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Bill Justis

 
Artist: Bill Justis

Similar Artists:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Justis Manker, Sid Manker

Worked With:

Billy Sherrill, Billy Sanford, Hargus "Pig" Robbins, Bob Moore, Sheldon Kurland, Ray Edenton, Jerry Carrigan, Jimmy Capps, Larry Butler
  • Born: October 14, 1927, Birmingham, AL
  • Died: July 15, 1982, Nashville, TN
  • Active: '50s, '60s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrumental Rock Instrument: Saxophone, Arranger, Songwriter
  • Representative Albums: "Raunchy," "Raunchy: The Very Best of Bill Justis," "Bill Justis Plays 12 Smash Instrumental Hits"
  • Representative Songs: "Raunchy," "College Man," "Scroungie"

Biography

Best known to most listeners for the aptly-titled instrumental smash "Raunchy," Bill Justis was also a longtime linchpin of the Nashville recording community, working as a producer, musical director and A&R man for labels including Sun and Mercury. Born October 14, 1927 in Birmingham, Alabama, he grew up in Memphis, studying music and English at Tulane University while playing trumpet in local jazz and dance bands. In 1957 the legendary Sam Phillips hired Justis to serve as the musical director for his Sun Records label--at 30, he was a good decade older than most of Sun's artists and had little interest in rock-and-roll until he learned just how lucrative the music had become. With guitarist Sid Manker, Justis composed a wild, primitive instrumental they dubbed "Backwoods"; Phillips renamed the tune "Raunchy," releasing it as a single in November 1957. Although Justis' honking tenor sax assumed center stage, what made "Raunchy" so unique was Manker's guitar--he forged the song's distinctive riff not from the traditional middle strings but from the bass strings, creating a cavernous, resonant sound further buffered by studio echo. The single proved Sun's best-selling instrumental release ever, staying in the pop Top 40 for 14 weeks. Justis would nevertheless score only more chart hit: "College Man," which only went as high as number 42. He continued recording the occasional single (including "Flea Circus," penned by Steve Cropper) but by and large focused the remainder of his career on studio work, arranging sessions for Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash and Roy Orbison. Justis also discovered Charlie Rich at Memphis nightspot the Sharecropper Club and brought him to Sun, in 1960 arranging Rich's first major hit "Lonely Weekends." However, squabbles with Phillips prompted Justis to leave Sun soon after, and he formed his own label, the short-lived Play Me Records, soon after moving to Nashville and briefly reuniting with Rich at RCA before landing with Mercury, which remained his home for the remainder of his career. In the years to follow Justis would arrange records for everyone from Patsy Cline to Dean Martin to Tom Jones, also recording a series of instrumental LPs for Mercury's Smash subsidiary. In 1972 he scored his first film, Dear Dead Delilah--in 1977, he scored the smash Smokey and the Bandit, reuniting with star Burt Reynolds a year later for Hooper. Justis died of cancer on July 14, 1982. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Bill Justis
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William E. "Bill" Justis Jr. (October 14, 1927 – July 15, 1982[1]) was an American pioneer rock and roll musician, composer, and musical arranger best known for his 1957 Grammy Hall of Fame song, "Raunchy."

Justis was born in Birmingham, Alabama but grew up in Memphis, Tennessee and studied music at Christian Brothers College (high school department) and Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana. A trumpet and saxophone player, while in university he performed with local jazz and dance bands. He returned home to Memphis in 1954 and was eventually taken on by Sam Phillips at Sun Records where he recorded music for himself as well as arranged the music for Sun artists such as Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison, Johnny Cash and Charlie Rich. Released in November 1957, his song "Raunchy" was the first rock and roll instrumental hit, and its popularity was such that it reached No.2 on the American Billboard chart and got to No. 1 on the Australian charts. It reached No. 11 in the UK Singles Chart.[1] Justis had one other significant hit record, "College Man", that went to U.S. No. 42.

In 1961, Justis moved to Nashville where he became a successful record producer and music arranger for both pop and country music performers at Monument and Mercury Records and other labels. He played saxophone on the soundtrack for the 1964 Elvis Presley film, Kissin' Cousins and that same year took over as manager of the singing group, Ronny & the Daytonas.

Justis had a number one hit in Australia in 1963 with "Tamoure". The song did not chart on the Billboard Hot 100. In the early 1960s he produced a successful series of instrumental album on the Smash label. Justis is credited by Ray Stevens in the TNN special The Life and Times of Ray Stevens for giving him the phrase "gitarzan" for which became a million selling pop hit for Stevens in 1969.

Justis also wrote the music for several Hollywood motion pictures including the 1977 Burt Reynolds / Sally Field hit Smokey and the Bandit and the acting duos 1978 film, Hooper.

Justis died of cancer in Nashville in 1982, at the age of 55, and was interred in the Memorial Park Cemetery in Memphis.

References

  1. ^ a b Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 294. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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