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The Burnette Brothers Biography

Boxing Brothers

Born in Memphis, the boxing brothers, Johnny and Dorsey Burnette, along with lead guitarist Paul Burlison, were “tearin’ it up” in the honk tonks of west Tennessee in 1953 with their hyped-up, no-holds-barred versions of traditional country and R&B songs.

Paul Burlison met the Burnettes in 1949 at a boxing tournament where Dorsey took home the trophies. Pulling no punches, Paul and Johnny joined a country band led by pianist Doc McQueen, and Dorsey joined up with Scotty Moore and Bill Black’s country goup playing pedal steel guitar. Dorsey rejoined Doc McQueen’s band playing upright slap bass and in 1953, Johnny, Dorsey and Paul created the now legendary “Johnny Burnette Trio” by doing double-duty, performing their special rockin’ kind of music between swing dance sets by the McQueen band. In the summer of 1953, both Johnny and Dorsey were blessed with the birth of sons—Dorsey’s son, Billy, was born in May, and Johnny’s son, Rocky, was born in June. The Burnettes celebrated the birth of their sons by dedicating songs to the babies. Fans loved these rockin’ new songs so much, they began requesting that “Rock ‘n’ Billy” music—which quickly translated to R-O-C-K-A-B-I-L-L-Y music.

Elvis Presley lived in the Lauderdale Courts, the same Memphis federal housing development where the Burnettes and Paul Burlison also lived. The Johnny Burnette Trio rehearsed their songs in the concrete-walled laundry room because it had great echo. Elvis would come around the massive laundry room while they were rehearsing, but the Burnettes ran him off because they wanted nothing to do with him or his “crooner” songs.

The Johnny Burnette Trio planted the roots of the Rockabilly tree by introducing a new, energetic mixture of country, R&B and gospel music, distinctive with its aggressive guitar and slap bass playing, and infused with soulful rhythm and vocal delivery that they perfected while crossing all segregation barriers and playing with Howlin’ Wolf. As performed by the trio, this new music was dubbed “Rockabilly,” but others called it the “Devil’s Music” instead. Had these pioneers recorded “Rockabilly Boogie” in 1953 before Elvis and the “Big Bang,” Rockabilly history would be completely different.


Excerpt from The Rockabilly Legends DVD Documentary 2-DVD Set.

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Reviews and Testimonials

Keen understanding and a great love for the music

Over the years there has been an elite group of men who understood Rockabilly music-- Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, Buddy Holly, Jerry Lee Lewis, Buddy Knox, Gene Vincent, and my friend of many years, Jerry Naylor. You have to have a keen understanding and a great love for the music to perform it as it should be performed.

The Rockabilly Legends: A Tribute to My Friends proves my point. Jerry Naylor was there when the music was being created. He knew all the Rockabilly greats, performed with them, loves the music and brings Rockabilly into the 21st century with great style and dignity.

Dugg Collins
KFDI Radio, Wichita, Kansas
Inductee to The Country Music Disc Jockey Hall of Fame

Rockabilly Legends
2015-11-24T20:05:36-05:00
Over the years there has been an elite group of men who understood Rockabilly music-- Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Johnny Cash, Roy Orbison, Buddy Holly, Jerry Lee Lewis, Buddy Knox, Gene Vincent, and my friend of many years, Jerry Naylor. You have to have a keen understanding and a great love for the music to perform it as it should be performed. The Rockabilly Legends: A Tribute to My Friends proves my point. Jerry Naylor was there when the music was being created. He knew all the Rockabilly greats, performed with them, loves the music and brings Rockabilly into the 21st century with great style and dignity. Dugg Collins KFDI Radio, Wichita, Kansas Inductee to The Country Music Disc Jockey Hall of Fame
https://rockabillylegends.com/testimonials/1116/
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