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Carlo Little

 
Artist: Carlo Little

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  • Born: December 17, 1938, London, England
  • Died: August 06, 2005, Cleadon, Tyne and Wear, England
  • Active: '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Drums

Biography

Drummer Carlo Little was one of the first important British rock & roll musicians, even if he never achieved stardom or recorded as often as some of the slightly younger musicians who followed in his wake. He is best-known, perhaps, for his brief period of drumming live with the Rolling Stones in their early days. This never amounted to bona fide membership, but he did play a few gigs with them in late 1962 and early 1963, when the drum chair in the Stones was still unsettled, as Charlie Watts had yet to fully commit himself to the group. Brian Jones wanted Little to join the Rolling Stones at that point, but Watts did end up going full-time with the band very soon afterward. Screaming Lord Sutch, in whose Savages Little played, remembered that the owners of the Flamingo Club advised Little to stick with Sutch and Long John Baldry instead of wasting his time with a band that was going nowhere: the Stones. Sutch also said that Little ended up recommending that the Stones take Watts on.

By 1963, though, Little was already well-known and admired among rock & roll and R&B enthusiasts in London, as one of the first drummers to play the music in an energetic, unabashed style. One of his admirers was a pre-Who Keith Moon, who took lessons from Little as a teenager. Little's most significant stint was in the early '60s with Screaming Lord Sutch & the Savages, who were among Britain's very first wild rockers, in spite of Sutch's vocal limitations. Little also drummed with another important, more R&B-inclined early '60s British group (though they didn't record much), Cyril Davies' All-Stars.

Little didn't record much beyond the discs on which he played with Sutch and Davies, but he did gig and play with Neil Christian, and record with Heavy Jelly. In the '70s, Little became a full-time bread delivery man, though continuing to play music in his remaining time. He continued to work in the food business in the following decades and play drums live on the side. There is more information about Little and his career on his website, www.carlolittle.com. ~ Richie Unterbergerwww.carlolittle.com. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
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Carlo Little (17 December 1938 — 6 August 2005) was an influential rock and roll drummer, based on the London nightclub scene in the 1960s. He was the first drummer with The Rolling Stones and taught Keith Moon how to play, recounting the story in an episode of the BBC programme Living Famously, devoted to Moon and recorded in 2004.[citation needed] Little was also with Cyril Davies All Stars and was the founding member of Screaming Lord Sutch's Savages.

Contents

Career

Born Carl O'Neil Little at the Queen Charlotte's Hospital, Shepherd's Bush, London, England, he was brought up and lived in Wembley, Middlesex for most of his life - his fellow townsmen included peers Keith Moon, Ginger Baker and Charlie Watts, all of whom would find fame with the same instrument. He was included in the evacuation of civilians during World War II as a child, and sent to relatives in Wales during the Blitz in London.

As a teenager he discovered Ted Heath and then skiffle music, especially Chris Barber and Lonnie Donegan. Skiffle inspired Little to join a band, Derek Addison's Rhythm Katz. By the late 1950s rock and roll had arrived in the United Kingdom, and Little became a huge fan of Chuck Berry and Little Richard, whose drummer Earl Palmer he was influenced by. Little found himself called up in 1958 to join the British National service, where he served in Kenya and Malta and was singled out to become head drummer due to his loud playing. He was demobbed in 1960.

On his return to civilian life he met David Sutch and formed The Savages with amongst others Nicky Hopkins who lived locally. Screaming Lord Sutch and The Savages toured the UK and became known for their unique British rock and roll shows. The bulk of the band members, including Carlo, left in 1962 to join the Cyril Davies All Stars and cut a single 'Country Line Special', an instrumental track which influenced Keith Richard and Ray Davies. He also played a few gigs with the young Rolling Stones and was asked by Brian Jones to join permanently before they hired Charlie Watts as their official drummer in January 1963. In 1998, during their European tour, he was invited as an official guest backstage at one of their Paris concerts..[1]

Carlo continued to work as a session drummer throughout the 1960s and played in pub bands throughout the 1970s and 1980s, until he reformed the All Stars in 2000 and recorded an album, 'Never Stop Rockin' which also featured Ron Wood, Jeff Beck and Long John Baldry.

Next to his musical activities, he worked as a bread salesman and entrepreneur until his retirement.[2]

Little died of lung cancer in Cleadon, Tyne and Wear in 2005, at the age of 66. The Carlo Little All Stars album Never Stop Rockin' was released by Angel Air records in January 2009.

See also

References

  1. ^ official website
  2. ^ official website

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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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