*** Welcome to piglix ***

Rudy's Rock


Rudy's Rock is a 1956 instrumental composed by Bill Haley and Rudy Pompilli and released as a Decca single. The song appeared in the 1956 movie Rock Around the Clock.

The saxophone solo was by Rudy Pompilli, who played tenor saxophone in the band. The instrumental consisted of an extended saxophone solo by Pompilli with a drumming interlude performed by Ralph Jones.

"Rudy's Rock" was released as a Decca 78, 30085A, backed with "Blue Comet Blues" in 1956.. The single reached #34 on Billboard and #38 on Cash Box. In the UK, the single reached #30 in November, 1956 and re-charted at #26 in December, 1956. "Rudy's Rock" appeared on the Decca album Rock and Roll Stage Show in 1956.

The Comets performed "Rudy's Rock" in the 1956 film Rock Around the Clock. Unlike other songs in the movie, "Rudy's Rock" was performed live on camera, and this version was not released on CD until the late 1990s. In live performance, the song was augmented by acrobatic slap-bass playing (in the original recording and film by Al Rex).

The song was performed on The Ed Sullivan Show on Sunday, April 28, 1957 when Bill Haley and the Comets made their second appearance on the show. They also performed the song on October 20, 1958 in Brussels, Belgium at the Royal Flemish Theatre (KVS) and in Lima, Peru in 1961 with Al Dean on saxophone in a radio broadcast version (during a brief period when Pompilli had left the band).

It was a major part of Haley's stage show for the rest of his career. Live versions of the song appeared on the live albums Bill Haley's Scrapbook (recorded in New York City in December 1969 for Kama Sutra/Buddah Records) and Live in London '74 (recorded in London, England in March 1974 for Antic Records). In addition, near the end of his life Pompilli recorded an updated studio version of the song in 1975 for the Sonet Records album Rudy's Rock: The Sax That Changed the World, which was credited to Rudy Pompilli and the Comets. After Pompilli's death in 1976, Haley and the Comets continued to perform the song in his memory, such as a 1976 appearance on Austrian television in which Pompilli's sax part was played by replacement player George Baker.


...
Wikipedia

...