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Joe Jones (singer)

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Name
  
Joe Jones


Role
  
Singer

Joe Jones (singer) wwwwaybackattackcomimagesphotojonesjoejpg

Died
  
November 27, 2005, Los Angeles, California, United States

Albums
  
You Talk Too Much - The Best Of

Similar People
  
Serge Chaloff, Count Basie, Miles Davis, Cannonball Adderley, John Coltrane

Joseph Charles "Joe" Jones (August 12, 1926 – November 27, 2005) was an American R&B singer, songwriter and arranger, who was born in New Orleans, Louisiana. Jones is also generally credited with discovering the Dixie Cups. He also worked with B.B. King. As a singer, Jones had his greatest hit in the form of the Top Five 1960 R&B hit "You Talk Too Much", which also reached #3 on the pop chart.

Contents

Joe Jones (singer) Joe Jones 1925 2005 Find A Grave Memorial

Nic joe jones legendary duo live at the ryburn folk club


Career

Jones served in the U.S. Navy, where he played piano in a band, before studying music at the Juilliard Conservatory of Music. He formed a band, Joe Jones and his Atomic Rebops, in the late 1940s; band members played on Roy Brown's 1947 hit "Good Rocking Tonight". He was expelled from the Musicians Union in New Orleans for attempting to set up a rival organization, but was later reinstated.

He became a valet, then pianist and arranger for B.B. King, and recorded his first solo single, "Adam Bit the Apple", for Capitol Records in 1954. He also discovered Shirley and Lee, whose recording of "Let the Good Times Roll" became a hit in 1956. In 1960, a re-recording of a song he had first recorded in 1958, "You Talk Too Much", became a national success, but his subsequent releases were less successful.

Jones claimed to have composed many songs, including the song "Iko Iko." Although his assertions were originally successful, a federal jury and then Court of Appeals ruled that Jones did not write "Iko Iko," that his claims were fraudulent, and that the true writers were the band he managed, the Dixie Cups (the true original recording of this song had been released as Checker 787 by New Orleans singer and pianist Sugar Boy Crawford and his Cane Cutters in late 1953). The band hired music attorney Oren Warshavsky, who had previously won a case demonstrating that Jones falsely professed ownership of another Mardi Gras classic song, "It Ain't My Fault." Jones also failed in his bid to declare title (though not as an author) to yet another Mardi Gras classic song, "Carnival Time." He also recorded the original "California Sun", which was made a hit by the Rivieras.

He later moved into music publishing, and worked tirelessly for the rights of fellow R&B acts. In 1973 Jones set up a company in Los Angeles, California, making advertising jingles.

He died in 2005 from complications from quadruple bypass surgery.

References

Joe Jones (singer) Wikipedia