Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Rockin' at the Hops

 
Album Review: Rockin' at the Hops
 

  • Artist: Chuck Berry
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: 1960
  • Total Time: 26:36
  • Genre: Rock

Review

The two classic cuts that bookend this album should be enough to attract the uninitiated -- Berry at his best wrote danceable little "vest-pocket" screenplays dealing with teen life, of which "Bye Bye Johnny" and "Let It Rock" were two of his best; but because they've been so heavily anthologized, those two cuts don't have the pulling power here that they would have had 40-some years back. So get this record for everything else that's on it -- Rockin' at the Hops not only has no filler, but it's chock full of records that show off a bluesy side of Berry's output that was never fully appreciated at the time. His version of Big Maceo's "Worried Life Blues" shows how good a bluesman Berry might've been had he been more the Muddy Waters-type player and singer that Chess had been looking for; "Down the Road a Piece," a song written by Don Raye (of "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" fame), is a lost Berry single that could've rated right up there with "Roll Over Beethoven," except that its roadhouse ambience and story line were more mature than a lot of kids might've embraced in 1959; and Walter Brown's "Confessin' the Blues" and "Driftin' Blues" fit into the same category, Berry the adult bluesman rather than the teen-oriented teaser. "Childhood Sweetheart" is a sequel to "Wee Wee Hours," Berry's very first blues side, lifting a fragment or two from Elmore James' "Dust My Broom" for its guitar break. "Too Pooped to Pop" and "Betty Jean," by contrast, are a pair of enjoyably upbeat rock & roll numbers, each featuring uncharacteristic elements, a sax solo on the former, and a male chorus on the latter; in between them is "Mad Lad," an instrumental that presents Berry drifting into what would later be defined as a surf guitar mode -- a quicker tempo would have done it (and does anyone want to bet that a young Carl Wilson didn't wear out a copy or two listening to this track?). ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Bye Bye Johnny Chuck Berry Chuck Berry (2:02)
Worried Life Blues Big Maceo Merriweather Chuck Berry (2:07)
Down the Road a Piece Don Raye Chuck Berry (2:10)
Confessin' the Blues Jay McShann, Walter Brown Chuck Berry (2:06)
Too Pooped to Pop Chuck Berry Chuck Berry (2:31)
Mad Lad B.B. Davis Chuck Berry (2:06)
I Got to Find My Baby Chuck Berry Chuck Berry (2:12)
Betty Jean Chuck Berry Chuck Berry (2:25)
Childhood Sweetheart Chuck Berry Chuck Berry (2:40)
Broken Arrow Chuck Berry (2:19)
Driftin' Blues Charles Brown, Johnny Moore's Three Blazers, Eddie Williams Chuck Berry (2:16)
Let It Rock Chuck Berry Chuck Berry (1:42)

Credits

Willie Dixon (Bass), Matt "Guitar" Murphy (Guitar), Chuck Berry (Guitar), Chuck Berry (Vocals), Chuck Berry (Main Performer), Johnnie Johnson (Piano), Fred Below (Drums), L.C. Davis (Sax (Tenor)), Eddie Hardy (Drums), Bob Schnieders (Liner Notes)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Wikipedia: Rockin' at the Hops
Top
Rockin' At The Hops
Rockin' At The Hops cover
Studio album by Chuck Berry
Released 1960
Recorded Unknown
Genre Rock and roll
Length 26:36
Label Chess Records
Producer Leonard Chess
Philip Chess
Chuck Berry chronology
Chuck Berry Is on Top
(1959)
Rockin' At The Hops
(1960)
New Juke-Box Hits
(1961)

Rockin' At The Hops is a Chuck Berry album which was released in 1960 under Chess Records.

Track listing

  1. "Bye Bye Johnny" – 2:02
  2. "Worried Life Blues" – 2:07
  3. "Down The Road A Piece" – 2:10
  4. "Confessin' The Blues" – 2:06
  5. "Too Pooped To Pop" – 2:31
  6. "Mad Lad" – 2:06
  7. "I Got To Find My Baby" – 2:12
  8. "Betty Jean" – 2:25
  9. "Childhood Sweetheart" – 2:40
  10. "Broken Arrow" – 2:19
  11. "Drifting Blues" – 2:16
  12. "Let It Rock" (Chuck Berry song) – 1:42

Personnel


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Rockin' at the Hops" Read more