Fats Domino, Early Rock ’n’ Roller With a Boogie-Woogie Piano, Is Dead at 89
He was number 169 on the list.
Fats Domino, the New Orleans rhythm-and-blues singer whose
two-fisted boogie-woogie piano and nonchalant vocals, heard on dozens of hits,
made him one of the biggest stars of the early rock ’n’ roll era, died on
Tuesday at his home in Harvey, La., across the Mississippi River from New
Orleans. He was 89.
His death was confirmed by the Jefferson Parish coroner’s
office.
Mr. Domino had more than three dozen Top 40 pop hits through
the 1950s and early ’60s, among them “Blueberry Hill,” “Ain’t It a Shame” (also
known as “Ain’t That a Shame,” which is the actual lyric), “I’m Walkin’,” “Blue
Monday” and “Walkin’ to New Orleans.” Throughout he displayed both the buoyant
spirit of New Orleans, his hometown, and a droll resilience that reached
listeners worldwide.
He sold 65 million singles in those years, with 23 gold
records, making him second only to Elvis Presley as a commercial force. Presley
acknowledged Mr. Domino as a predecessor.
“A lot of people seem to think I started this business,”
Presley told Jet magazine in 1957. “But rock ’n’ roll was here a long time
before I came along. Nobody can sing that music like colored people. Let’s face
it: I can’t sing it like Fats Domino can. I know that.”
Rotund and standing 5 feet 5 inches — he would joke that he
was as wide as he was tall — Mr. Domino had a big, infectious grin, a fondness
for ornate, jewel-encrusted rings and an easygoing manner in performance; even
in plaintive songs his voice had a smile in it. And he was a master of the
wordless vocal, making hits out of songs full of “woo-woos” and “la-las.”
Working with the songwriter, producer and arranger David
Bartholomew, Mr. Domino and his band carried New Orleans parade rhythms into
rock ’n’ roll and put a local stamp on nearly everything they touched, even
country tunes like “Jambalaya” or big-band songs like “My Blue Heaven” and
“When My Dreamboat Comes Home.”
Antoine Dominique Domino Jr. was born on Feb. 26, 1928, the
youngest of eight children in a family with Creole roots. He grew up in the
Ninth Ward of New Orleans, where he spent most of his life.
Music filled his life from the age of 10, when his family
inherited an old piano. After his brother-in-law Harrison Verrett, a
traditional-jazz musician, wrote down the notes on the keys and taught him a
few chords, Antoine threw himself at the instrument — so enthusiastically that
his parents moved it to the garage.
He was almost entirely self-taught, picking up ideas from
boogie-woogie masters like Meade Lux Lewis, Pinetop Smith and Amos Milburn.
“Back then I used to play everybody’s records; everybody’s records who made
records,” he told the New Orleans music magazine Offbeat in 2004. “I used to
hear ’em, listen at ’em five, six, seven, eight times and I could play it just
like the record because I had a good ear for catchin’ notes and different
things.”
He attended the Louis B. Macarty School but dropped out in
the fourth grade to work as an iceman’s helper. “In the houses where people had
a piano in their rooms, I’d stop and play,” he told USA Today in 2007. “That’s
how I practiced.”
In his teens, he started working at a club called the
Hideaway with a band led by the bassist Billy Diamond, who nicknamed him Fats.
Mr. Domino soon became the band’s frontman and a local draw.
“Fats was breaking up the place, man,” Mr. Bartholomew told
The Cleveland Plain Dealer in 2010. “He was singing and playing the piano and
carrying on. Everyone was having a good time. When you saw Fats Domino, it was
‘Let’s have a party!’ ”
He added: “My first impression was a lasting impression. He
was a great singer. He was a great artist. And whatever he was doing, nobody
could beat him.”
In 1947 Mr. Domino married Rosemary Hall, and they had eight
children, Antoine III, Anatole, Andre, Antonio, Antoinette, Andrea, Anola and
Adonica. His wife died in 2008. A complete list of survivors was not
immediately available.
In 1949 Mr. Bartholomew brought Lew Chudd, the owner of
Imperial Records in Los Angeles, to the Hideaway. Mr. Chudd signed Mr. Domino
on the spot, with a contract, unusual for the time, that paid royalties rather
than a one-time purchase of songs.
Immediately, Mr. Domino and Mr. Bartholomew wrote “The Fat
Man,” a cleaned-up version of a song about drug addiction called “Junkers
Blues,” and recorded it with Mr. Bartholomew’s studio band. By 1951 it had sold
a million copies.
Mr. Domino’s trademark triplets, picked up from “It’s Midnight,”
a 1949 record by the boogie-woogie pianist and singer Little Willie
Littlefield, appeared on his next rhythm-and-blues hit, “Every Night About This
Time.” The technique spread like wildfire, becoming a virtual requirement for
rock ’n’ roll ballads.
“Fats made it popular,” Mr. Bartholomew told Rick Coleman,
the author of “Blue Monday: Fats Domino and the Lost Dawn of Rock ’n’ Roll”
(2006). “Then it was on every record.”
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