Sid King & The Five Strings

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Sag, Drag And Fall 00:00 Tools
Purr, Kitty Purr 00:00 Tools
Let 'Er Roll 00:00 Tools
Good Rockin' Baby 00:00 Tools
When My Baby Left Me 00:00 Tools
Sag Drag & Fall 00:00 Tools
Gonna Shake This Shack Tonight 00:00 Tools
Purr, Kitty, Purr 00:00 Tools
Ooby Dooby 00:00 Tools
Sag, Drag, and Fall 00:00 Tools
Purr Kitty Purr 00:00 Tools
I Like It 00:00 Tools
Booger Red 00:00 Tools
Blue Suede Shoes 00:00 Tools
Let 'Er Rip 00:00 Tools
It's True, I'm Blue 00:00 Tools
Sag,Drag And Fall 00:00 Tools
Put Something in the Pot Boy 00:00 Tools
Maybelline 00:00 Tools
I've Got the Blues 00:00 Tools
Let' er roll 00:00 Tools
But I Don't Care 00:00 Tools
Mama, I Want You 00:00 Tools
Crazy Little Heart 00:00 Tools
Drinkin' Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee 00:00 Tools
Twenty One 00:00 Tools
Warmed over Kisses, Left over Love 00:00 Tools
If Tears Could Cry 00:00 Tools
Booger Red (Philips Pb 589) 00:00 Tools
Who Put the Turtle in Myrtle's Girdle 00:00 Tools
Drinkin' Wine Spoli Oli 00:00 Tools
What Have Ya Got to Lose 00:00 Tools
Hello There Rockin' Chair 00:00 Tools
I Cried 00:00 Tools
Once upon a Time 00:00 Tools
Shake The Shack 00:00 Tools
Oh What You Do to Me 00:00 Tools
How Easy Was It Dear 00:00 Tools
It's True, I'Blue 00:00 Tools
oobie doobie 00:00 Tools
Gonna Shake the Shake The Shack Tonight 00:00 Tools
Let Her Roll 00:00 Tools
Sag, Drag And Fall (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
It's True I'm Blue 00:00 Tools
Drinkin' Wine Spoli-Oli 00:00 Tools
Oh What Do You Do To Me 00:00 Tools
Let ‘er roll 00:00 Tools
Good Rockin’ Baby 00:00 Tools
Purr, Kitty Purr (Album Version) 00:00 Tools
Oobie-Doobie 00:00 Tools
Shake This Shack 00:00 Tools
Gonna Shake This Shake Tonight 00:00 Tools
Let Er Roll 00:00 Tools
Essential Rockabilly: The Columbia Story 00:00 Tools
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One of the first white rock & rollers to record for a major label (Columbia Records), Sid King (born Sid Erwin) was also one of the first young Southern musicians to go from Western swing to rockabilly in the mid-'50s. Erwin grew up in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. He sang and played guitar at school, and while still in his mid-teens he began appearing on local radio with a friend, Melvin Robinson. The duo eventually took over the program, and Erwin and Robinson (who also played steel guitar and sax) formed a band, bringing in Erwin's brother Billy Joe on lead guitar, Ken Massey on bass, and David White on drums. The group, by then known as the Western Melody Makers, stuck to playing country and Western swing in their gigs and radio appearances, but they were listening to lots of records by black artists. They were signed to Starday Records in 1954 and recorded a handful of songs, but these yielded no hits. They subsequently got a contract with Columbia Records and rechristened themselves the Five Strings. Erwin, in turn, changed his name to Sid King, all for the sake of a rhyming moniker, Sid King & the Five Strings. The Columbia sessions show just how far afield from country the group's listening had gotten. Their harmonies, the high-compression beat of their playing, and their choice of songs, coupled with Jim Beck's hard, up-front mixing of the rhythm section, made them, for a time, one of the hotter rockabilly acts outside of Memphis. They weren't as wild as the Sparkletones, but within Columbia Records' stable of artists, their music (along with that of the Collins Kids) constituted a tiny corner of rockabilly validity. Hearing their stuff today, they could have been fair rivals to Bill Haley & His Comets or Carl Perkins, with a sound midway between the two. Sid King & the Five Strings were featured on the Louisiana Hayride alongside Elvis Presley and Johnny Horton and inherited "Ooby Dooby" from Roy Orbison (competing head to head with the latter's Sun version), but they never had the success of those whose paths they crossed. Their success was still confined to Texas, and by 1957 their Columbia contract had ended. The group's sound had also softened by that time, and their music no longer had the same edge, so by 1958 the band had called it quits. King saw recording activity on his own in the early '60s on the Dot Records label through his acquaintance with Pat Boone, a fellow native of Denton whom he'd met years earlier, but by 1965 he was out of the music business. He resumed performing part-time in the 1980s, drawn back to the stage by a new generation of Europeans eager to hear authentic American rockabilly. He never quite jumped into rock head over heels, nor did he ever break through to a national audience. The only vintage King available on CD domestically is an interesting, but not wholly representative, set of radio broadcasts from the mid-'50s that are closer to hillbilly than rockabilly. His Columbia recordings have been reissued in Germany on Bear Family's Gonna Shake This Shack Tonight. ~ Richie Unterberger & Bruce Eder, All Music Guide[1] Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.