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Oscar McLollie

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Birth name
  
Oscar Mack Lollie

Instruments
  
Vocals

Occupation(s)
  
Singer

Years active
  
Mid-1940s–c.1980s

Oscar McLollie wwwvocalgroupharmonycom4ROWNEWOscarMcLollie2jpg

Born
  
September 22, 1924 Kelly, Louisiana, United States (
1924-09-22
)

Died
  
4 July 2008, Oakland, California, United States

Albums
  
Roll, Hot Rod, Roll, Hot Lollies, The Very Best Of

Genres
  
Jump blues, Rhythm and blues

Record labels
  
Modern Records, Mercury Records

Similar
  
Googie René, Maxwell Davis, Bob Holman

Oscar mclollie convicted modern 970 a


Oscar McLollie (born Oscar Mack Lollie, September 22, 1924 – July 4, 2008) was an American jump blues singer.

Contents

Oscar mclollie roll hot rod roll modern 970 b


Biography

He was born in Kelly, Louisiana. He was drafted into service in World War II, and sang baritone with a vocal group, the Bullets, at USO shows. After the war he moved to Los Angeles, and sang in local jump blues bands before being recruited by Mercury Records, for a short time, as their West Coast A&R man for black music. He also recorded the song "I'm Hurt" for Mercury.

When McLollie's contract with Mercury ended, he returned to performing, and in 1953 was asked by Leon René and his son Rafael "Googie" René to record their song "The Honey Jump" for their new record label, Class. The upbeat song, with honking saxes and pounding piano, became a regional hit and was leased to Modern Records, but was covered more successfully by other artists. His follow-up, "All That Oil In Texas", was also successful locally. Oscar McLollie and his Honey Jumpers continued over the next few years to record a series of songs written by Leon or Googie René, including "God Gave Us Christmas", and "Lolly Pop" which was covered by Louis Jordan.

McLollie and his band remained popular live performers. In 1955, he recorded the ballad "Convicted", with an upbeat B-side, "Roll Hot Rod, Roll". The single was promoted by DJ Alan Freed, became McLollie's biggest seller on the Modern label, and won him a slot on the Hunter Hancock TV show. However, later releases were less successful. After returning to the Class label, he achieved his only national chart success in 1958 when "Hey Girl – Hey Boy", a duet with Jeanette Baker backed by Googie René's band, reached number 61 on the Billboard pop chart. The song was also covered by Louis Prima and Keely Smith. However, it was not successfully followed up, Baker claiming that "McLollie was an extremely difficult person to work with.. we just didn't get along."

Later, McLollie continued to perform in cabaret in Los Angeles. Reportedly, he also spent some time in the Philippines, where he appeared in low-budget martial arts movies.

He died in Oakland, California, in 2008.

Songs

Hey Girl - Hey Boy
Dig That Crazy Santa Claus
Hot Banana

References

Oscar McLollie Wikipedia