(By Dick Stewart – Editor and
Features Interviewer
For Lance Monthly
http://www.lancerecords.com)
Jack Ruby's Strippers tend
to DJ Bob Kelly's feet after
his 50 mile Kennedy
fitness walk in Dallas, Texas
Gene Vincent, Jack Ruby, and Eddie Cochran Were Major Players in the Life of this ‘50s Pioneering Rocker
[Interviewer’s note: Las Vegas, Nevada resident and Texas born Robert Kelly contacted me as a result of TLM’s featured interview with Lee Dresser of the Krazy Kats (May 2004 issue). Kelly said he enjoyed the interview and because Dresser’s accounts had many similarities to those of his own, he proceeded to give me a brief description of his musical past:
Like so many of the aspiring ‘50s rock
‘n’ roll artists of the time, Robert Kelly’s sole passion in life was to
become a star on the basis of his vocalizations and he feverishly wrote
songs that he believed would best compliment his efforts. Well it didn’t
happen, but his song-writing proficiencies did and they defined his long-time
successful musical career. “I was inducted into the Rockabilly Hall of
Fame for the songs that I wrote back in the 1950’s,” says Kelly. “I did
write a few hits, but never got to sing them myself.” Of course, as one
would expect in such a volatile occupation, it wasn’t an easy process in
obtaining that honor. Kelly certainly had his ups and downs and he experienced
the-getting-screwed ordeals that were all too common during rock ‘n’ rolls’
infancy, which he discusses in frank detail. But Kelly’s remarkable accomplishments,
as you will soon discover in this fascinating interview, should also earn
him membership into a soon-to-be established association, the TLM’s Pioneering
Rock ‘n’ roll Unsung Hero’s Hall of Fame
==============================================================================================
Lance
Monthly (LM): When and where were you born?
Robert Kelly (RK): I was born in Fort
Worth, Texas on Oct. 2, 1935. My Mother and Father were adagio dancers.
(that’s acrobatic dancing to music for the younger folks) After
about three or four months of [her] pregnancy with me, she finally had
to give up being thrown across the stage and being lifted into the air
doing a back bend on my Father’s out-stretched arm. So, actually, I was
on stage before I was born. Guess I came by this entertainment business,
naturally.
LM: Did you
grow up in a town or city neighborhood or in the country?
RK: My folks lived in an apartment
in Fort Worth, Texas when I was born, but soon after, we moved outside
of the main town to the country—a suburb called Riverside. They bought
a very small house [for] $4,000 (back then it was an enormous amount of
money) [which had] one eight-by-ten-foot bedroom, ten-by-twelve-foot living
room, [a] very small Kitchen, and [a] small bath. There was a screened-in
back porch with canvass that you could roll up
LM: How many
brothers and sisters do you have?
RK: I was an only child for the first
fifteen years of my life, but then I had a sister, Karen. It was a blessing
in disguise because I then had my best “fan” and supporter and it was right
there in my own family. By the time she was two or three, she was crying
to go on dates with me, and I would take her with me. When I would go to
a drive-in movie or something, I would just let her go to sleep in the
back seat and there was no problem. My Mom and Dad got a night of rest,
I had my regular date, and Karen was just as happy as a lark.
LM: What kinds
of things did you like to do for entertainment while you were a youth?
RK: All of my extended family were
musical. In other words, my mother’s sisters all sang ala the Andrews Sisters,
my uncles all played guitar and would sing blues and old standards, and
one of their friends played all the wind instruments. So, my first instrument
was the saxophone. Almost every weekend they would all get together and
have what they called a “jam session”—usually at our house, even though
it was way too small. But they didn't seem to care.
LM: Did your
folks saddle you with a lot of chores while you were growing up?
RK: I did a lot of things but don't
remember them being called “chores,” as such. I mowed the lawn, took out
the trash, and had to keep my room clean and tidy. What I do remember most
[is that] I was expected to make good grades in school. My Mother never
finished high school and my Father only went to the eighth grade before
he had to start to work to help his family make a living. So education
was a definite priority for me.
My Father went to night school even
after I was born to get his education, so I was pretty much brain washed
into going to college. Hell, I didn't even realize that you could quit
school after high school because I had been programmed into graduating
from college. Needless to say, I did graduate from North Texas State with
a bachelor’s degree in business, and the knowledge gave me an advantage
to actually make a living in the crazy thing we call the "entertainment
business" for all these many years—even without singing a hit record! I
did write a few hits, but never got to sing them myself.
It was always amazing to me that there
were so many great singers, musicians, and entertainers that were not working.
Thanks to my Father’s business knowledge and my classes in salesmanship
and marketing, I always had publicity photos, a demo tape or acetate, and
anything else that I could conjure up to get me work. Sure, sometimes it
was only at the Yellow Belly Drag Strip playing on the back of a flat bed
truck or performing between the strippers at Jack Ruby's nightclub, but
I was getting paid and honing my skills as an entertainer. This kept me
working and gradually moving up, and I didn't have to get a “real job.”
LM: Robert,
at what age did you switch to the guitar, who taught you, and do you remember
your first guitar?
RK: I started playing sax at about
six years old and a friend of the family taught me to play and read "treble
clef" music for the sax. To this day, I still have trouble reading "bass
clef," so I guess the early training is all I can rely on. I then started
to play guitar at about age thirteen and two of my uncles played and sang,
so they taught me all the basics.
My first guitar had only the three
lower strings because my Uncle gave me one of his old guitars. I guess
he wanted to see if I would really learn to play it. I was great on "Guitar
Boogie" because I could play that on the only strings that I had. Needless
to say, my parents then bought me an older Martin acoustic guitar from
a pawn shop. There weren't many electric guitars around at the time and
they couldn't have afforded one, anyway.
I played that guitar all the way through
high school and it was really a pretty good guitar and sounded great for
the type of music that I was doing—just accompanying myself while I sang
mostly songs that I was writing. So most of my songs were written with
guitar and not piano.
LM: When did
you decide to become a professional musician and how did your parents feel
about your decision to do so?
RK: As long as I passed my parents’
criteria, they were always happy with any decision that I made about my
career. By that, I mean my Father had a pretty rough time because he never
did graduate from high school and had to get his education in night school
after he was an adult. So, I was DEFINITELY going to graduate from college,
and I did with pretty good grades, I might add.
After graduation, my parents gave me
a hundred dollars and I went to Los Angeles, California to be a superstar.
Ha! After about a year and a half, I figured out that I would have to try
another route to stardom, so I went back to Dallas and tried to do a regular
job, but that wasn't in the cards for me. I was playing music on weekends
and then decided that I should get a job connected to music, so I got a
disk jockey job at radio station WRR in Dallas.
This was the perfect spot for this
time in my life. I could work nightclubs and weekends playing guitar
and have a regular income from my DJ work—started out from midnight to
6 A.M., then a couple of years later, I moved up to the drive time: 3 P.M.
to 6 P.M. I also did all the promos and commercial recordings for
the station because I had experience with recording that no one else at
the station [had].
LM: What was
Fort Worth like in the early days of rock ‘n’ roll; that is, was it a city
of opportunity for the aspiring artist with notable record labels, recording
studios, promoters, venues, etc.?
RK: Not really, I was in grade school
in Fort Worth [and attended] high school at Abilene, Texas (freshman and
sophomore). Then I moved to Olney, Texas (for Junior and Senior Year).
I did work in Fort Worth for the summers of the above years with my grandfather
as a carpenter’s helper (flunky in other words).
I went to North Texas State in Denton,
Texas for my college, [which] was 30 miles from Fort Worth and Dallas.
This was when my music career really started [circa 1953]. I had
been writing songs for a couple of years, but when I got to college, I
put together a singing group [with] Neil Wood, Johnny Biggerstaff, [and]
Bill Byrd as background singers. We started performing my songs at college
functions and then I decided we should try to record.
My first experience in music in Fort
Worth was to record my songs that I had written at Clifford Herring's Recording
Studio. (He later became famous for recording Bruce Channel's version of
"Hey, Baby.") [A fellow by the name of] Bill Smith, who referred to himself
as "Major Bill Smith," was about the only person of any consequence there
at that time and he was really a double-talkin', double-dealin', low life
kind of a guy. The best example of [this originated during a time when]
he wanted some of my songs for his artists. So I gave him a demo acetate
with the idea that he could have the publishing rights if anyone of his
artists ever recorded them—but only the publishing.
I never heard from him again; but,
just a couple of years ago, I ran into my long time friend Mac Curtis (we
were from the same small town in Texas, Olney, but he was younger than
me) at the Rockabilly Weekender here in Las Vegas. I gave Mac a copy
of my CD (1954/1959 Rockabilly). About a week later, I got
an e-mail from Mac and he told me that he had recorded a song called "NO"
that was supposedly written by Bill Smith, but he said that it was my song
"Boo" with just the title changed. All of the words and music were exactly
the same. So, Bill Smith just stole my song and put his name on it
so he wouldn't have to pay royalties to anyone.
I would have sued him, but by that
time he was dead, so for me it was a fitting end. (Mac did send me
a copy of his version called "NO" and he did a good job on it. I just wish
I had known about it in 1955 instead of 2002.) My original version
"Boo" is on my CD [Editor’s note: Go to the home page of http://www.lancerecords.com
for more details.]
So the actual answer was "nothing much
of any importance" going on in Fort Worth [from] 1953 to 57—at least for
me, there wasn't any thing of any consequence.
Afterthought: Mac Curtis did record
my song "What You Want" (1956), [which] was released on King Records.
Bob Kelly and the Pikes (my ‘50s group) sang background on it and we recorded
it at the above mentioned Clifford Herring Recording Studio. So,
that was my first recorded song that I wrote and also the first time I
was actually on a record even if it was as a background singer.
Bill Smith had the publishing and I
never got a penny from him. As a matter of fact, I never got anything from
him—nothing: no statement of royalties, no phone messages—zilch!
LM: Give our
readers a little more insight into your performances at Jack Ruby’s club.
What kind of club was it, and assuming that you met Ruby, how would you
describe his demeanor at that time? Do you think he was a fair man? In
addition, what was your pay for your performances?
RK: Jack Ruby and I were not personal
friends; as a matter of fact, I didn't like him at all, but I did come
in contact with him on many business propositions. He was a "news hound"
as people in the entertainment business call someone that is constantly
trying to get free publicity in any way possible.
Probably 1955 [was] the first time
I had any contact with Jack Ruby [and it was an] introduction that I will
never forget. He owned a club called The Vegas Club, even though it was
in Dallas and it was basically a late night club where all the "rounders,"
as they were called then, would hang out. The strippers, hoods, prostitutes,
etc., were the usual crowd. Anyway, I was only 19 at the time, well under
the 21-age limit, but a friend of mine that went to the club quite often
talked me into going [there] one Saturday night at about 1:00 A.M.
When we walked into the door and started
down an isle next to the bar, Jack Ruby met us coming from the opposite
direction and immediately pulled out a 38 revolver from under his coat
and pointed it directly at my friend and shouted very loudly, "I told you
to never come in here, again, and I meant it!" Needless to say, I immediately
turned my tail around and was out the door so fast that you could hear
my feet burning leather all the way. My friend came out a couple of minutes
later and [admitted] that he had gotten into a fight at the club the last
time that he was there and had beaten up one of Jack Ruby's bartenders
because the bartender had been going out with his girl friend. Jack Ruby
didn't care, and yes, he always carried a gun just as he did when he shot
Oswald.
- 1960 to 1962 -
The [next meeting I had with Ruby was]
when I was a D.J. and I had a show from midnight to 6:00 A.M. at the Cotton
Bowling Palace in Dallas. I had a talk-radio show in 1960 before it was
a popular thing to do as it is today. I had a booth in-between 48 lanes
of bowling, 24 on each side with a restaurant in the middle. I would play
music, but when I had someone interesting to talk to, then I had a roving
microphone and I would talk to people as they bowled or ate.
I would invite celebrities who were
in Dallas on promotion tours or whatever and tell them that they could
get free bowling if they would come by and let me interview them. I made
one call to Jack and that was all it took. He was there about every other
night. He was a bi-sexual, so he would bring the strippers from his nightclub
so all the guys would come around, and then he would hit on them. Also,
he knew that I would interview the strippers and he would get free publicity.
There were a couple that I remember very well: “Chris Colt and her 45's,”
WOW! And “Toi Rebel” [see headline photo] with my friend, Bobby Rambo.
(He was the guitar Player and I played bass for Scotty McKay at the time.)
Later, I recorded Bobby for his first record release.
- Late 1962 -
I next [ran into] Ruby when I worked
at one of his clubs (I don’t remember if it was the Carousel or the Theatre
Lounge) when my group was the featured act in between the strippers. (I
worked both of these clubs, but I don’t remember which one Jack Ruby owned.)
It would be a stripper, then a comic, then the featured act (me), a stripper,
the comic, and the featured act again. We usually did three shows like
this and usually got $100.00—not each [as] there were four of us, so it
was $25.00 apiece. Four guys doing rock songs for a bunch of guys that
only wanted to see the strippers was a very difficult audience to entertain;
but we were in “show business” . . . at least that was the way we looked
at it at the time.
- 1961 or 1962 -
President Kennedy had a fitness program
that he was promoting [in which] he asked everyone to walk fifty miles.
So as a D.J., I proclaimed that I would not only walk fifty miles around
Loop 12 in Dallas, but I would broadcast all the way. (Actually I did walk
all the way, but I was only on the radio between songs and news and commercials.)
When I finished the walk, there were lots of people there to greet me—and
who was the first with his strippers in see-through blouses? Jack Ruby,
of course.
I was not surprised when Jack Ruby
shot Oswald. He was mentally disturbed as far as I was concerned—almost
like a manic-depressive—high as a kite one minute and low as a mole the
next, trying to cover it up with a superiority complex. My own opinion
is that he thought that the majority of the people would truly love him
because he had killed the man that killed President Kennedy. I'm quite
sure that it was a spur of the moment thing that just snapped in him when
he got close to Oswald; after all he was always in the police stations
and everyone knew him. This was his way of getting lots of press.
LM: Robert,
describe your high school. How did the “cool cats” dress and style their
hair (it was ducktails for us with purple, pink, and black shirts), and
what was fashionable for the girls? Were customized cars with spinner hub
cabs, et al, popular and was it “in” to sport them by cruising the drive-in
restaurants?
RK: I went to grade school and junior
high in Fort Worth, Texas, and then moved to a smaller town (Abilene, Texas)
for my freshman and sophomore years of high school. [From there I moved]
to an even smaller town (Olney, Texas) for my junior and senior years,
so I was kind of like a big fish in a very small pond. I played football
and baseball and was much better than I would have been if I was in the
bigger towns, but the small town atmosphere was not to my liking. We had
a No-D-Lay drive-in [at which] everyone used to hang out and have burgers
and shakes, but we didn’t even have a square to drive around (we only had
one main street), so it was drive to the north side of town then turn around
and drive back on the same street to the south part of town. Each time,
you would pass the same people that you had passed going the other way,
so it wasn't what you would call exciting. Occasionally, there would be
a car full of kids from a nearby town, but after they made a couple of
trips, they were through and that was it.
I finally got a bunch of us together
who had dates, and because we lived in a Baptist community (they wouldn't
let us dance), we would all take our cars out to the small airport outside
of town and turn all of our radios on to WLAC out of Nashville, [which]
played all of the rhythm and blues songs from the late ‘40s and early ‘50s
and dance on the concrete at the airport. This was 1952 and 1953 [and R&B
songs] were considered “race records” back then because [the] artists were
black: The Clovers, The Drifters, The Flamingos, etc. They wouldn't even
play this kind of music on the radio stations that were in town.
I wore my hair in a ducktail [style],
T-shirts with the sleeves rolled up, low-slung jeans with no cuffs (cuffs
only started in the ‘70s with the Rockabilly Revival). The wearing of cuffs
on jeans like some of the rockabillies do now is from the rockabilly revival
of the 1970’s; they're trying to look like the ‘50s in the ‘70s, but didn't
talk to anybody from the actual ‘50s. Nobody rolled up the legs of [his]
pants in Texas, just like nobody wore bowling shirts (another ‘70s misnomer).
Maybe our pink and black, and as you say, purple and black (I had a turquoise
and black shirt, also) looked like the bowling shirts that they wear today,
but they weren't bowling shirts.
[So in the ‘50s] when you dressed up
you would wear black pegged pants, a pink shirt with black pockets and
collar, and you had to have a skinny belt. I remember a green shiny shirt
that my Mother made for my group, The Pikes, and me that had three-quarter-length
sleeves and shimmered when we were on stage. We thought that our "shit
didn't stink!"
I would have loved to have had a "souped-up"
car, but, I had to buy my own car—a 1948 Ford 2 door—no flippers, no hot
rod, but I did have it lowered by using shackles on the springs in the
back. It would bump the ground with ever dip in the road but it was cool.
My friends called it the Grey Lizard because it had lots of scratches on
the paint. So I bought a gallon of gray paint and painted it with a paintbrush.
So, of course, it had streaks in it and it did kind of look like a lizard
skin instead of a real paint job.
Anyway, it is very easy to get this
gasoline when someone is not looking, particularly if it is about one or
two in the morning. (We didn't think of it as stealing; more like borrowing.)
Well, it will actually work in the older cars; the only thing is that with
all the impurities, you have to clean out the gas filter about every ten
miles or so, and occasionally it will have water in it and it just won’t
start with the starter. [So] you have to push it to get the motor moving
fast enough.
My first car, an old 38 Chevrolet,
got clogged up and gas was pouring out onto the motor; I could see through
the holes in the floor board that the motor was on fire, so I stopped and
my friend and I almost emptied a whole flower bed from a yard, taking the
dirt and putting in into the motor. It was a good old car though because
I just pushed it to my house, washed off the dirt, cleaned the gas filter,
and it just started up and ran some more. Guess they don’t make them anymore
like they did in 1938. Speaking of my 1938 Chevrolet with knee action instead
of shock absorbers, let’s see if I can explain it: When you hit a bump
with knee action, the front end of the car will go up and down about two
to three feet. If you hit more than one bump, it will exaggerate that double.
Get the picture?
Well, Olney Texas is rather boring
so a couple of the guys and myself decided to take my 20-gauge shot gun
out and go rabbit hunting. This was about 11:00 P.M. one night, so we went
out into this plowed-up field with furrows (long rows). The Chevrolet had
the big head lights on the fenders in the front, so you could actually
put your leg over the headlight and lock it under the other leg; and you
could ride on the front fender with the shot gun. If you saw a rabbit in
the headlights then you could shoot it.
Now, that doesn't seem real sporting,
you say, but, with my 38 Chev (with knee action), it was a massive success
if you could just hang onto the head light and not go flying across the
field. Every time the car hit a furrow, the action was not only from
side to side, but also up and down—and not just occasionally; I'm talking
all the time. We did a lot more laughing at the craziness than we ever
did with killing of rabbits—believe me, the rabbits had a better chance
of surviving than we did.
LM: Well Robert,
you’re the first musician from the ‘50s with whom I shared a similar style
of attire and automobile: skinny belts, no cuffs, D.A.’s, pink shirts,
and lowered cars in the back with shackles. And as I previously stated,
purple shirts were also “in” in the Albuquerque ‘50s, as well as taps on
the heels and soles of our black patent-leather shoes. And my car was a
1947 Ford 2-door coup, lowered in the back with six-inch shackles and decorated
with moon or Oldsmobile flipper hubcaps and chrome extenders for my dual
exhaust pipes. I also put a backseat in my Ford and added glass-pack mufflers
for that cool sound that only a V-8 engine could produce. We never thought
that V-6’s sounded cool. Your comments?
RK: Sounds like we were doing pretty
much the same. I had a gutted muffler instead of a glass pack—like I said,
I didn't have much money back then and you could take the insides out of
a muffler pretty cheap. I would have liked to have the spinner hubcaps,
too, but I couldn't afford them so I painted the rims the same color as
my car—like I said, gray with a paintbrush, and then it all matched—UGLY,
but it matched.
Question for you: did you ever take
the gearshift mechanism knob that was on the right side of the steering
column and move it to the left side so you could shift gears with your
left hand? (It was upside down, of course, low gear was up and up, second
was down and down, and reverse was up and down, etc.) That way you could
have your arm around your girl and not have to move it to shift gears.
I thought it was pretty cool until my Dad saw it and told me to change
it back—immediately, if not sooner. His reasoning: "A car is to get you
from place to place and not a toy to be played with." This was after all,
1952. [Interviewer’s note: No I didn’t, Robert, but I had some buddies
that did. I let my girl, Judi, to whom I’ve been married now for 41 years,
shift for me.]
LM: When you
performed at Jack Ruby’s club, describe some of the negative scenarios
in reference to fights, threats, police harassment, etc., what led up to
them, and how Ruby dealt with the unruliness. Did a patron or an employee
of Ruby’s ever threaten you?
RK: To me it was just another of those
“funky" jobs that we had back then and they all pretty much became a blur
after a while. Jack Ruby always had a bouncer and ran a pretty tight ship
as far as patrons staying under control, so maybe everyone in his places
were afraid to cause any trouble. I don't know.
I didn't remember anything strange
or unusual from performing at Jack Ruby's Carousel Lounge Strip Club, so
I sent an e-mail to my long time friend and member of Expression, Jerry
Brown, [who] worked the job with me and here is what [he] had to say about
the job:
“I really don't remember anything bizarre
happening to us in those clubs. Ruby owned the Carousel that we worked
in. I remember the waitresses were very friendly, and I ended up going
out with one of them the next night. I don't remember the Theatre Lounge,
but I don't think Ruby owned that. He obviously owned the Vegas Club, where
you had some problems you had told us [about]. Jack Ruby loved the girls
and the entertainment, but I never saw him do anything out of line that
concerned any of us or anyone around us . . . just a peach of a guy, wasn't
he?”
The other strip club that I worked—the
Theatre Lounge—must have been with Scotty McKay and his band. I was
the bass player and singer with Bobby Rambo on guitar and either Paul Carney
or Roger (Gougenheimer) Bland on Drums with Scotty on Piano and doing Jerry
Lee Lewis-type antics for his show.
LM: Where
were you and what were you doing when you learned that Ruby shot Oswald.
In addition, what happened to his clubs when he went to prison?
RK: I was a disk jockey at WRR radio
station in Dallas at the time. I also did all the production station promos,
commercials, etc., so I was at the radio station before my regular on-air
shift and someone told me that Jack Ruby had just shot Oswald. After thinking
about it for a while, I really wasn't surprised.
The day Kennedy was shot, however,
was a much more interesting day for me. That day, in-between doing my production
work and then my regular DJ shift, I usually gave the newsman a break and
sat in the newsroom. It was in-between news reports so all I was doing
was being there to answer the phone.
(Background: The radio station that
I worked for was owned by the city of Dallas and because of this, we had
police radio, which every other radio station had, but we also had Channel
2 radio for the police, which was only for police and internal use. No
one else had this. Now back to the story.)
I was giving the newsman a break and
then I heard on the Channel 2 police radio speaker that the President had
been shot and they were taking him to Parkland Hospital. Panic!!!
Here I am, a novice D.J. that knows more about music and recording than
anything connected to the newsroom, and I have just heard the most important
news in history from Channel 2 radio that I don’t know whether I am even
supposed to be listening to and I don’t know what to do.
Needless to say, by the time I got
the news director on the phone and he told me to get it on the air immediately.
It was too late; it was already broadcast and it didn't matter where I
had heard the information. Just as soon as I had the news director on the
phone, the regular newsman took over and all I was good for at that time
was to take phone calls from all over the world, asking about the incident
and what was going on in Dallas. It's one of those experiences where adrenaline
takes over and you do whatever it takes to get through the moment, sometimes
without really thinking about the situation.
I was at the station all the way through
my regular D.J. shift (3:00 P.M. to 6:00 P.M.) until well after 12 midnight
and then it was about 1:00 A.M. when I finally got home. The minute I walked
into my house, it all finally dawned on me that the President of the United
States had just been killed! I just started sobbing uncontrollably and
couldn't really believe that this had happened. I had been talking about
it, on the phone to radio stations all over the world, but I wasn't listening
or thinking about what I was saying—reality wasn't a part of it; just reporting
breaking news. The reality hit me after I got home, and that
was really painful. People always say that they remember where they were
when Kennedy was shot; well, I certainly do.
LM: Describe
your time in L.A. and the overall music scene during that time in that
very competitive market. Why didn’t it work out and why did you think you
had all of the right stuff to put you on the map? In addition, did you
meet and hang with any of the other aspiring musicians who eventually became
famous?
RK: I had just turned 22 on October
2, 1957 and was a graduate of North Texas State University, but couldn't
get a [decent] job in California. I did finally get a job as a pirate on
the Caribbean Pirate Ship at that new place that had just opened up called
Disneyland. I would walk around from 4:00 P.M. to 10:00 P.M. and look like
a pirate and answer questions; then from 10:00 P.M. to 1:00 A.M. I would
mop and scrub the ship and make sure it was spick and span for the next
day. This way, I could go into L.A. for music interviews and work in Anaheim
late afternoons and nights.
I'd guess that 90% of all the Disneyland
3,500 employees were either struggling actors, songwriters, or singer/musicians
in the 18-to-25-year-old age group. We had lots of fun times [when] the
park closed. We would take the little cars and drive around the streets
by reaching back and dislodging the governors on the motors; you could
speed pretty fast. There were some all-night beach parties that turned
out to be fairly interesting, also.
I don't know if I was a curse on my
friends or not, but it seems like most of the people that I became friends
with are no longer alive. I met Eddie Cochran when we were doing demos
at Imperial Records (way before he sang the bass part on my song "Git it");
he was killed in a car accident. I met and became friends with Jesse Belvin
(met him through Rene’ Hall, Sam Cooks' old manager) before his "Goodnight
Sweetheart" hit; he was killed in an auto accident. I wasn't really friends
with Gene Vincent—mainly because of his arrogance—but I knew him and he
recorded two of my songs.
To sum up my one and a half years in
California, my Grandfather who I worked construction with in the summers
of my fifteenth to twentieth years had a nice old expression: "Almost nearly,
not quite hardly." That was exactly how it was. Lee Hazelwood liked me,
but couldn't get me a record deal. Jimmie Haskell really wanted to do something
for me, but couldn't because he was just a preliminary A&R man. Rene'
Hall wanted to manage me, but he didn't really have much to offer, and
so on and so forth. I was beating my head against the wall and not getting
anywhere.
I went back to Texas to try it from
another angle. I was going to have to serve my military obligation for
being in the Naval Reserve while I was in college, so I went back to Texas
to find out that I didn't have to serve because Korea was over and I had
already served in the reserves; I could just finish out my obligation there
on weekends.
LM: You indicated
that you befriended Eddie Cochran and that he sang bass backup to Gene
Vincent’s cover of “Git It.” What is your take on his demeanor and what
do you know about the depression he suffered over Buddy Holly’s tragic
demise on February 3, 1959? Did you ever meet Holly?
RK: During the late 1950's, it was
actually a very small group of musicians and entertainers that were trying
to "make it" in rock and roll. Don't get me wrong; there were more
than enough but not nearly as many as there are now. So, in this
small community, just about everybody knew each other and most of the time
were eager to help and assist each other. Most of the artists were pretty
nice people—the only exceptions were the managers, agents, and record company
executives.
I met Eddie Cochran while I was singing
and arranging unrecorded songs as preliminary demos for Jimmy Haskell at
Imperial Records for $8.00 per song. Eddie was really personable
and [a] nice guy—but I can't say the same for his manager, Jerry Capehart.
I gave them a demo of some of my songs and later I found out that they
changed one of my songs (at the request of his manager) enough so they
could claim [they] wrote and recorded it. However, it still sounded
too close, so they changed it again and it finally became "C'mon, Everybody."
My original rough demo is on my Rockabilly CD, and was called "When We
Get Together." Eddie's first recording was called "Let's Get Together"
and later changed to "C'mon Everybody." Both of Eddie's versions
are on the Liberty Recording of Eddie Cochran's Greatest Hits.
Basically all that was left from my
original was a concept and idea. That was done quite frequently in
that era, so I just chalked it up to "experience" and learned to not give
demos to the wrong people—no matter how influential they were.
I was only in California from June
1957 to February 1958, so the people that I met and visited while I was
there were more like "acquaintances" rather than "personal friends." Eddie
and I met and talked quite a few times but the recording of "Git it" was
after I left California, so really, I had nothing to do with him being
the bass voice on it.
Most of the rockers back then were
tenors and there were only a few of us that were what I [would] call "baritones"
that could sing bass; Eddie and I both were in that category, so I am certainly
glad that he did such a super job on "Git it." If I were asked or consulted,
I would have picked him, but no one cared enough to let me know.
What I do know is that Eddie had heard my demo of "Git it" and he nailed
the "idea and concept" of my song—just as Gene Vincent did on his lead
singing of [it]. Gene kind of varied from the program and did not do my
lyrics on "Somebody Help Me" and just made up some of his own at the recording
session because he couldn't remember my lyrics. At least, he didn't
ask for writing credit.
Sadly to say, I never met Buddy Holly—even
though we were both from Texas—or Ritchie Valens, and I only met, briefly,
the Big Bopper from rock and roll shows in Dallas. I'm sure it was a difficult
time for everyone when their plane went down. I was back in Texas when
the crash happened so I don't know about Eddie's possible depression. It
is very depressing to me that so many of the early rockers did not make
it even into their 30's. Now, I feel quite lucky and happy that I
am still alive and well and still have my small recording studio [to help]
keep up my "artistic" juices, even if it is recording other people and
trying to pass along whatever advice and experience that I have accumulated
over the past 50-some-odd years. Hell, I am still learning new things
everyday with this new digital world of computers.
LM: Your Internet
bio says that you recorded “Git It” and other tracks at Sellers Recording
Studio in Dallas under the name of Bob Kelly and the Pikes. Was this studio
considered a leading sound studio in Dallas? In addition, who encouraged
you to record your music there and did you pay for the session?
RK: Sellers in Dallas and Clifford
Herrings in Fort Worth were just about as good as most of the medium-scale
studios.I did the "Git it" session at Sellers because I didn't have a good
demo of the song and Big D Music (owned by Ed Mclemore, who was also the
owner of Sportatorium and Big D Jamboree) wanted Gene Vincent to do the
song. Big D paid for the session to do just the one song there.
Actually, after I got back to Dallas
from my trip to California and started to work at WRR radio, I started
to buy my own equipment and opened my own studio, Top Ten Recording. I
found out that sometimes it is not the equipment that makes for good recordings;
it is more the producer and recording engineer that really makes the difference,
so I used my experience in that area to do some pretty good things: The
Night Caps’ "Wine, Wine, Wine," The Continentals (most of their hits),
Gene Summers (his Alta recordings), and lots of demo's for Scotty McKay,
Bobby Rambo, Arthur K. Adams, Expression, and many more.
LM: You speak
of Gene Vincent’s arrogance. Give our readers a straightforward take on
Gene’s demeanor and a little on his background as you knew it.
RK: Sometimes you have to know the
circumstances to understand the full situation. When I first met Gene Vincent,
he was the headliner (already had his hit record "Be Bop a Lula") at the
Big D Jamboree and I was singing with my group Bob Kelly and the Pikes
in the preliminary show before the Big D Jamboree; I wasn't even on the
main show, yet. You had to win the prelims a couple of times before you
could get paid to be on the main show (a big whooping $15 per man). So,
I met Gene, probably, three times before he even acknowledged that I was
a real person and before then, he definitely didn't remember my name.
Finally, one day in Ed Mclemore's office
(the owner of Big D Jamboree and then Gene Vincent’s manager), they played
him my songs and he was having one of his good days, laughing and talking—really
a very nice and personable fellow. He liked my demo and said he would think
about doing the songs. I had heard things like that before so I didn't
put much enthusiasm into the conversation. Then, months later, Ed Watts
(the head of Big D Publishing) called me and said that Gene was actually
going to do "Git it" and wanted me to come in to sign a publishing contract.
So I did. I was just learning the music business, so I didn't have a publishing
company and I signed over the publishing on "Git it" to Big D Publishing.
At the same time, Big D Music (the
parent company--management, booking, publishing, and anything else that
they could take money from the artist) offered me a seven-year contract.
They wanted 15% for management, 10% for booking, publishing on all my songs,
and offered me NOTHING. I wanted a guarantee of a recording contract within
a year, a minimum of XXX dollars a week (I don't remember what I wanted,
but it was probably something like one hundred a week or something just
as ridiculous as that) and the main thing that was essential to me was
to not pay them a commission for jobs that I got for myself (without their
help). If they would give me this, I would sign with them for one year
and if they met the above, then it would be a seven-year deal. Needless
to say, they wouldn't go for that, so I didn't sign.
Back to Gene. Most of what I know about
Gene comes after this and [a lot] of it is hearsay and some personal contact,
but we were not personal friends—just "business associates." They didn't
use the words “manic depressive” in those days, but as far as I know, that
is pretty much what Gene was like. I know it's not good to talk about someone
that is not able to defend himself, but there are many situations that
occurred [that] his former band mates and anyone that was doing business
with him will substantiate.
He could be the nicest and most congenial
person and then the next minute explode into a tirade and do some very
unusual things. For instance, Ed Watt called me to tell me that Gene was
going to be on American Bandstand and do my song "Git it," so I was really
excited. Back then, if you were on the Dick Clark show, then you definitely
had a huge hit. Well, I waited and waited and nothing. Come to find out,
Gene had taken the money that he was supposed [to use for expenses to travel
to] the Bandstand Show and had gone to Mexico for a party [instead]. That
cost me lots of money at a time when I surely could have used it.
Some of my very close friends—Scotty
McKay, Juvy Gomez, Dude Kahn, and others tried to be in Gene's Band and
couldn't put up with the inconsistency of his personality. They have all
said to me that Gene could be the nicest guy and then a holy terror. If
you think about it, there have been lots of "Blue Caps" over the years
that Gene [employed], not only here in the U.S. but Europe, also. Gene
was a very talented singer and a superb showman on stage; I just wish that
he could have been able to control the demons inside, which would have
let him control his drugs and drinking. [If he had] he probably would have
been an even bigger success than he was. I will always be grateful to him
for doing my song "Git it" and "Somebody Help Me" because those were the
first two really big successes that I had. I still get BMI royalties from
these song—even now, 45 years later. I say the following to friends all
the time, so guess I should say it in print, now:
“Thank you, thank you, thank you, everyone
in Europe for still playing ‘Git it.’ I mention Europe because most of
my BMI checks are based on airplay in Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Finland,
[and] Great Britain. You all have been helping me make money for over 45
years and I certainly do appreciate it.
LM: You let
them have the publishing on “Git It, “ but did you give up a portion of
the writers’ credits?
RK: I wouldn't give up any of the writers’
credit. Maybe, it was because I had a business degree from college. But
I figured that if I wrote it and they wanted to record it the way that
I wrote it, I should get the credit for writing it. I did a lot of negotiating
on the publishing but not on my writing. I'm sure I lost some deals with
my persistence, but that’s the way I felt about my artistic abilities.
LM: Your list
of sound recording credits is impressive. Did you publish any of the songs
by the artists that you mentioned and receive credit for music arrangements,
or were you just paid outright for the sessions by the label or promoter?
RK: By the time I started my own recording
studio and doing sessions for other people, I had my own publishing company,
Little Star Publishing; and yes, I did publish some of the songs. I did
lots of work for The Continentals and since I wrote a few of their songs,
I got the publishing on those. Even some of the other songs that I didn't
write, I got the publishing, because I was instrumental in getting the
songs recorded.
For the Nightcaps, I got A&R and
recording engineering credits on the original album cover. (Some remakes
don’t have the liner notes, so I don’t think I am mentioned. I was just
paid hourly for the recording on this LP—no publishing.) At my Top Ten
Recording studio in Dallas, Texas, it was mainly just an hourly rate to
record. I got paid separately for arranging and producing. Sometimes
I got credit and sometimes not, depending on the job.
I didn't really have a big publishing
operation. I started my publishing company to use for my own songs and
then later as a security measure for some of the writers and composers
that were friends. There was so much theft and corruption in the music
business in the 1950's that I would take someone’s songs and put [it] into
my publishing company just to keep people from stealing the song or as
a means to negotiate (for the writer) if someone wanted to use it. In other
words, I was working for the writer to make sure that he got what he deserved.
If the only way someone would record the song was to have the publishing,
then I would [offer] my publishing rights, but I made sure that the writer
got his fair share and didn't get screwed in the transfer. I called it
the "Good Ole Boy" syndrome: I wasn't going to steal from them and I made
sure that no one else did.
LM: Of all
of the high-profile artists that you recorded, who were the most difficult
and why?
RK:It would probably make for more
interesting reading to have a lot of "smut" about a lot of people, but
you will have to remember that I was in Dallas, Texas and most of the high-profile
artists were just mainly kids in their late teens and we were all just
getting started. So there were no prima donnas (except Gene Vincent who
was already a star).
Scotty McKay was goofy in a good way,
[and] Gene Summers was laid back. Mac Curtis was even tempered and from
my hometown. Ronnie Dawson was just a super talented kid (about 16 at the
time). Arthur K. Adams was just a struggling guitar player who sang blues
songs and I traded studio time for his playing guitar or publishing of
his songs because he couldn't afford to pay me.
The Continentals were really just eighteen
year olds with lots of enthusiasm. The Nightcaps were local super stars
with no national status. Kirby St. Romain was a one hit wonder. Bobby Rambo
was a great guitar player (who later played with some of the superstars).
[And there was] Ronnie Tutt, my fraternity brother and great drummer (later
with Neil Diamond and Elvis).
I think I was just lucky to be around
such nice artists before they reached success---and even now, most of them
(those that are still alive) are still good friends of mine and they are
just the same as they were back then.
Most of the problems that I know about
came from New York, California, Nashville, and other high-profile recording
places with artists that had egos bigger than their talent, and I didn't
have to deal with that until later in the 1970's (not with my group Expression
but with record producers and A&R men).
LM: The demo
that you sent me of the ten 1972 live songs by Expression was excellent
and certainly showed a great deal of professionalism in the performances
of the songs via the employment of a very modern style of the time. What’s
the history behind this group (formation, venues played, founder, demise,
etc.)?
RK: From 1960 to 1964, I was doing
quite well (financially) in Dallas, Texas with my Top Ten Recording Studio,
Little Star Publishing, and working as a Disk Jockey at WRR radio, but
I still had the urge to make a living playing music on stage—call it the
"ham" in me or whatever, I was missing something.
In 1962, three guys came into my recording
studio and I felt like they had something: Jerry Brown, piano player and
singer (I had known through my association with Scotty McKay); Jay Ramsey,
guitar player, singer, and songwriter; and Frank Cole, sax, guitar, bass
and singer. I decided [to] record them and put out a record locally to
see if it would do anything. [It’s titled] “Smooth Talkin' Woman” b/w “Look
Away Love,” Jay Ramsey writer and Little Star Publishing on Libra Records—my
label).
Success locally was mediocre [and]
I couldn't get a national record release. Then, I asked them if they would
like to form a group [that would] include ME. They said, sure!! So, we
recorded some songs [with] Jay singing lead, and Jerry, Frank, and I singing
background. [With] slightly more success, I got a record leasing deal with
Smash Records, a subsidiary of Mercury Records. [It’s entitled] “Thrill”
b/w “Come Back Karen,” published by Little Star. We got a Best Bets in
Cashbox—as good as you could get at the time for a rating. Lots of airplay
and sales locally, but still only moderate success nationally. It was a
one-record-lease deal, so back to the drawing board.
After about a year of being together—daytime
jobs and beer joints or Air Forces base gigs on the weekends—I told them
that we could make a lot more money if we had a nightclub act. Well, none
of them had ever seen a nightclub act, but we started to put one together
on my knowledge and Jerry Brown's vocal arrangements. We were quite successful
and did make lots more money. I then got a booking agent from Associated
Booking Corp (ABC) to come see us and [determine] if he could do anything
for us. He said that he could keep us booked, if we didn't mind a little
traveling. Little to him meant all the time.
So, we decided that if he could get
us three months work then we would all quit our jobs and go on the road.
We did go on the road in Sept. 1964 [and] kept going for the next sixteen
years!
We called Kirby and ask him if he wanted
to be [our] drummer [and] he said yes, even though he didn't play drums.
He sold his bass, bought a set of drums, and met us in Phoenix, Arizona
at the Playboy Club. [He] played drums for two weeks and kept trying to
tune them to make them sound right. Finally a drummer from the downstairs
room came up to help him and he said, “No wonder your tom toms don’t sound
good. You have them upside down.”
We did all the middle U.S. and East
Coast Supper Clubs until 1967 and then we got a chance to play the Sahara
Tahoe Casino in Lake Tahoe [for] about twice the money that we were making
everywhere else. So that was the next step. Needless to say, we wanted
the Nevada Casino Circuit, and so we busted our buns to get as good as
possible and it paid off.
By 1968 we were pretty much into the
Las Vegas, Reno, Tahoe routine and instead of making $1,500 a week in the
Mid-West, we were up to the $3,000 a week—of course, that was split five
ways. You don’t get rich but it's a hell of a lot easier to be middle class
and pay all your bills.
We stayed together until 1974, winning
Best Small Lounge Group a couple of times and parted friends. Kirby wanted
to be a stand-up comedian; Jerry Brown wanted to do a piano bar, so he
wouldn't have to travel; and Jay, Frank and I continued until 1980. We
still get together for a reunion of sorts about twice a year—well, except
for Frank who kind of disappeared into Martha's Vineyard, all the way over
to the East Coast.
Short Story: We were playing a club
in Texas and this drunk came up to the stage and wanted me to give him
one of our albums (live performance that we sold at the clubs for extra
money) and he said that he had a friend that was starting a record company
and would send it to him. So I gave him one. The guys were always scolding
me for giving away albums, but this time it was a SCORE.
About two weeks later, I got a telegram
from a guy named Nick Venet (Capitol Records A&R man that did all the
Beach Boys’ recordings) and he said that he and a couple of his friends
were starting a new label and he would like us to record [for] him. I called
him and ask if this was a joke, but he was for real. We were headed back
to Las Vegas, so he met us there and we started to record for the new label
MediaArts. He wanted to use a different drummer [citing that] Kirby was
okay for stage, but he wanted a pro. So I said that I had one of my frat
brothers that we would like to use and he said, “NO, I have the best, Ronnie
Tutt,” and I said, “That’s Funny. That’s’ my fraternity brother that I
wanted to use. We also used Joe Osborne on bass (another really nice laid-back,
great picker).
Our first single released on MediaArts
was “California Is Just Mississippi (with a Lot More Cars and a Lot More
Bars)” and it [moved into] the top ten in ten major markets. We were quite
sure that we had finally made it. WHOA! Wait a minute. That would be too
easy. They called us to say that our song was going to be #80 with a bullet
in the next [issue of] Cashbox, but when [it] came out, “Bye Bye Miss American
Pie” was #80 with a bullet (also on MediaArts) and ours was not to be found
anywhere. From what I could find out, MediaArts was given the number #80
slot. Because Don McCleen had sold 150,000 records in New York alone, his
song was put on at the label’s request instead of ours, which had sold
only 100,000 in 26 markets.
They put all the promotion men on “American
Pie” and our record just kind of withered away. Not sour grapes, just the
fickle way that the music business has of not exactly being equal. Sure,
“American Pie” should have been #80, but ours should have been #90 or somewhere—but
NOOOOO!!! Just keep playing the Lounges in Nevada.
We had another single release with
MediaArts and then United Artists bought it. When United Artists got control,
instead of releasing our album, they released us instead. It was a great
album, but no one ever heard it but close friends.
When the computer age came along
in 1986, I got off the road and started doing a one man band, making my
own tracks on the computer and then playing guitar and sax, and singing
to the tracks. I worked mostly small lounges at the big casinos in Las
Vegas until 2002 and then I decided to semi-retire. I have a small computer
studio in my home now and keep my artistic juices flowing by doing some
recording and making web pages, but only when I want to! Boy, is that a
wonderful feeling.
Actually, I have been very lucky to
be able to do what I dreamed of doing and making a living at it—even without
stardom—and coming out of it all with a good outlook on life. I've seen
a lot come and go, but I am still here and enjoying my happy times.
I have cleaned up digital CD copies
of live performances from our first stage shows, live performances including
a great oldies rock comedy routine, and a whole CD, 24 [tracks] of all
the demo songs that we recorded as well as the early record releases. So
if you are a real nostalgia buff and want to hear what was happening during
the ‘50s (my rockabilly CD), ‘60s (early demo recordings and releases),
and ‘70s (Expression live performances and Comedy), just let me know. They
are all $15 apiece and I will pay for shipping. Sorry about the commercial----but
just letting you know that they are available.
kellybob@cox.net
- e-mail
http://members.cox.net/kellybob
- personal web page
LM: What was
it like working the casinos? Was it a tough environment? Can you remember
a particular incident that you’d like to forget and one that you will cherish
forever?
RK: In many respects, it was much better
than any of the other options that Expression had without having a hit
record in the late 1960's, ‘70s and ‘80s. Back then, there were no
big concert opportunities for an unknown group, so it was usually just
the nightclubs or supper clubs or (if you had a show) the Nevada Circuit.
Not only were the working conditions better in Nevada, the money was almost
double or triple of what we had made before, and there was not nearly as
much traveling. Before Nevada, it was coast-to-coast traveling, including
Canada and [the] Bahamas, so it was really brutal on expenses.
The nicest amenity of working the casinos
was the environment and working conditions. Usually, a nice
stage, lights, fairly good PA equipment, and even though we had to do four
shows, there were usually people to entertain. If you were any good [with]
quality response, lots more money [was the result]. [Also] between Las
Vegas, Reno, and Lake Tahoe, it is only 450 miles travel.
In Nevada, if someone disrupts the
shows or gambling, they are thrown out of the Casino. [However,]
in the supper clubs and nightclubs, they would let one drunk ruin a whole
evening because he was a regular customer and they didn't want to offend
him.
Actually playing the casinos was not
much different than playing the supper clubs. You have to keep the
show pretty fast paced with some comedy and be prepared to do the show
if there is a full house or twelve people, because there is probably a
whole casino that can hear you. If you screw around then they will know
and definitely won't come in to see you. We always did some of our
own original material in the middle of our shows—our latest record, or
a song that one of us had written that was recorded by someone else, and
we always had an album of our stage performances and original songs to
sell after the show with autographs and such.
Here are a few incidents from the top
of my head after [more than] twenty years of "road miles":
Most Famous Guest - When we were doing
our show at the Outrigger Club in Oklahoma City, this huge man walked into
the club with a group of people and it was obvious that it was John Wayne.
At the end of our show, I introduced him to the crowd and he came up on
stage and bowed to the audience and said, "These guys are pretty good,
even if they do need a haircut." Needless to say, our hair at the
time was about like the Beatles, so it wasn't nearly like the current rock
groups of today. Shaking hands with "The Duke" was pretty impressive and
I remember it today some forty years later.
Most Bizarre Newspaper Headline - At
the Olympic Hotel in Seattle, Washington, the day after our opening night,
the newspaper entertainment headline was "Expression Knocks Themselves
out for Audience." Actually what happened was in the middle of a ballad
that Jay Ramsey was singing, a Shure sound column fell from above the stage
and hit Jay on top of his head; [it] knocked him out cold. [He was]
rushed to the hospital [and received] many stitches. The owner of the club
wanted us to finish the show after Jay was hurried off in the ambulance.
(For the younger audience, a Shure sound column was about four feet tall
and two feet wide with four ten-inch speakers, and it was about as good
as you could get in the late 1960's for a PA system.)
Most Ardent Fan - After many appearances
at the Mint Casino in downtown Las Vegas and the Sahara on the strip, we
were getting quite a good following. There was this one older woman
that just loved our group. She loved us so much that she would get
in front of the stage and turn to the audience and raise up her dress (above
her head) with nothing on underneath except panty hose, and [she would]
do bumps and grinds like a stripper would do. Normally, this would
be a good thing—at least in the guys eyes—but when I say "older," I mean,
probably in her late 70's, and a wrinkled wiggly torso is not that exciting.
But the crowd always loved it and she would get a standing ovation just
before security would take her away. She did this so much that finally
security, [upon] seeing her come in the door, [would] take her out before
she ever got to the stage. Later, one of the security guards
told me that she must really like [us] because she doesn't come in here
any other time—only when Expression is playing.
Most Cherished Events - Sharing the
lounge stage (alternating shows) with Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Willie Nelson
(before his huge success), Kenny Rogers (before he was a super-star), Barbara
Mandrell (when her sister Erleen was still playing drums with the back-up
group), Little Anthony (while he still had The Imperials with him), Louie
Prima and Keely Smith (and later Sam Butera and the Witnesses), Count Basie
Orchestra, Don Rickles (comedian), Bill Medley (Righteous Brother without
Bobby Hatfield), and many more I can't remember right now.
During the 1970's, Expression was voted
"Best Small Lounge Group" twice and "Best Vocal Group" once. In the 1990's,
I was inducted as a legend into the "Rockabilly Hall of Fame" for the songs
that I wrote back in the 1950's.
LM: If you
had to do it all over again, what would you do differently?
RK: As you can probably tell from this
interview I usually have something to say about whatever is asked, but
I think you might have me stumped on this one. I know I must
have made some mistakes but I definitely didn't keep making them.
So, I have thought about it long and hard and I can’t think of anything
that I would do differently; well, not anything that would have made a
big difference in the final outcome. I never had a hit record singing and
had only moderate success as a song writer, but I have made a better than
average living doing something that I love (entertaining).
Even though I have never been a star,
I was second billed to some pretty big stars for almost forty years; so
that probably puts me in the better-than-average category.
I don't say that I was content to being second best, but it is a hell of
a lot better than having a nine-to-five day job at a desk, and that is
what I have always been the proudest.
LM: Thank
you, Robert for your visit with me. Do you have any final thoughts, including
any advise for the young aspiring musicians?
RK: Someone once told me that stardom
in the entertainment business can be broken down into the following:
Until you have the first big success
and are exposed in front of the masses for the first time, it is 10% talent
and 90% luck. But, if you are lucky enough to get that first big huge break,
then it reverts to 90% talent and 10% luck.
I don't think I really appreciated
this statement when I was younger, but now that I am older and have seen
some entertainers come and go, over the last forty-some-odd years, it seems
to be much truer than I ever expected. Basically, if you are an entertainer,
learn your craft by working and be ready for that big break if you ever
get the chance. If you don't, then it probably will just pass you by and
you will fall into the one-hit-wonder category (not just recording, but
performing, as well, since that is entertaining, also). But,
if you are ready mentally and physically and are able to handle the challenge,
then you [might just] stay on top.
I never really had the big break, but
for many years I felt like I was ready to be an overnight success, any
minute. Sure enough, my success was playing music and singing
(without a day job) until I was 65 and could retire to my home-recording
studio (where I am now).
Wouldn't it have been great to have
[had] all these computers with all their impressive gadgets back in the
‘50s when I had a one-track Ampex tape recorder? I didn't even get
a stereo recorder until the 1960's!
[We encourage
you to submit your comments on this interview to: rvstewartproductions@yahoo.com.
Write “Kelly Comments” in the e-mail subject box.]
My Father C. Kelly
and my Mother Eedy about June 1935
or down to cover the screen and that
was where I had my bed and toys. It was hot in the summer (no air
conditioning) and cold in the winter
(no heat of any kind), but we had an open space with lots of trees behind
our house, and I spent most of my
time, playing in the forest of oak trees.
Young Robert Gene
in front of screened-in porch
My Sister Karen and
I in Olney, Texas
Family Jam Session
Uncle Teedy (left) Me (Center) and
Uncle David tuning
his guitar right with Karen directing.
My First Instrument
was this Saxophone.
Bob Kelly remote
Radio Broadcast on WRR in Dallas, Texas
from the Cotton Bowling
Palace, Midnight to 6 a.m.

Bob Kelly & The
Pikes singing 1957 (Bill Byrd, left, Kelly in middle, Neil Wood, right
Bobby Rambo, Toi Rebel (stripper) Bob
Kelly
at Cotton Bowling
Palace in Dallas as a DJ on WRR radio 1961
6 a.m. Start of my
50 mile walk around loop 12 in Dallas
Kelly high school with
I used to always double or triple
date in that car because if it wouldn't start, then I would always have
help to push it; it was of course, standard shift and we would always park
on a hill, so it would be easy to get it moving. The reason it was always
so hard to start might take a little explanation for some of you. In Texas,
particularly in West Texas where I was, there are lots of oil wells. Each
oil well had unrefined gasoline called drip gas. It had all the impurities
still in it and water is one of [them]. so maybe that is why they call
it drip.
Bob Kelly on air
at radio station WRR in Dallas 1962
Kelly Disneyland
1957
Kelly & Friend
at NAS Dallas Reserve 1957

Jerry Brown
Frank Cole Jay Ramsey Bob Kelly
Expression 1963
Jerry
Jay Frank
Kelly
Expression 1964
The Supper Club scene in 1964 was
a local band [first taking the stage and] playing and [then] the four of
us (now called The Expressions) coming out [and] singing some harmonies,
solos, comedy, and generally trying to entertain an audience. The next
step was to get rid of the local band because we all played [instruments]
and we needed to be self-contained to make more money. All we needed was
a drummer, but all the drummers that we knew were not personality wise
compatible with us to spend everyday and night together. The only person
that we wanted was Kirby St. Romain (big hit “Summer’s Really Comin'” in
1962, but out of work in 1965).
Jay
Kelly
Jerry Kirby
Frank
Expression 1966
Jay
Kirby Frank
Jerry Kelly
Expression 1974
Bob Kelly
Kirby St. Romain Jerry
Brown Jay Ramsey
Expression Reunion
Dec. 2003
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If you have comments
or questions, email me at kellybob@cox.net