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'''"She's Got It"''' is a 1956 song by [[Little Richard]]. The song was first was issued as single in October, reached #9 on Billboard's R&B charts, and was then included on Richard's debut album on Specialty Records ''[[Here's Little Richard]]''.<ref>Larry Birnbaum ''Before Elvis: The Prehistory of Rock 'n' Roll'' - 2013 - 0810886383- Page 337 “She's Got It” is one of the clearest examples of the twelve-bar verse-and-refrain structure in Little Richard's repertoire, with Richard singing the melody of a boogie-woogie bass line in the third and fourth measures of each verse. It was issued on the same single as “HeebieJeebies,” and both sides made the R&B Top 10.</ref> The number was sung on film by Little Richard while [[Jayne Mansfield]]'s character went to the powder room in ''[[The Girl Can't Help It]]''.<ref>David Kirby - ''Little Richard: The Birth of Rock 'n' Roll'' 1441174362 2010 - Oblivious to both her crush and her cleavage, Miller takes her to a club where Little Richard is playing a spirited version of “Ready Teddy.” Of course it's spirited, since he's obviously lip-synching to the Specialty recording. Clearly director Frank Tashlin is making sure the Tarzan of jungle music is staying in his tree. But with Little Richard's next number, rock 'n'roll loses its irrelevance and steps right into the heart of square culture. Ashe sings “She's Got It,” Jerri Jordan sashays back and forth ...</ref> |
'''"She's Got It"''' is a 1956 song by [[Little Richard]] written by [[John Marascalco]]. The song was first was issued as single in October, reached #9 on Billboard's R&B charts, and was then included on Richard's debut album on Specialty Records ''[[Here's Little Richard]]''.<ref>Larry Birnbaum ''Before Elvis: The Prehistory of Rock 'n' Roll'' - 2013 - 0810886383- Page 337 “She's Got It” is one of the clearest examples of the twelve-bar verse-and-refrain structure in Little Richard's repertoire, with Richard singing the melody of a boogie-woogie bass line in the third and fourth measures of each verse. It was issued on the same single as “HeebieJeebies,” and both sides made the R&B Top 10.</ref> The number was sung on film by Little Richard while [[Jayne Mansfield]]'s character went to the powder room in ''[[The Girl Can't Help It]]''.<ref>David Kirby - ''Little Richard: The Birth of Rock 'n' Roll'' 1441174362 2010 - Oblivious to both her crush and her cleavage, Miller takes her to a club where Little Richard is playing a spirited version of “Ready Teddy.” Of course it's spirited, since he's obviously lip-synching to the Specialty recording. Clearly director Frank Tashlin is making sure the Tarzan of jungle music is staying in his tree. But with Little Richard's next number, rock 'n'roll loses its irrelevance and steps right into the heart of square culture. Ashe sings “She's Got It,” Jerri Jordan sashays back and forth ...</ref> |
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==References== |
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Revision as of 23:15, 23 January 2018
"She's Got It" is a 1956 song by Little Richard written by John Marascalco. The song was first was issued as single in October, reached #9 on Billboard's R&B charts, and was then included on Richard's debut album on Specialty Records Here's Little Richard.[1] The number was sung on film by Little Richard while Jayne Mansfield's character went to the powder room in The Girl Can't Help It.[2]
References
- ^ Larry Birnbaum Before Elvis: The Prehistory of Rock 'n' Roll - 2013 - 0810886383- Page 337 “She's Got It” is one of the clearest examples of the twelve-bar verse-and-refrain structure in Little Richard's repertoire, with Richard singing the melody of a boogie-woogie bass line in the third and fourth measures of each verse. It was issued on the same single as “HeebieJeebies,” and both sides made the R&B Top 10.
- ^ David Kirby - Little Richard: The Birth of Rock 'n' Roll 1441174362 2010 - Oblivious to both her crush and her cleavage, Miller takes her to a club where Little Richard is playing a spirited version of “Ready Teddy.” Of course it's spirited, since he's obviously lip-synching to the Specialty recording. Clearly director Frank Tashlin is making sure the Tarzan of jungle music is staying in his tree. But with Little Richard's next number, rock 'n'roll loses its irrelevance and steps right into the heart of square culture. Ashe sings “She's Got It,” Jerri Jordan sashays back and forth ...