blame brown people for lack of funding.
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Johnny Burnette and The Rock and Roll Trio, with Paul Burlison and Dorsey Burnette
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Paul Burlison ( Rock & Roll Trio, “Train Kept A Rollin”)
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The Beatles and their… let’s call them ‘homages’, shall we?
Baby Let’s Play House - performed by Elvis Presley, written by Arthur Gunter / Run For Your Life
Lonesome Tears in My Eyes - written by Johnny Burnette, Dorsey Burnette, Paul Burlison and Al Mortimer (performed by the Beatles for ‘Pop Go the Beatles’) / The Ballad of John & Yoko
You Can’t Catch Me - written and performed by Chuck Berry / Come Together
#beatles homages#elvis presley#johnny burnette#chuck berry#run for your life#the ballad of john and yoko#come together#the beatles
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Stray Cats - Your Baby Blue Eyes (1981) Paul Burlison / Dorsey Burnette / Johnny Burnette Johnny Burnette and The Rock ‘n’ Roll Trio Cover from: “Gonna Ball” "Built for Speed" (US)
Personnel: Brian Setzer: Vocals / Guitar Lee Rocker: Bass Slim Jim Phantom: Drums
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Johnny Burnette and The Rock ‘n’ Roll Trio - Your Baby Blue Eyes (1956): https://tmblr.co/ZoHQpk2KeRMsg
#Your Baby Blue Eyes#80's#Stray Cats#Rockabilly Revival#Gonna Ball#Johnny Burnette and The Rock ‘n’ Roll Trio#Johnny Burnette#Dorsey Burnette#Paul Burlison#Rockabilly#Replacing Dead Links#audio-tut.ru
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The Rock & Roll Trio: Johnny Burnette, Dorsey Burnette, Paul Burlison
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Johnny Burnette - “Train Kept A-Rollin’” Between the Rails: America’s Train Songs Song released in 1956. Compilation released in 1996. Rock and Roll / Rockabilly
Every generation of music appears to have had its trailblazing rebels. Someone seems to always muster up enough courage to reject convention and sonically give a middle finger to the status quo, daring people to call what they’ve created music. The most glaring example of this concept is probably derived from punk rock, but there were plenty of music rebels long before that. Rock and roll had been established between the late 40s and early 50s, but there was perhaps no one more raucous than Johnny Burnette and his Rock ‘n’ Roll Trio when they first burst on to the Memphis scene in 1956.
Johnny Burnette was an incredible Memphis rocker whose life was cut short at the young age of 31 because of a tragic boating accident. Unable to cut it as a professional boxer, Burnette quickly turned toward music, along with his brother Dorsey and guitarist Paul Burlison. Deeply inspired by the rowdy sounds being put forth by local phenom Elvis Presley, they set out to make similar music to his. In ‘56 they released three singles, none of which achieved any national success due to poor promotion. In a 1996 article in Nashville Scene, Daniel Cooper explains that Capitol wanted to sign the trio, but they wound up going with Coral Records instead. As a result, Capitol signed Gene Vincent, who became a 50s rock and roll superstar. To think what could have been for the Rock ‘n’ Roll Trio had they signed to the right label.
However, one of those failed Coral singles would manage to become a definitive piece of rock and roll history. “Train Kept A-Rollin’,” a cover of a jump blues tune originally released in 1951 by Tiny Bradshaw, features an incredible level of unrestrained energy from Johnny Burnette on vocals, along with what’s believed to be the first ever use of guitar distortion in rock music, courtesy of Paul Burlison.
On an energetic level, this definitely compares to Elvis, but at least the King had that signature, bellowing velveteen voice. What Burnette lacks in vocal talent, he makes up for in rambunctiousness, seemingly set on trying to piss off every last music purist lying in his wake. He sings slightly off-beat in certain instances because he can. He screams because he feels like it. No one’s going to stop him. His approach to singing definitely led to new types of rock and roll where pure, raw, powerful energy held way more value than technical skill. A watershed moment, to say the least.
And then there’s Burlison’s guitar. Rock music had never witnessed before the fuzz that Burlison had generated on “Train Kept A-Rollin’”. And according to Burlison, it all came from a mistake. That same Nashville Scene article goes into detail about how that fuzziness materialzied and how some of the world’s most famous rockers were totally gobsmacked by it:
Before a live date in Philadelphia, Burlison had dropped his amplifier and, unbeknownst to him, partially disengaged one of the tubes. As a result, throughout the entire show his guitar had emitted a thick, fuzz-like tone. “We did the whole show with it that way,” he says. “Every song we played. Because I didn’t know what it was.” But Burlison liked the sound and soon learned how to loosen the tube just enough to replicate it. At the studio in July, he suggested trying it out on a couple of tracks. Far from objecting to what essentially amounted to using faulty equipment, [producer Owen] Bradley went along with the guitarist.
By itself, the Trio’s locomotive-speed rendition of “The Train Kept A Rollin’,” fueled by Johnny Burnette’s out-of-breath screeching vocals, would have ranked as a rockabilly classic for the ages. But with Burlison playing a deceptively simple series of bass-string octaves through his fuzzed-out amp, the record proved an instant sensation within the industry itself.
“People started calling me right after the song came out. Boy! Engineers would call and ask me, `What are you doing on that song?’ Every motel, every hotel we stayed at, somebody would call and wanna know what we were doing on it,” Burlison says.
…Burlison’s tone never stopped confounding some of the best guitarists in the business. In one episode reported to him by Memphis musician-producer Jim Dickinson, Dickinson was in England with the Rolling Stones when they all wound up in the same hotel with Eric Clapton. As Dickinson told Burlison, Clapton was playing the Trio’s “The Train Kept A Rollin’ ” on a portable record player, trying to learn it. Frustrated, says Burlison, Clapton finally “got up, and he took the guitar up, and threw it down on the bed…and he said, `What in the hell’s he doing?‘
“Another time, in the 1980s, Burlison was working with the Sun Rhythm Section at a show in Pennsylvania. Los Lobos was in town that night, and after Burlison came offstage the Los Angeles rockers were waiting for him in back. As Burlison recalls, Los Lobos’ Cesar Rosas thrust a guitar at him “and said, `Show me.’ I said, `What?’ He said, `How you did “Train Kept A Rollin’.”
But Burlison’s version of events has been questioned. Vince Gordon and Peter Dijkema argue in their 2011 book, Rockabilly: The Twang Heard ‘Round the World: The Illustrated History, that Burlison’s description doesn’t make sense in relation to how the track sounds. Certain strings sound a lot cleaner than others, and if there really was a tube malfunction, then each string would have a similar amount of distortion. Gordon and Dijkema further contend that Burlison wasn’t even playing guitar at all and that the guitar work on “Train Kept A-Rollin’” actually tracks with that of session guitarist Grady Martin. Whatever the case may be, the use of guitar distortion on this song is easily one of the most important moments in the history of modern music. It made people reconsider the limits of what a guitar was capable of.
In 1956, the combination of Johnny Burnette’s passionate disregard of vocal formalities and Paul Burlison’s (or maybe Grady Martin’s) brand new, earth-shattering guitar fuzz constituted an unbelievable set of musical breakthroughs. Over 60 years later, the reverberations generated by “Train Kept A-Rollin’” are still felt to this day. It’s just a total shame that the song failed to chart nationally. Had Burnette and his trio signed with Capitol instead of Coral, they may have achieved a much higher level of success. Instead, they disbanded around 1957.
Brunette would go on to write songs with his brother Dorsey for teen heartthrob Ricky Nelson and would later chart a bunch of times as a solo act, but none of those contributions pale in comparison to the magic he and his trio generated with “Trian Kept A-Rollin’”.
#rock and roll#rock n roll#rock & roll#rock#rock music#rockabilly#rockabilly music#music#50s#50s music#50's#50's music#50s rock and roll#50's rock and roll#50s rock n roll#50's rock n roll#50s rock & roll#50's rock & roll#50s rock#50's rock#50s rock music#50's rock music#50s rockabilly#50's rockabilly
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Johnny Burnette & The Rock & Roll Trio - "Lonesome Train"
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53rd Flight Rock - "Train Kept A-Rollin'" by Johnny Burnette and The Rock and Roll Trio
53rd Flight Rock – “Train Kept A-Rollin'” by Johnny Burnette and The Rock and Roll Trio
I can’t remember exactly where I first heard about Johnny Burnette and the Rock and Roll Trio. It might have been during my Crampsphase or it could have been in one of the 1950’s rock n roll/teenage delinquent flicks I used to (and still do) love. All I know is that when I heard this version of “Train Kept A-Rollin'” I about knocked myself over. I kinda liked Aerosmith’s version along with The…
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#Dorsey Burnette#Grady Martin#Johnny Burnette and the Rock and Roll Trio#Memphis#Paul Burlison#Rockabilly#Train Kept A-Rollin
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