When formed in 1955, the band included Willie Williams on rhythm guitar (replaced in late 1956 by Paul Peek), Jack Neal on upright bass, Dickie Harrell on drums, and Cliff Gallup on lead guitar. The band quickly gained a reputation playing in various country bars in Norfolk, Virginia (where Vincent was born. There they won a talent contest organized by a local radio DJ, "Sheriff Tex" Davis, who then became Vincent's manager.
After "Be-Bop-a-Lula" became a hit, Vincent & His Blue Caps were unable to follow it up with the same level of commercial success, although they released critically acclaimed songs like "Race with the Devil" (number 96 on the US Billboard chart and number 50 on the US Cash Box chart) and "Bluejean Bop" (number 49 on the US Billboard chart and another million-selling disc).
Cliff Gallup left the band in 1956, and Russell Williford joined as the new guitarist for the Blue Caps. Williford played and toured Canada with Vincent in late 1956 but left the group in early 1957. Gallup came back to do the next album and then left again. Williford came back and exited again before Johnny Meeks joined the band. The group had another hit in 1957 with "Lotta Lovin'" (highest position number 13 and spending 19 weeks on the Billboard chart and number 17 and 17 weeks on the Cashbox chart). Vincent was awarded gold records for two million sales of "Be-Bop-a-Lula", and 1.5 million sales of "Lotta Lovin'".
On November 17, 1957, Vincent & His Blue Caps performed "Be-Bop-a-Lula" on the nationally broadcast US television program The Ed Sullivan Show. The song spent nine weeks on the Billboard chart and peaked at number 23 on January 23, 1958 and reached number 36 and spent eight weeks on the US Cashbox chart. It was Vincent's last American hit single. The song was used in the movie Hot Rod Gang for a dance rehearsal scene featuring dancers doing the West Coast Swing.
Vincent & His Blue Caps also appeared several times on Town Hall Party, California's largest country music barn dance, held at the Town Hall in Compton, California. They appeared on October 25, 1958, and July 25 and November 7, 1959.
By the end of 1959 the Blue Caps were no longer part of the billing on Gene Vincent records. The late 1959 single "Wild Cat" was credited solely to Gene Vincent, and this would be the case on all subsequent Gene Vincent releases.
Gene Vincent, real name Vincent Eugene Craddock, (February 11, 1935 – October 12, 1971) was an American rockabilly pioneer musician, best known for his hit “Be-Bop-A-Lula”.
Early life:
His parents, Ezekiah Jackson and Mary Louise Craddock, were shop owners in Norfolk, Virginia. He grew up in Virginia under the influence of country, Rhythm and Blues and Gospel music. He received his first guitar as a gift from a friend at the age of 12.
In 1952 Gene left school and joined the Navy. In 1955 he was stationed in Korea, where he suffered a severe motorcycle accident that shattered his left leg. He refused to have it amputated, the leg was saved, but left him with a permanent limp and considerable chronic pain for the rest of his life.
Early career:
He left the Navy and started playing in various country bands in his native Norfolk, Virginia. In 1956 he wrote "Be-Bop-A-Lula", which helped him sign a contract at Capitol Records with his backing band The Blue Caps.
After "Be-Bop-A-Lula" had become a huge hit, Gene Vincent & the Blue Caps were unable to follow it up with the same level of commercial success but recorded critically acclaimed songs like "Bluejean Bop" and "Race with the Devil". That year, Vincent was reputedly convicted of public obscenity and fined $10,000 by the state of Virginia for his live performance of the erotic song, "Woman Love", although this is now believed to have been just a rumor.
The group had another hit with 1957's "Lotta Lovin'." Vincent also became one of the first rock stars to star in a film, The Girl Can't Help It together with Jayne Mansfield.
There were numerous changes of personnel in his backing group, The Blue Caps. However, a dispute with the US Tax Authorities and The American Musicians' Union over payments to his band and his having sold the band's equipment to pay a tax bill led him to leave the USA and try his hand in Europe.
Following a tour through Europe in 1959, Vincent managed to attract a new huge and discerning audience there, especially in England and France. By that time his career had mostly ended in the US. Consequently, he moved to England in 1960. His stage shows became "must see" events and his bands through those years were to spawn some of the most respected players in the world today. It was during his early tours of Britain that he adopted the trademark leather outfit, at the suggestion of British Rock 'n' Roll impressario, Jack Good.
In 1960, while on tour in Britain, Vincent and songwriter Sharon Sheeley were seriously injured in a high-speed traffic accident in a private hire taxi travelling through Chippenham, Wiltshire on the A4. The car, a Ford Consul, suffered a blowout causing it to swerve and crash into a lamp post. Vincent broke his ribs, collarbone, and added further damage to his already weak leg, and Sheeley suffered a broken pelvis. Both Vincent and Sheeley survived, but the accident killed Vincent's tourmate and Sheeley's fiancé, Eddie Cochran.
Later career:
His attempts to re-establish his American career by recording in folk rock and country-rock styles proved unsuccessful, and he is most remembered today for his recordings of the 1950s and early 1960s which originally appeared on the Capitol Records label.
On the album "I'm Back and I'm Proud" recorded for long-time fan John Peel's Dandelion label, Gene was backed by members of The Doors, whose lead singer, Jim Morrison, copied Gene's 'Leather Look'.
He has achieved a genuine legendary status and his work is respected, and often copied, by singers and groups worldwide. His major hit, Be-Bop-A-Lula has become what is considered to be one of the top three rock'n'roll records of all time and has rightly earned Gene a place in the history of modern music. Had he managed to survive through the Punk years, he would undoubtedly still be a leading figure in contemporary rock'n'roll.
On his final tour of the UK, he was backed by The Wild Angels, a British band who had previously worked at the Royal Albert Hall with Bill Haley & the Comets and Duane Eddy. Because of pressure from his ex-wife, the Inland Revenue and promoter Don Arden, Gene had to return rather swiftly to the USA.
Gene Vincent died from a ruptured stomach ulcer while visiting his father in California, and is interred in the Eternal Valley Memorial Park, Newhall, California.
He was the first inductee into the Rockabilly Hall of Fame on its formation in 1997. The following year he was also posthumously inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Bluejean Bop
Gene Vincent & His Blue Caps Lyrics
Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴ Line by Line Meaning ↴
With your big blue eyes
Don't want you looking
At other guys
Got to make you give me
One more chance
I can't keep still, so baby let's dance!
Well the bluejean bop is the bop for me
It's the bop that's done in a dungaree
You dip your hip, free your knee
Squeal on your heel baby, one-two-three
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Bop, Blue Caps, Bop!
Well, bluejean baby when I bop with you
Well, my heart starts a-hoppin' like a kangaroo
My feet do things they never done before
Well, bluejean baby, give me more more more
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Rock it again, Blue Caps, Go!
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Blue Caps, bop with Gene, now, Let's go!
Well, it's bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean, baby won't you bop with Gene?
The lyrics to Gene Vincent's song Bluejean Bop celebrate the joy of dancing with a specific partner - the "bluejean baby" with the "big blue eyes". Vincent declares that he cannot bear the thought of her looking at other guys, and begs her for one more chance to dance with him. The song describes the excitement and energy of the bluejean bop, which is done in dungarees and involves dipping hips, freeing knees and squealing on heels. As Vincent bops with his bluejean baby, his heart "starts a-hoppin' like a kangaroo" and his feet do things they've never done before.
Overall, the lyrics to Bluejean Bop are a simple celebration of young love and the joy of dancing. They capture the exuberance of youth and suggest a time of innocence and fun. The song's upbeat tempo and infectious melody make it an enduring classic in the rockabilly genre.
Line by Line Meaning
Bluejean baby
Addressing the listener, who is wearing blue jeans.
With your big blue eyes
Complimenting the listener's appearance and eye color.
Don't want you looking
Expressing possessiveness and jealousy over the listener's attention.
At other guys
Asking the listener to only pay attention to the singer and no one else.
Got to make you give me
Acknowledging the need to persuade the listener to stay with the singer and dance.
One more chance
Imploring the listener to dance with him one more time.
I can't keep still, so baby let's dance!
Expressing the singer's enthusiasm for dancing and imploring the listener to join him in the Bluejean Bop.
Well the bluejean bop is the bop for me
Declaring the singer's love for the Bluejean Bop dance style.
It's the bop that's done in a dungaree
Describing the type of clothing typically worn while doing the Bluejean Bop - blue jeans.
You dip your hip, free your knee
Explaining some of the dance moves involved in the Bluejean Bop.
Squeal on your heel baby, one-two-three
Providing more specifics about the dance moves involved and encouraging the listener to join in.
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Repeating the name of the dance and expressing enthusiasm for it again.
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Asking the listener to dance the Bluejean Bop with the singer, named Gene Vincent.
Well, bluejean baby when I bop with you
Referring to the listener again and emphasizing how the singer feels when dancing with them.
Well, my heart starts a-hoppin' like a kangaroo
Describing the singer's excitement and joy when dancing with the listener.
My feet do things they never done before
Describing how dancing the Bluejean Bop with the listener makes the singer feel - like they are doing something new and exciting.
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Repeating the request for the listener to dance with the singer.
Rock it again, Blue Caps, Go!
Encouraging the band, called the Blue Caps, to keep playing and to start the song over again.
Bluejean, bluejean bop
Repeating the name of the dance and emphasizing its importance in the song.
Bluejean, bluejean bop
Repeating the name of the dance again.
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Asking the listener one more time to dance with the singer and the Blue Caps.
Lyrics © Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Written by: Hal Levy, Gene Vincent
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
@Wolfhoundersful
Bluejean baby
With your big blue eyes
Don't want you looking
At other guys
Got to make you give me
One more chance
I can't keep still
So baby let's dance!
Well the bluejean bop is the bop for me
It's the bop that's done in a dungaree
You dip your hip, free your knee
Squeal on your heel baby, one-two-three
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Bop, Blue Caps, bop!
Well, bluejean baby when I bop with you
Well, my heart starts a-hoppin' like a kangaroo
My feet do things they never done before
Well, bluejean baby, give me more more more
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Rock it again, Blue Caps, go!
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Blue Caps, bop with Gene, now, let's go!
Well, it's bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean baby, won't you bop with Gene?
@jolyne7913
Bluejean baby
With your big blue eyes
Don't want you looking
At other guys
Got to make you give me
One more chance
I can't keep still, so baby let's dance!
Well the bluejean bop is the bop for me
It's the bop that's done in a dungaree
You dip your hip, free your knee
Squeal on your heel baby, one-two-three
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Bop, Blue Caps, Bop!
Well, bluejean baby when I bop with you
Well, my heart starts a-hoppin' like a kangaroo
My feet do things they never done before
Well, bluejean baby, give me more more more
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Rock it again, Blue Caps, Go!
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Blue Caps, bop with Gene, now, Let's go!
Well, it's bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean, baby won't you bop with Gene?
@Wolfhoundersful
Bluejean baby
With your big blue eyes
Don't want you looking
At other guys
Got to make you give me
One more chance
I can't keep still
So baby let's dance!
Well the bluejean bop is the bop for me
It's the bop that's done in a dungaree
You dip your hip, free your knee
Squeal on your heel baby, one-two-three
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Bop, Blue Caps, bop!
Well, bluejean baby when I bop with you
Well, my heart starts a-hoppin' like a kangaroo
My feet do things they never done before
Well, bluejean baby, give me more more more
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Rock it again, Blue Caps, go!
Well, the bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean bop, baby won't you bop with Gene?
Blue Caps, bop with Gene, now, let's go!
Well, it's bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean bop, bluejean bop, oh baby!
Bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean, bluejean bop
Bluejean baby, won't you bop with Gene?
@sdgakatbk
The whole band sounds really good on this.
@GarageZan
Go,go,go Gene Vincent for ever ROCKABILLY RULES! The man had the grace of God...
@paulbrennan3996
Rock n Roll pioneer sadly missed but never forgotten 🎼🎶 Gene Vincent R.I.P and R.I.P to Dickie Harrell 🙏👏🤝🎼🎶
@wesleycook7687
Underrated performer. He had the Presley sound on Be Boppa Lula first. A real Rockabilly legend. Loved all his records. John Lennon has a picture with him on Gene's Unchained Melody video. John really liked Gene Vincent.
@djangorheinhardt
God,that record is worth listening to ,if just for the sake of Cliff Gallup`s solos.He is superb on that track..Apparently Cliff was offered good contracts as a solo artist but he turned them down ,preferring to bring up his 2 children in a stable home life,when he quit Genes` Blue Caps.
@fredsalfa
First time Ive heard this music and its alot better than the modern stuff today
@ambush1sg
And Glenn on guitar! Man, there'll never be a replacement for Gene, Eddie Cochran & Buddy Holly!!!
@mathieuschuler366
This comment is as old as most kids on youtube these days
@tomrucco6490
It might be an old comment the bottom line is there will never be a replacement for that Talent !