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Smokestack Lightnin' Home Page -- The Blues Profile Page
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"Rock ‘n’ roll saxophone pretty much begins with Big Jay Mc
Neely. He’s the king of the honkin’, squealin’, bar walkin’,
flat-on-his-back Blowin’ tenor men -the Number One “real gone guy” of
the 50’s.-" Black & White Blues (the Book)
For the next several years, Big Jay, according to The New Rolling Stone Encyclopedia of Rock & Roll, "was famed for his playing-on-his-back acrobatics and his raw, hard-swinging playing." During his act he'd leave the stage, walk across the top of the bar, and sometimes walk out the door of the club, often with a line of people following him. Once, in San Diego, during one such "walk," he was arrested on the street for disturbing the peace; inside the club, his band kept playing until someone could rush down to the police station, post Big Jay's bail, and bring him back to finish his song. In the early- to mid-fifties, Big Jay added vocal groups to his act,
beginning with Four Dots & Dash, which included, at one time oranother,
16-year-old Jesse Belvin, Marvin Phillips (later of Marvin & Johnny
fame), Tony Allen and Mel Williams. In fact, Belvin made his first
recordings with Big Jay, including "All That Wine Is Gone." Big Jay also
worked extensively with The Hollywood Flames, The Penguins and The
Medallions up and down the West Coast. In 1955-56 he shared the stage
with the Clovers, the Harptones (at the Apollo Theater), Bill Haley and
His Comets, the Moonglows, Little Richard, and others. Big Jay retired from full-time music for 20 years, but in 1983 he returned to performing and hasn't looked back. In 1987 he played in a blues jam with B.B. King, Robert Cray, Etta James, Albert King, Junior Wells and others on the internationally-televised Grammy Awards. Two years later, he was honking outside the Quasimodo Club in West Berlin on the night the Berlin Wall came down--and the German press jokingly called him "the modern Joshua" after the rumor went around the Big Jay helped blow it down with his horn. In 2000 the Experience Music Project in Seattle installed a special Big Jay McNeely exhibit that includes his original Conn saxophone; the Smithsonian magazine put the horn on its June 2000 issue cover, along with Jimi Hendrix's hat, Janis Jopin's feather boa, and Eric Clapton's Stratocaster. Big Jay is also the subject of Jim Dawson's Nervous Man Nervous: Big Jay McNeely & the Rise of the Honking Tenor Saxophone (Big Nickel Press, 1995), the only book ever written about the R&B sax and its influences. These days Big Jay McNeely spends a good deal of time playing in Europe, Australia and Japan, but he has also had time to honk and shout at several Doo-Wop Society concerts, blues and jazz festivals, the Viva Las Vegas Rockabilly Festival, and the Rockin’ 50s fest in Green Bay. He has also recently appeared in several of Art LaBoe’s variety concerts. Big Jay is still tearing it up and knows how to delight and entertain an audience of any size, from small clubs to stadium crowds. One of the last true old school entertainers, Big Jay is still available for booking at select concerts, festivals and clubs.
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