IS
OFFERING FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION TODAY, A ROCKIN
ORIGINAL 1ST PRESSING CHUCK BERRY "ON STAGE" LP
IN NICE CONDITION!
CHECK OUT THE
SONG LIST BELOW TO SEE THE AWESOME
SELECTIONS!!
THIS IS
THE ORIGINAL 1963 1st PRESSING ON
THE BLACK CHESS LABEL WITH SILVER
PRINT# CHESS LP-1480 IN HIGH FIDELITY. GOLDMINE PRICE
GUIDE VALUES THIS AT $120.00 IN NRMT
COND.

VISUALLY, THE 46 YEAR OLD THICK
VINYL DISC IS IN VERY NICE
CONDITION! I HAVE EXAMINED THIS UNDER BRIGHT LIGHT
AND DO SEE SOME NON-FEELABLE LIGHT SCRATCHES &
SCUFFS (MOSTLY OF THE SWIRLY VARIETY) THEY DO NOT EFFECT
THE OUTSTANDING LISTENING EXPERIENCE! BASED ON THE ABOVE
IMPERFECTIONS OVERALL I FEEL THE VINYL
DESERVES A GRADE OF EX-.


THE
COVER PRESENTS VERY WELL. THERE IS NO SPLITTING,
TAPE OR STICKERS! THERE IS VERY MINOR EVIDENCE
RING WEAR TO THE REVERSE SIDE ONLY. JUST SOME MINOR
DINGS/SCRAPES/ CREASES AS SHOWN. THE REVERSE SIDE LINER NOTES
ARE VERY INFORMATIVE AND READABLE. THERE IS A NAME WRITTEN IN
BLUE UPPER LEFT CORNER ON BACK. BASED ON THE ABOVE
IMPERFECTIONS THE COVER GRADES
EX-
I HAVE PLAY GRADED THIS AND THE
LISTENING EXPERIENCE WAS JUST OUTSTANDING!!! SOME
VERY MINOR NOISE HERE AND THERE MOSTLY BETWEEN
SONGS BUT NOTHING DISTRACTING AT ALL. A FANTASTIC
LISTENING COPY! THERE WERE NO SKIPS,
OR DISTRACTING POPS, HISSES, CLICKS OR
BURPS!
THE
LISTENTING EXPERIENCE GRADES
EX+
OVERALL THIS ROCKIN' LP GRADES AN
EX-!
Charles Edward
Anderson Berry was born on October 18, 1926 in St. Louis,
MO. His mother, Martha, was a
schoolteacher; his father, Henry, was a contractor and deacon
of the nearby
Antioch
Baptist
Church. The third
of six children, he grew up in The Ville, an area just north
of downtown St.
Louis which was one of the few areas in
the city where Blacks could own property. Consequently, during
the 1920's and 30's, The Ville became synonymous with Black
prosperity. Berry grew up attending Simmons Grade School and
Sumner High School, the first Black high school west of the
Mississippi; other Sumner alumni include Tina Turner, Arthur
Ashe, Robert Guillaume, Robert McFerrin, and Dick
Gregory.
Before he
could graduate from high school,
Berry
encountered his first problem with the authorities. In 1944,
on a joy ride to Kansas City, Berry and two companions were
arrested and found guilty of armed robbery; each was sentenced
to 10 years in the Intermediate Reformatory for Young Men at
Algoa, near Jefferson, Missouri. At Algoa, drawing on his
Baptist roots,
Berry
joined a gospel group; he also engaged in a brief career as a
boxer before being released on his 21st birthday in
1947.
A year
later, Berry married Themetta Suggs and began a series of
jobs: between 1948 and 1955, Berry worked at the Fisher Body
auto assembly plant, trained to be a hairdresser at the Poro
School, freelanced as a photographer, assisted his father, and
began his career as a musician. Eventually, on New Years' Eve,
1952, he was asked to join the Sir John's Trio, a small combo
consisting of pianist and leader Johnnie Johnson and drummer
Ebby Hardy. Adding showmanship and hillbilly music to the
combo's savvy selection of blues and r & b, Chuck soon
took over the band, vying with Ike Turner and Albert King for
popularity in the St.
Louis
area.
Eventually,
Chuck visited
Chicago
where, on the advice of Muddy Waters, he sought out Leonard
Chess, owner of Chess Records. Chess, along with house
producer Willie Dixon, was immediately impressed by an upbeat
country tune Berry had written called "Ida Red"; they asked
Berry, Hardy and Johnson to return. On May 21, 1955, the
song, now renamed "Maybellene," was recorded with Willie Dixon
on bass; immediately, Chess gave a copy of the record to the
influential disc jockey Alan Freed, who aired the single for
two hours straight one night on his show on WINS in
New
York. The song went on to sell
over a million copies, reaching #1 on Billboard's R & B
chart and #5 on the Hot
100.
Berry's
initial success was tempered by the hard reality of
showbusiness. The copyright for "Maybellene" contained the
names of Alan Freed and Russ Fratto as well as
Berry's;
while Freed's name on the song ensured airplay, it also
reduced
Berry's
royalty payments. Additionally,
Berry
discovered that his first road manager, Teddy Reig, was
pocketing money from his live appearances. Learning from these
initial pitfalls, Berry realized that self-sufficiency and
independence were keys to long term survival in the business,
and from this point on, he became determined to take charge of
his own affairs, sowing the seeds for the later allegations of
his being difficult to work
with.
Aside from
"Roll Over Beethoven," which reached #29 on Billboard's Hot
100 in May 1956, Berry found the initial success of
"Maybellene" hard to follow; subsequent singles, such as
"Thirty Days," "No Money Down," "Too Much Monkey Business,"
and "You Can't Catch Me" sold respectably but failed to cross
over.
Berry's
first release in March 1957, "School Days," was to change all
that. Like "Roll Over Beethoven," it drew on a universal
adolescent theme and made #5 on the Hot 100, leading to
bookings for 240 one-nighters in that year alone. With only
one exception (1958's "Beautiful Delilah"), Berry was to enjoy
an unbroken string of chart hits for the next two and-a-half
years: "Oh Baby Doll" (#57) and "Rock and Roll Music" (#8) in
1957; "Sweet Little Sixteen" (#2), "Johnny B. Goode" (#8),
"Carol" (#10), "Sweet Little Rock and Roller" (#47), and
"Merry Christmas Baby" (#71) in 1958; and "Anthony Boy" (#60),
"Almost Grown"(#32), and "Back in the USA" (#37) in 1959.
These songs are, without doubt, some of the greatest and most
enduring songs in the history of rock and
roll.
With the
money from all this success, he purchased some 30 acres of
land in
Wentzville
MO (about 30
miles west of St.
Louis) in April 1957, and 11
months later, he opened Club Bandstand. The Club was located
at 814 North Grand Avenue between Delmar and Enright; in the
1910's and 1920's, this was St. Louis' Theater District, home
to the Princess Theater, the St. Louis Theater and the Fox,
all of which were segregated until the late 1950's. The area
was also a bastion of white professional culture. Not only did
fraternal organizations such as the Masons and the Scottish
Rite build their temples there, but the area was home to a
number of doctor and dentist offices and the gradually
expanding St.
Louis
University.
The appearance of a racially integrated nightclub owned by a
successful black entertainer in such an area must have been a
red flag to the local authorities, and it wasn't long before
the St. Louis police had their chance to close it down in the
scandal that very nearly put an end to Berry's
career.
On
December 1,
1959, while playing a show in
El Paso,
TX,
Berry
met Janice Escalanti, a young Native American woman from
Yuma,
AZ. They
discussed the possibility of her working as a hat check girl
at Club Bandstand, which she agreed to do. She was terminated
after two weeks, and after soliciting for several nights at a
local hotel, she called the
Yuma
police to find a way to get home. The call led to charges of
violating the Mann Act -- transporting a woman across state
lines for immoral purposes. A first trial, in which Berry was
found guilty, was overturned after the judge was found to have
uttered racist remarks; a second trial in October 1961 arrived
at the same verdict, however, and Berry was sentenced to 3
years in jail and a $10, 000
fine.
On
February 19,
1962
Berry
began serving his sentence; his music, however, was not so
easily restrained. In March of 1963, The Beach Boys released a
note-for-note cover of "Sweet Little Sixteen" which they
called "Surfin'
USA."
Meanwhile in
England,
newcomers The Rolling Stones released their first single, a
version of "Come On"; in quick succession, they went on to
cover "Carol," "You Can't Catch Me," and "I'm Talkin' About
You." And just 5 days before his release on October 18, 1963,
Beatlemania began to take hold on the world as 15 million
viewers watched The Beatles, who had begun their rise to the
top with covers of "Rock and Roll Music" and "Roll Over
Beethoven," perform on Sunday Night at the London
Palladium.
The time
was ripe for a comeback, and
Berry
did not disappoint. From February, 1964 to March 1965, Chess
released six singles, all of which made the top 100. "Nadine"
(#23), "No Particular Place To Go" (#10), "You Never Can Tell'
(#14), and "Promised Land" (#41), were all written in the
Federal Medical Center in Springfield, MO, and rank among the
very best songs in the Berry catalog. Sadly, the last of these
singles, "Dear Dad" (#95), was to be
Berry's
last chart success for seven years, heralding another decline
in his
career.
Berry's
signing with Mercury Records in 1966 contributed much to that
decline. Whereas the small, family owned Chess Records could
accommodate his idiosyncratic ways of doing business, the
corporate make-up of Mercury could only antagonize a feisty,
independent artist like
Berry.
Constant battles with producers, and a reluctance to keep up
with the changes in musical taste produced a series of
lackluster albums and watered-down remakes of his old hits.
Only the album Live at the Fillmore with the Steve
Miller Band remains as a worthwhile addition to
Berry's
body of work from that
time.
Unfortunately, when
Berry
resigned to Chess in 1970, his old record company was showing
the same signs of corporate identity. In January 1969, Chess
was sold to GRT, the tape manufacturing giant; later that
year, on October 16, Leonard Chess died, leaving the company
to his son Marshall and brother and partner Phil. In less than
two years, they too, had gone, but not before they managed to
bring back a little of the
Berry
magic. The appropriately titled Back Home featured
"Tulane" and "Have Mercy Judge," some of
Berry's
best work since
1964.
But
Berry's
greatest success was yet to come. In a supreme twist of irony,
one of the greatest songwriters of the rock and roll era
achieved his only number 1 hit with a sophomoric schoolyard
ditty entitled "My Ding-A-Ling." Originally recorded under the
title "My Tamborine" on the 1968 Mercury album From St.
Louis to Frisco, it became Berry's best-selling single
ever in July of 1972. But a second irony emerged from the
song's success. His greatest competitor from the early days of
rock and roll, Elvis Presley, was enjoying his greatest year
since coming out of the army, but his single "Burning Love"
was held to the #2 spot by a song euphemistically describing
the joys of masturbation. Regardless, the fact remains that
the song was wholly owned by
Berry's
publishing company, Isalee, providing him the kind of
financial reward that far better works never
did.
The year
ended with
Berry's
last chart success, a live version of "Reelin' and Rockin'"
from The London Chuck Berry Sessions which made #27.
The recordings that followed, the half-hearted Bio and
the underrated, back-to-roots Chuck Berry for Chess,
the moderately successful Rock It for Atco and a
godzillian number of greatest hits packages, showed that his
days as a recording artist were all but over; again, Berry's
fierce independence placed him at odds against a system that
increasingly demanded artist conformity. Rock It, his
last album released in 1979, was a good example of that,
having been produced at
Berry
Park
and delivered to Atco sight
unseen.
Since the
release of Rock It,
Berry's
career has been marked by even more controversy. A brief jail
term in 1979 for tax evasion, and a lengthy round of
litigation in the early 1990's by a number of women who
accused Berry of videotaping them as they went to the bathroom
at Berry Park and Berry's Wentzville restaurant, The Southern
Air, coupled with numerous erratic live performances, have
added fuel to Berry's reputation of being difficult and
unpredictable. Yet his contribution to rock and roll is
enormous and still being felt, as his 1986 induction to the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the 1987 release of his
autobiography and accompanying movie Hail, Hail, Rock and
Roll have proved. Perhaps John Lennon said it best -- "If
you tried to give rock and roll another name, you might call
it 'Chuck
Berry'."