decca took over the Brunswick label that Haley and the comets recorded "Rock around the clock" on
Discounting labels for Haley's earlier groups such as the Saddlemen, and reissue labels, Bill Haley and His Comets Recorded for Essex, Decca, Warner Bros., Gone, Roulette, Guest Star, APT, Newtown, Orfeon/Dimsa, Sonet, United Artists, Buddah/Kama Sutra, Bell and Antic. The Comets also did session recordings for Clymax, Coral, and Arcade and recorded "spinoff" projects without Haley for ABC-Paramount and EastWest.
T.I. is currently under the Grand Hustle Entertainment record label...
According to http://shinedown.net Shinedown's record label is Atlantic Records.
Motown was the record label for Diana Ross and the Supremes.
there both great because they are one direction's record label.
Bill Haley and the Comets did "Stop Beatin' round the Mulberry Bush" with flip side "Real Rock Drive" in 1953 for Essex.
Discounting labels for Haley's earlier groups such as the Saddlemen, and reissue labels, Bill Haley and His Comets Recorded for Essex, Decca, Warner Bros., Gone, Roulette, Guest Star, APT, Newtown, Orfeon/Dimsa, Sonet, United Artists, Buddah/Kama Sutra, Bell and Antic. The Comets also did session recordings for Clymax, Coral, and Arcade and recorded "spinoff" projects without Haley for ABC-Paramount and EastWest.
Bill Haley and The Comets
Bill Haley's New Comets was created in 1987.
The leader of the Comets was Bill Haley; they were billed as Bill Haley and his Comets.
I am guessing it,s rock around the clock by Bill Haley & the comets.
There's no indication of anyone by that name playing with Bill Haley and His Comets; there have been no less than 3-4 groups carrying the name Bill Haley's Comets in the years after Haley's death, so someone named Goodson could have performed with one of those groups.
"Rock Around the Clock" was.
Haley's first group as a leader was the Four Aces of Western Swing. Then he formed Bill Haley and the Saddlemen around 1949-1950, which became Bill Haley and the Comets in 1952.
Haley's
Bill Haley & His Comets In 1953, the late James E. Myers, a low-key Philadelphia musician, music publisher and movie extra co-wrote "Rock Around the Clock" with the late Max Freedman, a Philadelphia postal worker turned songwriter. The song was recorded by Bill Haley & His Comets in 1954 and forever changed the landscape of American popular culture. It stalled on the charts, then blasted to No.1 in 1955 after it was showcased as the theme for the teens-gone-wild movie "Blackboard Jungle.
Bill Haley is really the only one I can think of by name, and he wasn't really a Comet himself; the band was billed as "Bill Haley and His Comets."