Lonnie Donegan
Lonnie Donegan rose to international fame as one of the founding
fathers of a new wave of music called Skiffle that swept the
world during the 1950's.
He was born Anthony Donegan of
Irish/Scottish parentage in Glasgow, Scotland, on 29 April 1931,
and started to take an active interest in music as a teenager,
teaching himself to play guitar and drums. Lonnie was fascinated
by American blues and Dixieland.
In 1949, while serving in the British Army in Vienna, he spent
his spare time entertaining his fellow serviceman, and on
demobilisation he formed his own folk-oriented group and turned
professional.
Not long after its formation, the group appeared in
London with the American blues singer Lonnie Johnson, from whom
Donegan adopted his professional stage name.
But when the group
later failed to achieve any kind of lasting success, Donegan
disbanded the outfit and joined the Ken Colyer Jazz Band - which
was later taken over by Chris Barber - playing guitar and banjo.
In 1954, still very much an active member of the now renamed
Chris Barber Band, Lonnie recorded several numbers for Decca
Records, one of which was Rock Island Line. It was
released a year later and within weeks became a fantastic success
in Britain and America. The success was totally unexpected, but
Lonnie now left the Barber band and once again formed his own
group.
Rock Island Line sold more than three million copies
worldwide, but Lonnie received just $7 as a session fee for
making the record.
He followed up this initial smash record with a vast array of
hit records, often adapting old folk and blues songs into the new
skiffle sound, among them Lost John (1956), Bring
A Little Water Sylvie (1956), Don't You Rock Me Daddy-O
(1957), Cumberland Gap and Gamblin' Man/Puttin' On
The Style (both number one hits in 1957), Does Your
Chewing Gum Lose It's Flavour (1959), Battle Of New
Orleans (1959), My Old Man's A Dustman (which in
1960 became the first ever record to enter the British hit parade
at Number 1), Have A Drink On Me (1961) and Pick A
Bale Of Cotton (1962). For seven years he enjoyed great
success and even fronted his own record label for Pye - 'Lonnie
Donegan Presents . . .'
Not content to rest on his laurels, Lonnie started to branch
out in show business and diversify his talents. As early as 1957
he appeared on the variety stage, starring in pantomimes and
summer seasons, establishing himself as an all-round entertainer.
He had a ready-made market.
Throughout the 1960's and early 1970's, Lonnie Donegan's
career thrived. He enjoyed success in concert and cabaret in
Britain, and undertook seasons in Canada and America - where he
regularly played Las Vegas. Then in 1976 he suffered three major
heart attacks in rapid succession which curtailed his performing.
He later made his home in California.
Two years later he was back in the recording studio at the
suggestion of Paul McCartney, to make a new album called
Puttin'
On The Style, which was a contemporary re-working of many of
his former hits. The album featured some of the biggest recording
names in rock music as Lonnie's side-men - Elton
John, Leo Sayer,
Brian May from Queen, Ringo
Starr, Rory Gallagher, Ron Wood (from
The Move and Wizzard) and Adam
Faith, who produced the set.
The same year, he returned to touring Britain with a new group,
and in 1979 he featured at the celebrated annual Festival of
Country Music at London's Wembley Arena.
In 1992 Donegan underwent further bypass surgery following
another heart attack. He was awarded the OBE in 2000 and
eventually died on 4 November 2002, after a final heart attack in
Peterborough, mid-way through a UK tour and shortly before he was
due to perform at a memorial concert for George
Harrison. He was
71.
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