Frogtoon Music

Rumble by Link Wray

Artist Biography For Link Wray

Fred Lincoln "Link" Wray Jr. May 2 1929 – November 5 2005 Was A Native American Rock And Roll Guitarist Songwriter And Vocalist Who Became Popular In The Late 1950s. Building On The Distorted Electric Guitar Sound Of Early Records His 1958 Instrumental Hit "Rumble" By Link Wray And His Ray Men Popularized "the Power Chord The Major Modus Operandi Of Modern Rock Guitarists" Facilitating The Emergence Of "punk And Heavy Rock". Rolling Stone Placed Wray At No. 45 Of The 100 Greatest Guitarists Of All Time. In 2013 He Was A Nominee For The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. Though He Began In Country Music His Musical Style Went On To Consist Primarily Of Rock And Roll Rockabilly And Instrumental Rock. Wray Was Born On May 2 1929 In Dunn North Carolina To Fred Lincoln Wray Sr. And His Wife Lillian M. Wray Née Coats . They Were Shawnee Native Americans. Three Songs He Performed Were Named For American Indian Tribes "Shawnee" "Apache" And "Comanche". "Apache" Was An Instrumental Composed By Jerry Lordan It Was Originally A Hit In The United Kingdom For The Shadows In 1960. Wray Recorded A Cover Version 30 Years Later When It Was Also Associated With The Ventures And The Incredible Bongo Band. Wray Served In The US Army During The Korean War And Contracted Tuberculosis Which Laid Him Up In A Hospital For A Year. His Stay Concluded With The Removal Of A Lung Which Doctors Predicted Would Mean He Would Never Be Able To Sing Again. In 1958 Wray's First Hit "Rumble" Was Banned In New York And Boston For Fear It Would Incite Teenage Gang Violence. The Record Was First Released On Cadence Records As Cat # 1347 As Link Wray And The Ray-Men . Before During And After His Stints With Major Labels Epic And Swan Wray Released 45's Under Many Names. Tiring Of The Corporate Music Machine He Began Recording Albums Using A Three-Track Studio He Converted From An Outbuilding On His Brother's Property That His Father Used To Raise Chickens. While Living In The San Francisco Bay Area In The Early 1970s Wray Was Introduced To Quicksilver Messenger Service Guitarist John Cipollina By Bassist James "Hutch" Hutchinson. He Subsequently Formed A Band Initially Featuring Special Guest Cipollina Along With The Rhythm Section From Cipollina's Band Copperhead Bassist James "Hutch" Hutchinson And Drummer David Weber. They Opened For The Band Lighthouse At The Whisky A Go Go In Los Angeles From May 15–19 1974. He Later Did Numerous Concerts And Radio Broadcasts In The Bay Area Including KSAN FM And The Bill Graham Venue Winterland Ballroom With Les Lizama Later Replacing Hutchinson On Bass. He Toured And Recorded Two Albums With Retro-Rockabilly Artist Robert Gordon In The Late 1970s. The 1980s To The Present Day Saw A Large Number Of Reissues As Well As New Material. One Member Of His Band In The 1980s Drummer Anton Fig Later Became Drummer In The CBS Orchestra On The Late Show With David Letterman. In 1994 He Played On Four Songs Of The Album Chatterton By French Rocker Alain Bashung. Wray's First Three Marriages—to Elizabeth Canady Wray Katherine Tidwell Wray And Sharon Wray—each Ended In Divorce. Although Wray Had Eight Children With His First Three Wives He Had Little Contact With Any Of Them After Relocating To Denmark In The Early 1980s. Wray Died Of Heart Failure At His Home In Copenhagen At The Age Of 76. Survivors Included His Fourth Wife Olive Julie Povlsen Wray And Their Son. He Was Buried In The Crypt Of The Christian's Church Copenhagen. Jack Rose Cited Wray As An Influence As Did Iggy Pop And Neil Young. Jimmy Page Says That Link Wray Had A "real Rebel Attitude" And Credits Him In It Might Get Loud As A Major Influence In His Early Career. According To Rolling Stone Pete Townshend Of The Who Once Said "If It Hadn't Been For Link Wray And 'Rumble ' I Never Would Have Picked Up A Guitar." "The Only People I Ever Really Looked Up To Were Link Wray And Iggy Pop " Said Mark E. Smith Of The Fall. "Guys Like…Link Wray… Are Very Special To Me.

Frogtoon Music - Song Info: Rumble

"Rumble" Is An Influential Rock Instrumental By Link Wray & His Ray Men. Originally Released In 1958 "Rumble" Utilized Then-Unexplored Techniques Like Distortion And Feedback. It Is Also Described As The First Song To Use The Power Chord The Major Modus Operandi Of The Modern Rock Guitarist. The Song Is A 12-Bar Blues Instrumental Played By A Combination Of Two Electric Guitars An Electric Bass Guitar And Drum Set. "Rumble" Is Melodically Characterized By A Descending E-Minor Pentatonic Scale Played In Triplets Against The Straight Eights Chords. The Scale Is Played In First Position On The Guitar And While Not Original To "Rumble" Is A Staple Of Blues And Rock Guitar Playing. At A Live Gig In Fredericksburg Virginia Attempting To Work Up A Backing For The Diamonds' "The Stroll " Link Wray And His Ray Men Came Up With The Stately Powerful Blues Instrumental "Rumble " Which They Originally Called "Oddball." The Song Was An Instant Hit With The Live Audience Which Demanded Four Repeats That Night. Eventually The Song Came To The Attention Of Record Producer Archie Bleyer Of Cadence Records Who Hated It Particularly After Wray Poked Holes In His Amplifier's Speakers To Make The Recording Sound More Like The Live Version However Bleyer's Stepdaughter Loved It And It Was Released Despite His Protest. Phil Everly Heard It And Suggested The Title Rumble As It Had A Rough Sound And Said It Sounded Like A Street Fight. It Was Banned In Several Radio Markets Because The Term Rumble Was A Slang Term For A Gang Fight And It Was Feared That The Song's Harsh Sound Glorified "juvenile Delinquency." Nevertheless It Became A Huge Hit Not Only In The United States Where It Climbed To Number Sixteen On The Charts In The Summer Of 1958 But Also In Great Britain Where It Has Been Cited As An Influence On The Kinks And The Who Among Others. Bob Dylan Once Even Referred To It As "the Best Instrumental Ever." Instrumentals Were Far More Common On The Top 40 In The 1950s Than In Later Years. The 1980 Adam And The Ants Song "Killer In The Home" From Their Kings Of The Wild Frontier Album Is Based On The Same Ominous Descending Three-Chord Glissando Riff That Is Featured In "Rumble" Ants' Guitarist Marco Pirroni Has Cited Link Wray As A Major Influence . The Song Is Heard In The Films The Warriors In The Deleted Opening Scene Pulp Fiction Independence Day Blow And It Might Get Loud.

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