Lenny LaCour

Lenny LaCour (born Leonard James LaCour Sr., April 27,1932 in Bayou Brevelle, Louisiana) is a record producer, songwriter and performer, particularly active from the mid-1950s to the mid-1970s.[1] He is particularly notable as the producer of the principal recordings of singer Harvey Scales.

History

I'd call Lenny a cross between Sam Phillips and Colonel [Tom] Parker. But he doesn't have the attack thing they did.
Bob Kaider, 2003[2]
In Chicago, Lenny was one of the early pioneers of pushing and creating rock 'n' roll. Lenny recorded vocal groups and the approximation of rockabilly we had here. Some of his records got considerable play here and nationwide. But no one really recognizes the guy.
Robert Pruter, 2003 [2]
Lenny was more outstanding than his artists. He was Creole and had pretty hair. He was soft-spoken, but intense about producing his records. He was a classic example of a local record promoter.
Herb "the Cool Gent" Kent, former disc jockey at WBEE-AM, who first met Lenny LaCour in 1960; 2003[2]

Lenny LaCour was born in 1932 in Louisiana, where his parents were corn and cotton farmers on the Isle of Brevelle. The location, near the Cane River, later became well known as the site location for the film Steel Magnolias.[2]

Lenny LaCour's career in music initially commenced as a performer and songwriter, based in Chicago. LaCour's Creole heritage enabled him to move freely between Chicago's black and white nightclubs during the early 50s. "There were only two people doing that," LaCour has said. The other was Leonard Chess, owner of Chess Records.[2] In 1952, he auditioned for Leonard Chess, who rejected him, stating in the presence of Muddy Waters and LaCour[2] that Chess Records did not produce white artists.[1] Waters is reported to have said, "Mr. Chess, he's got a whole lot of soul in his voice."[2]

From 1952 to 1956, LaCour released several singles on the Chicago-based All American, Spin and Meteor labels.[1] As described by Dik De Heer:

LaCour's break came in 1956, when he won a Chicago jingle contest for Orange Crush, the soda bottling subsidiary of Pepsi-Cola. Under the name of King Creole, he performed a series of TV and radio spots for Orange Crush and soon singles of "Rock 'n' Roll Romance" were distributed with every Crush sixpack. This project was tied into a recording contract with Frank McGovern's Academy label, recording under his given name, Lenny LaCour.[1]

"Rock 'n' Roll Romance" was LaCour's biggest hit, described by LaCour as "the only million seller not to be on the Billboard charts".[2] The record is highly collectible; LaCour no longer owns a personal copy, having sold all of his own copies to a record collector.[2]

LaCour trademarked the name "King Creole" in 1952, and has asserted that a chance meeting with Elvis Presley was the inspiration for the title of the Presley movie King Creole.[2]

In 1960, LaCour started his first record label, Lucky Four Records, where LaCour was the songwriter, arranger, producer and main artist. He recorded under the name "Big Rocker".[2]

In 2008, the album Walkin' The Bullfrog (Night Train International) was released, which provided a career overview of Lenny LaCour's solo recordings.[1][3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Dik De Heer, with Gary Meyers and Eric LeBlanc, Biography of Lenny LaCour, including citation reference of Robert Pruter, "The Lenny LaCour Story". In Now Dig This, Issue 151 (October 1995), pp. 6-8. BlackCat Rockabilly Europe. Retrieved 2011-12-18. "Bayou Brevelle" is inaccurately identified as "Bayou Bredelle". See Explore Historic Natchitoches. Retrieved 2011-12-23.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Dave Hoekstra, "Almost Famous". Chicago Reader, February 6, 2003. Retrieved 2011-12-22.
  3. ^ Tuff City Records, Overview of Walkin' The Bullfrog. Retrieved 2012-01-02.