by Robert Wilkinson
Today we send up a happy and merry to one of the great guitar pioneers of our times, the amazing Duane Eddy! Master of the "twangy guitar," he gave us some amazing tunes in the 50s and 60s and inspired 10,000 guitar pickers everywhere. Today we have some great performance clips.! And he died two days after this posted, so he now joins the immortals in the greatest rock and roll band not on Earth.
Duane Eddy (April 26, 1938 - April 30, 2024) paired up with producer/songwriter Lee Hazelwood in Arizona in the 50s, and the rest is history! His band, the Rebel Rousers, featured such major talents as Steve Douglas, Jim Horn and keyboard player Larry Knechtel, both of whom also were part of The Wrecking Crew, a collection of the finest LA session musicians ever assembled. According to AllMusic, "The singles - 'Peter Gunn,' 'Cannonball,' 'Shazam,' and 'Forty Miles of Bad Road' were probably the best - also did their part to help keep the raunchy spirit of rock & roll alive, during a time in which it was in danger of being watered down. Much of that raunch was not solely due to Eddy himself, but to the honking sax solos of Steve Douglas..." We have more than a few of Duane and Steve live and cooking!
There's not too much footage of him performing live in the 50s, but I found a few oldies and quite a few newer ones! And given the era he was big, you can twist to just about all of these!
First, straight atcha from the Summer of 1958, here’s the tune that introduced the man to the world, so I’ve made it our Saturday Night Attitude Tune! Live on Dick Clark’s Saturday Night Beech Nut Show, here’s Duane Eddy and the Rebel Rousers cranking out his Top 10 1958 mega-hit ”Rebel Rouser."
Also from Dick's Saturday Night Beech Nut Show, from the Spring of 1959, Duane cranking up "Forty Miles of Bad Road," and again from that same time period, a different clip of "Rebel Rouser." (The great Gil Bernal did the original studio sax on Rebel Rouser, while Steve Douglas gave us 40 Miles of Bad Road.)
Another early live performance by Duane and the Rebel Rousers of his 1960 hit "Shazam!" Last year I had a great clip of this version, but it’s disappeared. So I found this copy of that performance. The video isn’t good, but it is them performing that song. “Shazam”
From a 1988 PBS Buddy Holly Tribute show, Duane live performing “Rebel Rouser” and “Ramrod”
From who knows when, dancing with Duane and Jim Horn wailing in a great live performance of "Don't Be Cruel."
From 1996, Duane live on television performing the legendary country classic "Ghost Riders in the Sky."
I found several clips of Duane performing live at the 2009 NAAM show! We begin with his first hit, the infinitely danceable "Moovin' N' Groovin'.
From the same show, a great live performance by Duane of "Rebel Rouser."
We follow with Duane doing his 1959 Top Ten hit "Forty Miles of Bad Road."
Duane live in October 2010 at the Royal Festival Hall in London performing "Three-30 Blues."
From the Guitar Geek Festival 2010, here's Duane Eddy live doing "Movin' N' Groovin" & "Detour."
From Glastonberry 2011, Duane rocking out live doing "The Theme From Peter Gunn." From the same concert, Duane live doing "Curveball."
Here's 20 minutes of Duane Eddy performing Live at EMI.
Now some original studio versions of his tunes!
From November 1957, his first big one! "Moovin' N' Groovin'" (It seems that Duane ripped off the intro riff from Chuck Berry's April 1956 cut of "Brown Eyed Handsome Man." And yes, the same intro was ripped off again by Brian Wilson for "Surfin' USA" a few years later.)
From July 1958, the original studio version of his #6 major hit "Rebel Rouser."
Also from 1958, his Top 20 hit "Cannonball."
From 1959, "The Lonely One." This single featured "Detour" on "the flip side," aka the "B side."
Also from 1959, Duane's MONSTER #6 UK hit! (It was Top 30 in the US in 1960.) If you don't hear one other tune today, check this one out! It's a pure 2 1/2 minutes of major guitar work with Godzilla sax playing by Steve Douglas!
1959's Top 30 hit "Yep." Here was the flip side to "Yep," “Three-30 Blues."
Here's a great rare long UK version of his 1959 hit, "Some Kind A Earthquake." (This is the 1 min 58 sec UK version.)
From 1959, his Top Ten hit "Forty Miles of Bad Road"
From 1960, the string drenched hit Top 5 movie theme "Because They're Young."
From 1960 with Lee Hazelwood, the somewhat grim downer theme from the movie Why Must I Die, "The Girl on Death Row."
Also from 1960, "Kommotion."
From 1961, Duane doing "Tammy." and "Along Came Linda."
From 1962, Duane doing a cover of the great Link Wray breakthrough song that was banned many places as "promoting juvenile delinquency," "Rumble."
Also from 1962, his Top 15 hit "Dance With the Guitar Man."
Here’s Duane’s 1962 take on the classic “Unchained Melody”
You can hear where Ennio Morricone found the “twangy guitar” part of his “Spaghetti Western Sound” in this famous tune cut 2 years before A Fistful of Dollars! From 1962, "the Ballad of Paladin."
From 1963, Duane doing Bill Justis' breakthrough #2 hit "Raunchy." (Bill's version hit the charts in November 1957, and is considered the first rock and roll instrumental hit.)
Also from 1963, "Boss Guitar."
From 1965, Duane doing the Bill Doggett hit, "Honky Tonk."
From 1970, Duane doing "Freight Train."
From 1978, the studio version of the classic "Wildwood Flower."
Duane's guitar playing is said to have been the inspiration for the instrumental style of the Shadows. 2 years ago I had Duane's cover of the Shadows' major 1960 hit “Apache,” but it’s nowhere to be found this year. But in honor of the Shads, here’s Hank Marvin and the Shadows doing their iconic 1960 version of "Apache." Before we quit this iconic tune, I found a gem! A Japanese guitar wizard by the name of Dr. K went to Nashville in 1991, and asked Duane to perform with him on yes, "Apache," complete with electronic drums and a unique arrangement.
The 25 min. clip from 1975 titled “The Guitar Man in Concert” on German tv is gone. However, from that show, a great live clip of Duane and his wife Deed doing “Son Of A Guitar Man”
For our penultimate song, I found this gem of Duane, Steve, and Robben Ford live giving up “Sashay”
We’ll begin to close this show with one that’s too good to miss, and is a must see! Here’s an incredible medley by Duane and the awesome Steve Douglas on Thicke of the Night in 1984 performing "Peter Gunn Theme,” “40 Miles of Bad Road,” and “Rebel Rouser.”
We now go to Duane kicking it up with the great Carl Perkins live in Nashville in 1994, backed by Duane playing lead for the Mavericks in Carl’s iconic rocker “Matchbox”
Next, live on Letterman, here’s Duane in a final offering of “Rebel Rouser”
We’ll close with Duane giving a very live, very smooth performance of “Dance To The Guitar Man.”
For our first encore, the last night of a 6 week tour in June 1991! Here’s 22 minutes of the audio of a show in Germany.Duane Eddy Live in Germany
For the second encore, an hour and 11 live in London! Duane Eddy Live at the London Palladium – October 2018
For the third encore and finale, Duane giving a very live, very smooth performance of “Dance To The Guitar Man.”
Mister Guitar Man, I heard you in the beginning via the extinct thing called the transistor radio, and knew I had experienced rock and roll in its rawest form. Thanks for all the tunes through the years, Duane, and may you rock on for many more!
© Copyright 2023 Robert Wilkinson
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