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{{About|the American blues pianist|the American Chicago blues pianist and singer|Piano "C" Red}} {{Short description|American blues musician}} {{Use mdy dates|date=December 2014}} {{Infobox musical artist <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Musicians --> | name = Piano Red | image = Piano Red.jpg | caption = | image_size = | background = solo_singer | birth_name = Willie Lee Perryman | alias = Dr. Feelgood | birth_date = {{birth date|1911|10|19|mf=y}} | birth_place = Near [[Hampton, Georgia]], U.S. | death_date = {{death date and age|mf=y|1985|07|25|1911|10|19}} | death_place = [[Decatur, Georgia]], U.S. | instrument = Piano, vocals | genre = [[Blues]], [[Rhythm and blues|R&B]] | occupation = | years_active = 1930sβ1980s | label = | associated_acts = | website = }} '''Willie Lee Perryman''' (October 19, 1911 β July 25, 1985),<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1985/07/27/arts/willie-perryman.html|title=Willie Perryman|date=July 27, 1985|work=[[New York Times]]|agency=[[UPI]]}}</ref> usually known professionally as '''Piano Red''' and later in life as '''Dr. Feelgood''', was an American [[blues]] musician, the first to hit the pop music charts. He was a self-taught pianist who played in the [[Boogie-woogie|barrelhouse]] blues style (a loud percussive type of blues piano suitable for noisy bars or taverns). His performing and recording careers emerged during the period of transition from completely [[Racial segregation in the United States|segregated]] "race music" to [[rhythm and blues]], which was marketed to both white and black audiences. Some music historians credit Perryman's 1950 recording "Rocking With Red" for the popularization of the term rock and roll in [[Atlanta]].<ref name="NGE">{{NGE|Laura McCarty|the Georgia Humanities Council|12 October 2005|1660}}</ref> His simple, hard-pounding left hand and his percussive right hand, coupled with his cheerful shout, brought him considerable success over three decades. ==Early life== Perryman was born on a farm near [[Hampton, Georgia|Hampton]], Georgia, United States,<ref name="LarkinBlues">{{cite book|title=[[Encyclopedia of Popular Music|The Guinness Who's Who of Blues]]|editor=[[Colin Larkin (writer)|Colin Larkin]]|publisher=[[Guinness Publishing]]|date=1995|edition=Second|isbn=0-85112-673-1|page=292}}</ref> where his parents, Ada and Henry Perryman, were [[Sharecropping|sharecroppers]]. He was part of a large family, though sources differ on exactly how many brothers and sisters he had. Perryman was an [[Albinism in humans|albino]] African American, as was his older brother Rufus, who also had a blues piano career as "[[Speckled Red]]".<ref name=NGE/> When Perryman was six years old, his father gave up farming and moved the family to [[Atlanta]], where he worked in a factory. Not much is known about Perryman's education or early life, but he recalled that his mother bought a piano for her two albino sons. Both brothers had very poor vision, an effect of their albinism, so neither took formal music lessons, but they developed their barrelhouse style through playing by ear. Perryman sometimes recalled imitating Rufus's style after watching him play, but it is doubtful that his brother was a major influence. Rufus, nineteen years older than Perryman, left Georgia in 1925 and did not return until a 1960 visit. Another influence that Perryman cited in interviews was [[Fats Waller]], whose records his mother brought home. Other influences were likely the local blues pianists playing at "house" or "rent" parties, which were common community fund-raisers of that era.<ref name=NGE/> ==Career== ===1930sβ1940s=== By the early 1930s, Perryman was playing at house parties, [[juke joints]], and barrelhouses in Georgia, [[Alabama]], and [[Tennessee]]. He developed his percussive playing style and harsh singing style to compensate for the lack of sound systems and to overcome the noise of people talking in venues. He worked these circuits with other Georgia bluesmen, including [[Barbecue Bob]], [[Charlie Hicks]], [[Curley Weaver]], and [[Blind Willie McTell]].<ref name=NGE/> He obtained seasonal employment performing in [[Brevard, North Carolina|Brevard]], North Carolina, a mountain resort town, and commuted back and forth between there and Atlanta. The Brevard job brought him before white audiences; by 1934 he had also begun to play at white clubs in Atlanta. In Atlanta he would play at a white club until midnight and then head over to an African-American club, where he would play until 4 a.m. Perryman developed a repertoire of pop standards, which were more popular among the white audiences, while continuing his blues sets in African-American clubs.<ref name="NGE"/> Around 1936 he began to be billed as "Piano Red". He made his first recordings with McTell in Augusta for [[Vocalion Records]], but they were never released. He also began working as an upholsterer, a trade which he occasionally maintained through later years.<ref name="NGE"/> ===1950sβ1960s=== In 1950, after spending the previous 14 years upholstering and playing music on weekends, Perryman recorded "Rockin' with Red" and "Red's Boogie" at the [[WGKA|WGST]] radio studios in Atlanta for [[RCA Records|RCA Victor]].<ref name="LarkinBlues"/> Both songs became national hits, reaching numbers five and three, respectively, on the ''[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]'' [[Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs|R&B]] chart, and "Rockin' with Red" has since been [[cover version|covered]] many times under many titles. This success, along with the further hits "The Wrong Yo Yo" (allegedly written by Speckled Red), "Laying the Boogie" and "Just Right Bounce", allowed him to resume an active performing schedule. He also recorded sessions in New York City and [[Nashville, Tennessee|Nashville]] during the early 1950s. Red played for white teenagers' high school parties in people's homes in Atlanta. Patrons would arrange for him to be picked up at his home and returned and would provide a "bottle" of booze for him and a modest fee. During the mid-1950s, Perryman also worked as a disc jockey on radio stations WGST and [[WAOK]] in Atlanta, broadcasting ''The Piano Red Show'' (later ''The Dr. Feelgood Show'') directly from a shack in his back yard. A young [[James Brown]] made an appearance on his show in the late 1950s. Perryman's involvement had him appearing on a flatbed truck in many parades, which led to his song "Peachtree Parade". From the mid-1950s until the late 1960s, he recorded for several record labels, including [[Columbia Records|Columbia]], for which he made several records; [[Checker Records|Checker]], for which he recorded eight sides with [[Willie Dixon]] on [[double bass|bass]]; and [[Groove Records]], a subsidiary of RCA Victor, producing the first hit for that label.<ref name="shaw">{{cite book | first= Arnold | last= Shaw | year= 1978 | title= Honkers and Shouters | url= https://archive.org/details/honkersshouterst00shaw | url-access= registration | edition= | publisher=Macmillan | location= New York | pages= [https://archive.org/details/honkersshouterst00shaw/page/460 460β462] | isbn= 0-02-061740-2}}</ref> Signed to [[Okeh Records]] in 1961, Perryman began using the name Dr. Feelgood and the Interns, releasing several hits, including the much-covered "Doctor Feelgood".<ref name="LarkinBlues"/> The persona was one he had initially adopted on his radio shows. The new career was short-lived, though, and he was never able to regain his former stature. In 1963, [[The Merseybeats]] recorded a cover of the [[A-side and B-side|B-side]] of "Doctor Feelgood," entitled "[[Mr. Moonlight (song)|Mr. Moonlight]]" (written by [[Roy Lee Johnson]]) as the B-side of their UK top 5 hit "[[I Think of You (1963 song)|I Think of You]]". It was also recorded by [[The Beatles]], appearing on the album ''[[Beatles for Sale]]'' in the United Kingdom and the album ''[[Beatles '65]]'' in the United States. In 1966, the [[The Lovin' Spoonful|Lovin' Spoonful]] recorded Perryman's song "Bald Headed Lena" on their second album, ''[[Daydream (The Lovin' Spoonful album)|Daydream]]''.<ref name="LarkinBlues"/> ===Late career=== Perryman continued to be a popular performer in [[Underground Atlanta]]. He made several European tours late in his career, including appearances at the [[Montreux Jazz Festival]], the [[Berlin Jazz Festival]], and the inauguration of Chancellor [[Helmut Schmidt]], and he also performed on [[BBC Radio]]. During this time, he was befriended by Bill Wyman, Keith Richards, Mick Jagger, Eric Clapton, and Paul McCartney, and Pete Ham of Badfinger wrote a song in his honor. Muhlenbrink's Saloon closed in 1979, and Perryman found himself without a regular job. That lasted until 1981, when he was hired to perform five nights a week at the [[DuPre Excelsior Mill|Excelsior Mill]] in Atlanta. In 1984, he asked co-owner Michael Reeves to arrange a live recording, and Reeves arranged for a mobile recording in October of that year. In 1985, Perryman recorded the song "Yo Yo", a duet with [[Danny Shirley]], who was later the lead singer of the band [[Confederate Railroad]]. The record reached the national chart in that year. The tapes from the Excelsior Mill remained in Reeves's possession for twenty-five years. In April 2010, he formed a partnership with the writer and producer David Fulmer to release a CD of the recording under the title ''The Lost Atlanta Tapes''. The CD was released by Landslide Records on August 17, 2010. ==Personal life== Perryman married in the early 1930s, and he and his wife, Flora, had two daughters. ===Death and funeral=== Perryman was diagnosed with cancer in 1985. He died in July that same year, at Dekalb General Hospital in Decatur, Georgia. Among those who attended his funeral were the governor of Georgia and the mayor of Atlanta.<ref>Hess, Norbert (1993). Liner notes for ''The Doctor's In''. Bear Family.</ref> ==Legacy== Piano Red's song "Mr. Moonlight" was [[cover version|covered]] by several UK beat groups, including [[The Beatles]] and [[Johnny Kidd & the Pirates]], who recorded it as the B-side of their 1964 single "Always and Ever".<ref name="AMG">{{cite web |url={{AllMusic|class=artist|id=p4127|pure_url=yes}} |title=Dr. Feelgood: Biography |author=Erlewine, Stephen Thomas |website=[[AllMusic]] |access-date=2008-10-26}}</ref> ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Authority control}} ==External links== * {{IMDb name|0714604}} * {{Discogs artist|Piano Red}} as Piano Red (+ other variations) * {{Discogs artist|Dr. Feelgood & The Interns}} as Dr. Feelgood & The Interns [[Category:1911 births]] [[Category:1985 deaths]] [[Category:People with albinism]] [[Category:20th-century African-American male singers]] [[Category:American blues pianists]] [[Category:American male pianists]] [[Category:American blues singers]] [[Category:Groove Records artists]] [[Category:RCA Victor artists]] [[Category:People from Hampton, Georgia]] [[Category:Deaths from cancer in Georgia (U.S. state)]] [[Category:20th-century American singers]] [[Category:African-American pianists]] [[Category:20th-century American pianists]] [[Category:20th-century American male singers]] [[Category:Black Lion Records artists]] [[Category:Southland Records artists]]
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