Sunday, March 25, 2007

March 25th, 2007 - This Day In History

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1957 : Ricky Nelson Records First Hits




Ricky Nelson, the real-life son of Ozzie and Harriet Nelson, who played himself on the hit radio and TV series The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, cuts his first records, "A Teenager's Romance" and "I'm Walkin'." A few weeks later, he sang the songs on the TV series and became an overnight pop star, despite his complete lack of musical experience.

Nelson was born in 1940 to famous parents: His father, Ozzie, was a bandleader, and his mother, Harriet, was a singer and actress. When Ricky was four years old, his parents launched their radio series, playing themselves, with actors playing their young sons. Five years later, Ricky and his older brother, David, suggested that they, like their parents, play themselves on the series. In 1952, the series moved to TV.

Nelson attended Hollywood High School and showed little interest in music until his girlfriend raved to him about Elvis. He boasted that he was about to cut a record himself. His father let him cut a demo with his orchestra; Nelson claimed he chose to cover Fats Domino's "I'm Walkin'" because it relied heavily on the two guitar chords Nelson knew how to play.

When Nelson played the song on the TV series, he became an overnight sensation. His first album, released in November 1957, topped the Billboard charts, and Nelson became one of the best-selling male singers of the 1950s, with 53 Hot 100 hits, 17 in the Top 10. Nelson later changed his name from Ricky to Rick. He also appeared in several movies, including Rio Bravo, with John Wayne and Dean Martin, in 1959 and The Wackiest Ship in the Army in 1960.

After Ozzie and Harriet went off the air in 1966, Nelson's music career fizzled until he discovered the emerging style of country rock. On two albums, he covered country material and scored a few hits in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Although he would never be a superstar again, he continued touring aggressively, performing more than 200 nights a year. He put together a new band in 1985 and signed a new record deal, but on December 31, en route to a concert in Texas, he died in a plane crash at age 45. The last song he performed live, the night before, was a cover of "Rave On" by Buddy Holly, who also died in a plane crash.