It was Roger Daltrey who said that Elvis turned everyone onto Rock and Roll but that it was Lonnie Donegan who opened it up for everyone to go out and form groups. He was a huge influence on a huge number of British bands of the late 50s and early 60s
Just learned of Lonnie watching a Lead Belly video wherein George Harrison is quoted, "Without Lead Belly, there'd be no Lonnie Donegan; with no Lonnie, there'd be no Beatles." HTF am I just now @ age 54 yrs learning of Lonnie? He was awesome!
I was a teen in '61, living in Minneapolis. I remember hearing "Rock Island Line" on local radio back then. And THEN - "Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavor On The Bedpost Overnight" exploded. Magic - I've been a fan ever since.
There would be no Beatles, Stones, Zepplin, Queen, Bee Gees etc etc etc etc etc etc etc etc without this man inspiring so many young British kids to pick up a guitar and make music their life...
The Beatles, The Stones, Fleetwood Mac, Led Zeppelin, Tom Jones - BASICALLY EVERY SINGLE GROUP/ARTIST WHO WERE ALL PART OF "THE BRITISH INVASION" (ie: the music/soundtrack of the sixties and seventies - you have the man above to thank for that!!! Lonnie Donegan was responsible for the British Invasion; Elvis Presley and Chuck Berry were responsible for the American equivalent!! FACTS.) MAY ALL THREE MEN REST IN HARMONIOUS PEACE!! 🤍🌹🕊️
I worked on several concerts over the years with Lonnie, mostly at the Chris Barber re-union tours, and was at his funeral to pay my last respects to the great man. Joe Brown did the eulogy and looking towards the coffin at the end said, " Such a small casket for such a great man ".. Just about summed him up really..
I have to assume my feet were moving, since my legs have no feeling from the knees down, these days. But I know my heart was beating faster! LOVE Lonnie!
I’m named after Lonnie Donegan!! But my mum wanted to spell it Loni! I’m so glad I’ve come across this and actually taken the time to listen to Lonnie! I absolutely love it and I’ll be listening to more!!
This song was part of my childhood in the mid-fifties, heard on the wireless. We had no TV and I asked my dad what Lonnie Donegan looked like. He screwed his eyes up and pulled his lips back to show his clenched teeth. I didn't believe him, but later when I saw Lonnie belting out the Rock Island Line lyrics at full pace I saw my dad was right. Still love Lonnie's version of that song. Great performer.
You know, in the US, we don't even know who Lonnie Donegan is. People who are into music know his name as the guy who inspired John, Paul, and George to start a skiffle band, and that's about it. My God, I love this man. He is absolutely wonderful.
Half of America have never seen the ocean and believe in something called god! Why would they have the inclination to search out a Scottish icon? I've had to tell Pensylvanians about Johhny Appleseed. Sorry man, but America is the fattest most ignorant nation on earth. By the way, I work with a revolving door of international sportspeople. I commend you on your taste. Lonnie was from Glasgow, Scotland, like myself. Rock on. 👊
@@strexus Your ridiculous alcohol fueled insults aside, Skiffle never made it to America. We were the musical influencers at the time, rather than the influenced. Bill Haley, Little Richard, blues artists, and then came the movie, "The Girl Can't Help It", which effectively put Skiffle in the ground and replaced it with Rock N Roll. From there, British youth embraced rock, made it their own and influenced the world.
I have watched The Voice video of Peter Donegan with Tom Jones about 6 times, its wondeful brought tears to my eyes every time. I live in Canada now so missed it last Saturday but thank goodness for Face Book & RUclips.
Im 80 now and was inspired to form a skiffle group after listing to LD. The Beatles.were also.influenced by him and many other 60s bands. Thanks to LD for bringing music to life and influencing so many. As Joe Brown said at LD's funeral, "Such a small casket to contain such a huge talent"
But! I'm 76 now, and I'd be thrilled to join @JohnRawlinsonCyprus ' new band. I always wanted to form an instrumental 'surf' music band, and call us 'The Dentures'. Can't find any personnel, tho.@@tedtimmis8135
Stunning! Never realized a British man could sing such American music as we as any in America. He did it his way. Musical genius. He seems so nervous here. He defined British bluegrass, it seems to me, and they called it Skiffle. I have bought some CDs to listen to him in respectable sound quality. A great discovery after 45 years of loving music.
My Grandad died a week ago yesterday, wish I knew the man better than I did but while talking to my Mum and my Nan recently and learning more, I learnt of my Grandad’s love for skiffle. I’d never heard of it, or Lonnie... I’m glad I have now. Cheers Grandad Ray, I’ll have a drink on you x
Lonnie Donegan spread rock music into the UK/Europe, he had a huge stage presence with the relaxation to use some humour to get the message across. Thanks!
It’s amazing because here he is playing pure American folk blues on telly years before the stones etc “discovered” it. I think his comedy stuff did get in the way of just how revolutionary he was. I LOVED his comedy stuff as a kid, this came later 🎶👍🏼👍🏼
I remember it like it was yesterday, but I'd never seen him perform it. He gave it his all and made novelty songs sound great. PS If you don't know him his other big hit from the day was Does Your Chewing Gum Lose It's Flavor On The Bedpost Overnight
this song was big on Chicago radio around 1960. It is one that certainly shaped my life. the trains coming into Chicago were awesome. Gosh, yes! So was Lonnie Donegan.
This is a Freedom song. In July 1954 Englishman Lonnie Donegan recorded a fast version of Leadbelly's "Rock Island Line". It was a hit in 1956. Donegan made no money because it was a bandsong. It was the first debut record to go gold in the UK. It reached the US Top Ten. It proved greatly influential on musicians in their younger days and was a catalyst in their musical motivation and careers. The skiffle style encouraged amateurs and one of many groups that followed was the Quarrymen, formed in March 1957 by John Lennon.
Being the son of a train man, this song was a hit when I was a youngster. A ride in a '56 Buick with my teenage buddy, on the old 2-lane out to Elgin, Illinois, his Mom swaying in the back seat as we cruised across the country.
I came here because I was checking a post on social media about trains and saw the Rock Island Line. I remembered a version of this from a movie called The General's Daughter.
In 1956 or 7, I hired an old car with really bad steering (90 degress play), and after school at Melton Mowbray drove to Grantham Drill Hall, with Gerry Woodcock to see Chris Barber, and his singer wife (forget her name for the moment), Lonnie and his skiffle group played this in a spot, complete with tea-chest bass! Absolutely wonderful. Thanks for the memory.
I came here after seeing this on the BBC documentary, 12.4.19. I am old enough to remember Lonnie but strangely enough not this particular song. Cumberland Gap and Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavour On the Bedpost Overnight....I recall well. His son Peter even sounds like Lonnie when he is talking. When Peter sang with Tom Jones it was a fantastic moment, I got goosebumps on me goosebumps!!
I did! I did! ✋✋! Tom is the best ever and and Lonnie's son, Peter, will b a legend in his own rite. Good advise his father gave him-to write his own music.
On this day in 1956 {May 19th} Lonnie Donegan and his Skiffle Group performed "Rock Island Line" on the NBC-TV program 'The Perry Como Show'... At the time the song was at #24 on Billboard's Top 100 chart; one month earlier on April 5th, 1956 it had peaked at #8 {for 1 week} on Billboard's Best Sellers in Stores chart and stayed on the Top 100 for 17 weeks... The group had two other records make the Top 100; "Lost John" (#58 in 1956) and "Does Your Chewing Gum Lose It's Flavor (On the Bedpost Overnight)" (#5 in 1961)... R.I.P. Mr. Donegan, born Anthony James Donegan MBE, {1931 - 2002}...
I remember learning that song in the second grade, well over 50 years ago! Of course we sang it at a much slower beat, but it was considered a classic folk song!
I notice that the actual song is quite short, but because it's an stage performance he fills it up with a story/monologue. I suspect that's because vinyl single records were limited to about 2 minutes so songs were always shorter than that.
Right around this time my best friend in High School memorized this and made me sing it along ith him, Along with a few Robert Johnson tunes like Hell Hound on my TRail,
I was heavily influenced as a child when I was a small scout, and the Rovers, the elder brethren, (they were eighteen years old!) played skiffle behind closed doors in the HQ. Of course, I remember "Rock Island Line" but the first song that really struck me was "Midnight Special" played by a skiffle group at a church youth club party! I was hooked and I still get asked now to play the King of Skiffle
I still can remember listening to Lonnie singing ,, diggin' my potatoes'' and Chris Barber playing Ice Cream, on mom's and dad's old Philips radio, my brother and I swinging to it in our dypers. Chris and Lonnie were also a big hit in Holland. Now I know, that those guys were the spark and the fuel that really started the engine up of a big load of bands in the UK and shortly after that also on the main land.
Jimmy Page led me here. He says in an interview elsewhere on youtube that along with the American blues stuff, Lonny Donegan's energetic guitar-based performance style was an important early influence. I guess I can see it.
+Andrew James Every body in the late 50`s and early 60`s who played guitar ,including me, Cliff,the Hollies,the Stones the Beatles.... you name it,.every body without exception all started because of Lonnie.He started it all by introducing skiffle..Bill Wyman introduced "Mule Skinner blues" at one of his blues concerts several years ago with the words," This is homage to Lonnie ,without whom,let`s face it,none of us would be here." `nuff said!!Skiffle we owe you !
Admittedly as I saw this comment it was late at night so I had to read it several times to make sure I was understanding it. the reason I'm having trouble wrapping my head around it or rather was having trouble wrapping my head around it is because it didn't make sense to me until I looked up that it was a member of The Rolling Stones that you were referring to. then I realized that perhaps it was a matter of relativity where the adulation was going. the reason for my confusion is because Jimmie Rodgers Wrote and recorded Blue Yodel No. 8 (Mule Skinner Blues) In 1930. So giving credit to a particular song or Style to someone years later was confusing to me. so I'm guessing it's kind of like when Dolly Parton gave Porter Wagoner credit for y'all come. because to her that was his song because he was the one performing it at what was then a modern time. after listening to Jimmie Rodgers he was certainly ahead of his time. back on the original topic and to close this post out which I wasn't meaning to make so long, I have an appreciation for the original version of this song but I think my heart is always going to be with the Johnny Horton version.
Pressing my tunic in the RAF this c ame on and I rushed down to turn it up. I left the iron on and burnt a hole in my tunic...amazingly I got away with it. Rock on
Lonnie was born into an age when TV was in it's infancy. Nowadays, Lonnie would have been HUGE! Musical, Funny, Personality in Spades, great voice......the BBC would have signed him up on a £10,000,000.00 contract. Then they would have made him a Quiz Show Host.....😵
Clarence Wilson wrote this in 1929 who worked on the Rock Island line it was first recorded by Lead Belly and Prisoners...im quite bewildered how Donnie made claim to this song through copy right...great effort but he didn't spend a millisecond on the Rock Island line.
Who came here after watching his son on the voice duet with Tom Jones ? Great magical duet they did , your dad Lonnie would be so proud 👍👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Just watched the Voice with Lonnie's son he is a very talented young man
That was a once in a lifetime moment on The Voice UK! I know Tom & Peter will remember it always!
Hahahaha meeeeee!!!!
I did!!!
Me
This man belongs in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Tru' Dat!!
For sure.
Definitely
ach who cares aboiut that ...backslapping millionaires
Lonnie was famous before the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame existed
It was Roger Daltrey who said that Elvis turned everyone onto Rock and Roll but that it was Lonnie Donegan who opened it up for everyone to go out and form groups. He was a huge influence on a huge number of British bands of the late 50s and early 60s
Tom Jones agrees.
The King of Skiffle!
Need I say more?
This song makes me want to start my own band too
This song makes me want to start my own band too
This song makes me want to start my own band too
Just learned of Lonnie watching a Lead Belly video wherein George Harrison is quoted, "Without Lead Belly, there'd be no Lonnie Donegan; with no Lonnie, there'd be no Beatles."
HTF am I just now @ age 54 yrs learning of Lonnie? He was awesome!
I was a teen in '61, living in Minneapolis. I remember hearing "Rock Island Line" on local radio back then. And THEN - "Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavor On The Bedpost Overnight" exploded. Magic - I've been a fan ever since.
Me too lol
I’m 54 and just learning of him now :) and a musician
I haven't listened to this in more then 20 years. Its a great record.
There would be no Beatles, Stones, Zepplin, Queen, Bee Gees etc etc etc etc etc etc etc etc without this man inspiring so many young British kids to pick up a guitar and make music their life...
Bernie Taupin credits him for everything in his recent memoir.
Almost every British guitar band of the 60s and 70s got into music because of Lonnie. He was king when they were growing up
and he probably admired southern blues music.
I heard he owned the Moody Blues catalog of songs.
If it wasn’t for Lonnie John Lennon would never have started the Quarrymen !
Even if you haven't heard of this guy, you've heard of all the musicians he inspired
True! Jimmy Page talks about him in his interview at Oxford.
Heard of him now, thanks to his son and Sir Tom Jones!
The Beatles, The Stones, Fleetwood Mac, Led Zeppelin, Tom Jones - BASICALLY EVERY SINGLE GROUP/ARTIST WHO WERE ALL PART OF "THE BRITISH INVASION" (ie: the music/soundtrack of the sixties and seventies - you have the man above to thank for that!!! Lonnie Donegan was responsible for the British Invasion; Elvis Presley and Chuck Berry were responsible for the American equivalent!! FACTS.)
MAY ALL THREE MEN REST IN HARMONIOUS PEACE!! 🤍🌹🕊️
B😮rends lee
Brenda lee
I worked on several concerts over the years with Lonnie, mostly at the Chris Barber re-union tours, and was at his funeral to pay my last respects to the great man. Joe Brown did the eulogy and looking towards the coffin at the end said, " Such a small casket for such a great man ".. Just about summed him up really..
0
@Lian Ellis asssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss
My condolences on the loss of your friend
Such an intense performance from Lonnie, which was what he always gave you. If your feet aren't moving when this is playing, you're past all help. RIP
I have to assume my feet were moving, since my legs have no feeling from the knees down, these days. But I know my heart was beating faster! LOVE Lonnie!
Couldn't get enough of Lonnie when I was a kid. He was amazing.
I’m named after Lonnie Donegan!! But my mum wanted to spell it Loni! I’m so glad I’ve come across this and actually taken the time to listen to Lonnie! I absolutely love it and I’ll be listening to more!!
This song was part of my childhood in the mid-fifties, heard on the wireless. We had no TV and I asked my dad what Lonnie Donegan looked like. He screwed his eyes up and pulled his lips back to show his clenched teeth. I didn't believe him, but later when I saw Lonnie belting out the Rock Island Line lyrics at full pace I saw my dad was right. Still love Lonnie's version of that song. Great performer.
Great story!
we had the record and 'chewing gum' song.
Love you Peter Donegan ❤️ you did your dad proud on the voice with Tom. It was magical. Your dad's writing is pure brilliance.
I died waiting for the song to start.
Watching as a 40 years old woman in 2022 and I think this is spectacular
watching as a 17yo young man in 1972 and I think this is splendid
@@Bandstand Watching as a 13 year old in 1961, it blew me away, a little later I heard Leadbelly do it. Both are great!!
Ah, back when music had talent and personality. A true classic from a very talented guy. Impossible not to sing along to.
You know, in the US, we don't even know who Lonnie Donegan is. People who are into music know his name as the guy who inspired John, Paul, and George to start a skiffle band, and that's about it.
My God, I love this man. He is absolutely wonderful.
Half of America have never seen the ocean and believe in something called god! Why would they have the inclination to search out a Scottish icon? I've had to tell Pensylvanians about Johhny Appleseed. Sorry man, but America is the fattest most ignorant nation on earth. By the way, I work with a revolving door of international sportspeople. I commend you on your taste. Lonnie was from Glasgow, Scotland, like myself. Rock on. 👊
@@strexus Your ridiculous alcohol fueled insults aside, Skiffle never made it to America. We were the musical influencers at the time, rather than the influenced. Bill Haley, Little Richard, blues artists, and then came the movie, "The Girl Can't Help It", which effectively put Skiffle in the ground and replaced it with Rock N Roll. From there, British youth embraced rock, made it their own and influenced the world.
@@strexus imagine writing this and not acknowledging how influenced Lonnie Donegan was by American music. This song is about an American railroad FFS.
@@kdavis002 Yes, well, you can't teach stupid. His attitude shames Scotland.
@@sharonraizor2839 ,shame as I loved the skiffle as a lad and still do .
This song will always be a banger
I have watched The Voice video of Peter Donegan with Tom Jones about 6 times, its wondeful brought tears to my eyes every time. I live in Canada now so missed it last Saturday but thank goodness for Face Book & RUclips.
Im 80 now and was inspired to form a skiffle group after listing to LD. The Beatles.were also.influenced by him and many other 60s bands.
Thanks to LD for bringing music to life and influencing so many. As Joe Brown said at LD's funeral, "Such a small casket to contain such a huge talent"
Little late to be forming a skiffle group… but better late than never.
@@tedtimmis8135 My wording wasn't very good was it? Although now 80 I started a skiffle group in 1958 when I was 15.
@@JohnRawlinsonCyprus LOL! Just having a little fun with your wording.
But! I'm 76 now, and I'd be thrilled to join @JohnRawlinsonCyprus ' new band. I always wanted to form an instrumental 'surf' music band, and call us 'The Dentures'. Can't find any personnel, tho.@@tedtimmis8135
Stunning! Never realized a British man could sing such American music as we as any in America. He did it his way. Musical genius. He seems so nervous here. He defined British bluegrass, it seems to me, and they called it Skiffle. I have bought some CDs to listen to him in respectable sound quality. A great discovery after 45 years of loving music.
My Grandad died a week ago yesterday, wish I knew the man better than I did but while talking to my Mum and my Nan recently and learning more, I learnt of my Grandad’s love for skiffle. I’d never heard of it, or Lonnie... I’m glad I have now. Cheers Grandad Ray, I’ll have a drink on you x
This artist, performance and TV coverage changed the world of music more than it gets recognised for. Absolutely timeless....
Lonnie Donegan spread rock music into the UK/Europe, he had a huge stage presence with the relaxation to use some humour to get the message across. Thanks!
Singularly one of the most outstanding recordings ever made by Lonnie Donnegan and ever recorded in the 1960's
Sorry to be pedantic but it was 1955 😉
The quality of this is amazing.
Just realized that Lonnie Donegan had so much talent and charisma! A very good story teller too!
We should hear more of Lonnie Donegan than we do. This is a great song.
He's long gone , but his music lives on . R.I.P. Lonnie Donegan .
This guy and Donovan are probably the 2 most important and influential musicians in Scotland.
ORIGINAL FOUNDERS OF AC/DC FROM THERE ALSO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@control5835 And the Stealers Wheel ones
Came here by accident, looking for the Johnny Cash version, but God I'm happy I found this version. What a voice.
The Beatles admired this guy when they were struggling musicians.
So did Jimmy Page massively
And George Harrison said that it all led back to Lead Belly
Rock Island Line was 1st song wee George Harrison learnt to play on guitar.
Roger Daltrey saw Elvis, and was suitably impressed. Then, he discovered Donegan....
Count me in . . .
I love how the drummer Pete Appleby is feeling it as the song goes on brilliant
The Voice UK brought me here, his son was singing, did a good job, then he sang with Tom Jones.
OUCH!!!!!
Lonnie deserves a lot more credit for his influence on what follows in RnR.
The sheer energy of this man just humbles me. RIP Lon.
star saw this live at the regal Gt Yarmouth
It’s amazing because here he is playing pure American folk blues on telly years before the stones etc “discovered” it. I think his comedy stuff did get in the way of just how revolutionary he was. I LOVED his comedy stuff as a kid, this came later 🎶👍🏼👍🏼
It is crazy that I have never heard of Lonnie Donegan until today! Can't help but tap that foot.
Back when music required talent, no auto tune and no lip syncing!
The guy is great. Thanks for the song.
If ever there was a folk singing hero, he is here, Donegan.....I've loved Lonnie since 1959, age 11. Love you.
Wow you're old as fuck!
Philadelphia C There’s something about your reply that I can’t stop giggling at.
Wow, you’re uncouth, rude, stupid and unfunny AF!
@@randybobandy402 Wow, a clown like you put 5 words together. Well done. Now work on the composition Coco!
@@strexus thanks bro
I remember it like it was yesterday, but I'd never seen him perform it. He gave it his all and made novelty songs sound great.
PS If you don't know him his other big hit from the day was Does Your Chewing Gum Lose It's Flavor On The Bedpost Overnight
I'm here because of his son😘
That line ‘I fooled you’ is the DNA of rock and roll right there - his delivery the pay off the rebellion the freedom - magical!
this song was big on Chicago radio around 1960. It is one that certainly shaped my life. the trains coming into Chicago were awesome. Gosh, yes! So was Lonnie Donegan.
This is a Freedom song. In July 1954 Englishman Lonnie Donegan recorded a fast version of Leadbelly's "Rock Island Line". It was a hit in 1956. Donegan made no money because it was a bandsong. It was the first debut record to go gold in the UK. It reached the US Top Ten. It proved greatly influential on musicians in their younger days and was a catalyst in their musical motivation and careers. The skiffle style encouraged amateurs and one of many groups that followed was the Quarrymen, formed in March 1957 by John Lennon.
+Lady Blackstardust not sure about the rest of your info but Lonnie Donegan was a Scotsman born in Glassgow
Born in Scotland by the way.
Not an Englishman ! Lonnie was from Glasgow, Scotland 🏴
Being the son of a train man, this song was a hit when I was a youngster. A ride in a '56 Buick with my teenage buddy, on the old 2-lane out to Elgin, Illinois, his Mom swaying in the back seat as we cruised across the country.
Lonnie is pure dynamite, he rocks!!!!
Skiffle: "British school boys covering Lead Belly with some cowboy thrown in." -Billy Bragg
I've heard this man's name mentioned many times, but had never listened to any of his music. What a discovery! Thanks Jimmy Page!
Listen to gambling man, , , , ,
😶😶😶😶😶😐😐😐😐
This was an immensely popular record and still sounds good.
Lonnie Donegan. The happiest Rock and Roller of all time.
I went to the Empire theatre in Glasgow (196?0) to watch Lonnie and today these videos have brought back some very special memories
I came here because I was checking a post on social media about trains and saw the Rock Island Line. I remembered a version of this from a movie called The General's Daughter.
The great Lonnie Donegan best Skiffle ever RIP.
Glasgow born Lonnie, you were the best in the world of skiffle
It seems to me Johnny Cash must have had some admiration for Lonnie. His basic rhythm was similar to this skiffle.
Thanks I’m glad I visited.
In Bernie Taupin's bio, "Scattershot", he talks about Lonnie, so I had to check him out
In 1956 or 7, I hired an old car with really bad steering (90 degress play), and after school at Melton Mowbray drove to Grantham Drill Hall, with Gerry Woodcock to see Chris Barber, and his singer wife (forget her name for the moment), Lonnie and his skiffle group played this in a spot, complete with tea-chest bass! Absolutely wonderful. Thanks for the memory.
Ottilie Paterson ? singer
I'm a bit late with this, but wasn't Chris Barber's wife Ottilie Patterson? They came to Birmingham Jazz Club in the fifties. Wonderful times!
I was today years old when I first heard of Lonnie Donegan. Wow! That is some singing!!
I came here after seeing this on the BBC documentary, 12.4.19. I am old enough to remember Lonnie but strangely enough not this particular song. Cumberland Gap and Does Your Chewing Gum Lose Its Flavour On the Bedpost Overnight....I recall well. His son Peter even sounds like Lonnie when he is talking. When Peter sang with Tom Jones it was a fantastic moment, I got goosebumps on me goosebumps!!
Just got up after watching it last night myself.
I did! I did! ✋✋! Tom is the best ever and and Lonnie's son, Peter, will b a legend in his own rite. Good advise his father gave him-to write his own music.
My god what a difference this guy made to music ! RIP.
Skiffle at is best! Influenced so many musicians the guy was a genius and his band amazing!
LONNIE!! What a talent.
On this day in 1956 {May 19th} Lonnie Donegan and his Skiffle Group performed "Rock Island Line" on the NBC-TV program 'The Perry Como Show'...
At the time the song was at #24 on Billboard's Top 100 chart; one month earlier on April 5th, 1956 it had peaked at #8 {for 1 week} on Billboard's Best Sellers in Stores chart and stayed on the Top 100 for 17 weeks...
The group had two other records make the Top 100; "Lost John" (#58 in 1956) and "Does Your Chewing Gum Lose It's Flavor (On the Bedpost Overnight)" (#5 in 1961)...
R.I.P. Mr. Donegan, born Anthony James Donegan MBE, {1931 - 2002}...
If you’re trying to trace rock and roll back to it roots you’re heading straight to two things. The Blues and Lonnie Donegan
Oh I wish today's music was as much fun as this.
lonnie donegan the ground zero for the whole British rock industry for then next forty years !!!
So glad this footage survives, so much footage has been wiped, lost forever.
boah... what an impressive recording. That is eight years before I am born. And is is so good even without playback.
I did the exact same thing 😀 however I’m never gonna fall in love again is great favourite song of mine
Wow! The Beginnings of British Rock n Roll, still go wild to this A big salute to Lonnie and the Band, again WOW xxx
You can definitely hear his influence on Lennon in the way John sings.
I remember learning that song in the second grade, well over 50 years ago! Of course we sang it at a much slower beat, but it was considered a classic folk song!
When music had a meaning ,was understood and appreciated .
BRITAIN'S ANSWER TO AMERICAN ROCKABILLY!.. REST EASY LONNIE... X
I notice that the actual song is quite short, but because it's an stage performance he fills it up with a story/monologue. I suspect that's because vinyl single records were limited to about 2 minutes so songs were always shorter than that.
I have known this song for all most 50 years but never saw a video of it , so for me this is Awesome
My god I was only 4 years old when I last heard this fantastic song Godbless mr lonnie Donegon ❤❤❤
Had a tremendous influence on British Rock and the Invasion !!! Thank you Lonnie !!!
That is frickin' brilliant!
Right around this time my best friend in High School memorized this and made me sing it along ith him, Along with a few Robert Johnson tunes like Hell Hound on my TRail,
I just stopped by the location where this was recorded in london.
I wish my Dad was here😢
Need to start listening to more of him
Top pro band, stunning musicianship, great atmosphere. Lonnie was a hard act to follow. Thank you for this.
I was a kid in grade school when I first heard this song and loved it from the beginning. Great version!
I was heavily influenced as a child when I was a small scout, and the Rovers, the elder brethren, (they were eighteen years old!) played skiffle behind closed doors in the HQ. Of course, I remember "Rock Island Line" but the first song that really struck me was "Midnight Special" played by a skiffle group at a church youth club party! I was hooked and I still get asked now to play the King of Skiffle
Definitely should be in R R Hall of Fame.
Came here as this was my dad's favourite song. Miss him so much and miss hearing this song. Thank you for the memory
Unforgettable
I came here from Brian Johnson's interview with Mark Knopfler.
I still can remember listening to Lonnie singing ,, diggin' my potatoes'' and Chris Barber playing Ice Cream, on mom's and dad's old Philips radio, my brother and I swinging to it in our dypers. Chris and Lonnie were also a big hit in Holland. Now I know, that those guys were the spark and the fuel that really started the engine up of a big load of bands in the UK and shortly after that also on the main land.
Jimmy Page led me here. He says in an interview elsewhere on youtube that along with the American blues stuff, Lonny Donegan's energetic guitar-based performance style was an important early influence. I guess I can see it.
Plant's biography led me here haha
+Andrew James Every body in the late 50`s and early 60`s who played guitar ,including me, Cliff,the Hollies,the Stones the Beatles.... you name it,.every body without exception all started because of Lonnie.He started it all by introducing skiffle..Bill Wyman introduced "Mule Skinner blues" at one of his blues concerts several years ago with the words," This is homage to Lonnie ,without whom,let`s face it,none of us would be here." `nuff said!!Skiffle we owe you !
Andrew James that’s why I’m here too. One has to realize that these sounds were very new to people in England.
Admittedly as I saw this comment it was late at night so I had to read it several times to make sure I was understanding it. the reason I'm having trouble wrapping my head around it or rather was having trouble wrapping my head around it is because it didn't make sense to me until I looked up that it was a member of The Rolling Stones that you were referring to. then I realized that perhaps it was a matter of relativity where the adulation was going. the reason for my confusion is because Jimmie Rodgers Wrote and recorded Blue Yodel No. 8 (Mule Skinner Blues) In 1930. So giving credit to a particular song or Style to someone years later was confusing to me. so I'm guessing it's kind of like when Dolly Parton gave Porter Wagoner credit for y'all come. because to her that was his song because he was the one performing it at what was then a modern time. after listening to Jimmie Rodgers he was certainly ahead of his time. back on the original topic and to close this post out which I wasn't meaning to make so long, I have an appreciation for the original version of this song but I think my heart is always going to be with the Johnny Horton version.
Kudos to you for your research.
Descobri essa lenda hj ..!!!! Mais um na minha listA!!!👏👏👽👽👽
Pressing my tunic in the RAF this c ame on and I rushed down to turn it up. I left the iron on and burnt a hole in my tunic...amazingly I got away with it. Rock on
had one album of his original copy likely 60s i think and i just loved the raw sound just come back for more of the same
Lonnie was born into an age when TV was in it's infancy. Nowadays, Lonnie would have been HUGE! Musical, Funny, Personality in Spades, great voice......the BBC would have signed him up on a £10,000,000.00 contract. Then they would have made him a Quiz Show Host.....😵
Clarence Wilson wrote this in 1929 who worked on the Rock Island line it was first recorded by Lead Belly and Prisoners...im quite bewildered how Donnie made claim to this song through copy right...great effort but he didn't spend a millisecond on the Rock Island line.