Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1955


Diddley Daddy

Buy Diddley Daddy now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




"'Diddley Daddy'" is a song by Bo Diddley. The song was issued as a single on Checker Records in June 1955. His second single, it followed on the heels of the success of the eponymous "Bo Diddley." The song spent four weeks on the Billboard R&B chart in the summer of 1955, peaking at No. 11.

Writing and recording



The song was recorded on May 15, 1955, in Chicago. Originally called "Diddy Diddy Dum Dum," it started out as a Billy Boy Arnold composition, which Leonard Chess, owner of Chess Records (Checkers was a subsidiary label of Chess), had heard Arnold play and wanted Diddley to record. However, Arnold had just signed a contract with Vee-Jay Records, and had recorded the song the day before at Universal Recording Corporation. When Chess wanted Arnold to sing the song, the latter realized he had a contract, responding, "I can't do it...I just recorded it for Vee-Jay." Chess responded, "Goddam! Ain't this a bitch!" A solution, however, was found on the spot: Diddley and Harvey Fuqua, who happened to be around, rewrote the lyrics.

As it happened, the harmonica player Little Walter was in the studio, and he asked Billy Boy Arnold for his harp; Walter plays the long solo after the first verse (Arnold plays harmonica on the B-side, "She's Fine, She's Mine"). Also decided at "the spur of the moment" was to have Chicago doo-wop group The Moonglows sing background vocals.

Critical praise



One of Bo Diddley's signature songs, "Diddley Daddy" evidenced Diddley's maturation process as an artist. It was described as a "terrific nugget" and an "infectious" "upbeat rocker". The 'Chicago Sun-Times' said it combined "outrageous braggadocio with a beat that resounds like an endless sexual shudder."

Marking Diddley's popularity in England, the Rolling Stones, who early in their career often played Diddley songs live, covered the song (along with Diddley's "Road Runner") on their first demo, recorded on March 11, 1963. Brian Jones would later borrow Diddley's guitar figure from the song for the band's 1965 single "19th Nervous Breakdown".

Bo Diddley, Diddley Daddy



The title of the song has come to stand for Bo Diddley himself, as evidenced from articles about Diddley by Val Wilmer and Stuart Colman.Stuart Colman, "Bo Diddley: The Diddley Daddy," in After Diddley's death, in 2008, the phrase directly referred to Diddley in various obituaries; the usage reflected Diddley's habit of self-reference as well as the way others talked about him, such as Tom Petty: "Elvis is King. But Diddley is Daddy."

Reissues



A Bo Diddley compilation CD issued in 1988 is also called 'Diddley Daddy'.Strong 303. The song is featured on many greatest hits albums by Bo Diddley including '16 All-Time Greatest Hits' and 'His Best'.

Personnel



*Bo Diddley lead vocals, lead guitar

*Little Walter harmonica

*Jerome Green maracas

*Clifton James drums

*The Moonglows backing vocals

Notable covers



*Chris Isaak, on 'Heart Shaped World' (1989)

*The Pretty Things & Yardbirds Blues Band, on 'Chicago Blues Jam 1991' and 'Wine, Women & Whiskey' (1994)Strong 841.

*Rolling Stones, first demo

*The Liverbirds, a British all-female beat group, recorded the song for a 1965 single. Their version reached No. 5 on the German Singles Chart.

*Dutch Mason, Canadian blues musician. The song was a staple of his band's live set.

*The Super Super Blues Band (1968), Howlin Wolf, Muddy Waters and Bo Diddley trio recorded it together as part of album "The Super Super Blues Band" for Chess Records.

References



Category:1955 singles

Category:Bo Diddley songs

Category:Songs written by Bo Diddley

Category:Checker Records singles

Category:The Rolling Stones songs

Category:Songs written by Harvey Fuqua

Category:1955 songs

Buy Diddley Daddy now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1955



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1070271754.