Ed Ward

Ed Ward is the rock-and-roll historian on NPR's Fresh Air with Terry Gross.

A co-author of Rock of Ages: The Rolling Stone History of Rock & Roll, Ward has also contributed to The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and countless music magazines.

Ward lives in Montpellier, France. He blogs at Ward in France.

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Music Reviews
11:40 am
Fri May 17, 2013

Jerry Lee Lewis: Live, Singing As If Life Depended On It

It was April 4, 1964, and Jerry Lee Lewis had officially bottomed out. He hadn't charted a record in years, and now, on tour in England and Germany, he was getting paid so little that he couldn't afford to bring his own musicians. Instead, he was forced to use pickup bands in England, and then, when he arrived in Hamburg, a British band called the Nashville Teens was waiting for him. The venue was the Star Club, where The Beatles, who had just leaped into stardom in America, had played not long before.

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Music Reviews
9:07 am
Wed April 10, 2013

Johnny Cash's Columbia Catalog Out Now — As A 64-Disc Box Set

Credit Sony Music
A new 63-disc box offers a complete retrospective of the Man in Black's storied career.

Originally published on Thu April 11, 2013 3:00 pm

In 1955, John R. Cash was a sometime auto mechanic, sometime appliance salesman who liked to play the guitar and sing, mostly gospel songs. The "R" in his name didn't stand for anything — and, in fact, he'd been named J.R. at birth and had to come up with "John" when he joined the Air Force. He'd spend the rest of his life reinventing himself.

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Music Reviews
10:26 am
Wed March 13, 2013

The Moving Sidewalks: Where The British Invasion Met Texas Blues

Credit Rancho Deluxe Productions
Before ZZ Top, Billy Gibbons (second from right) was in the more psychedelic Moving Sidewalks.

Originally published on Wed March 13, 2013 12:22 pm

There must be something in the water — or the beer — in Texas that caused the huge eruption of garage bands and psychedelic bands in the mid-1960s, because there sure were a lot of them, and their records on obscure labels have kept collectors busy for decades. Most of them were amateurs, but the Coachmen, who came together around 1964, were different.

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Music Reviews
11:54 am
Wed February 27, 2013

Aretha Franklin Before Atlantic: The Columbia Years

Credit Express Newspapers / Getty Images
Aretha Franklin became a star on the Atlantic record label after leaving Columbia.

Originally published on Wed February 27, 2013 4:01 pm

Aretha Franklin made her first record when she was 14, singing some gospel standards in the church of her father, Rev. C.L. Franklin, an easygoing Detroit pastor who was friends with Martin Luther King and just about every gospel singer you could name. One of the stars who visited a lot was Sam Cooke, who convinced Aretha that she could be a hit singing popular music.

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Music Reviews
10:47 am
Tue January 8, 2013

The Unsung Pioneer Of Louisiana Swamp-Pop

Credit Johnny Vallis
Joe Barry was a pioneer of "swamp-pop" in the early 1960s.

Originally published on Tue January 8, 2013 11:50 am

Southern Louisiana in the early 1960s was a hotbed of musical creativity among youngsters who'd been raised listening to French-language country music and Fats Domino. They combined those — and other — influences to make what's now called "swamp pop." Joe Barry was a pioneer in this area who should have been much bigger.

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Music Reviews
1:21 pm
Thu November 29, 2012

Turning Up The Volume On The Electric Blues

Credit Bear Family Records
Joe Hill Louis, B.B. King and Rufus Thomas appear on a new multi-disc compilation of electric blues, Plug It In! Turn It Up!

Originally published on Fri November 30, 2012 5:12 am

Blues is so much a part of the fabric of American music and American culture — not only as a defined musical form, but also as a springboard for all kinds of creativity — that it seems crazy to try to encapsulate it in any way. Bear Family Records, though, has just released a 12-disc survey of electric blues called Plug It In! Turn It Up! that does a great job of illuminating one particular aspect of the blues.

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Music Reviews
10:52 am
Tue November 20, 2012

The Insect Trust: An American Band Deconstructed

Credit Courtesy of the artist
The Insect Trust.

Originally published on Mon November 26, 2012 9:40 am

Music Reviews
10:35 am
Mon October 22, 2012

The Big Man Behind 'Shake, Rattle And Roll'

Credit Heinrich Klaffs / Wikimedia Commons
No figure in the history of rock 'n' roll is more incongruous than Big Joe Turner.

Originally published on Mon October 22, 2012 1:59 pm

Big Joe Turner's hardest-hitting singles have been collected on a new compilation, titled Big Joe Turner Rocks.

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Music Reviews
11:11 am
Mon October 15, 2012

More Than This: The 'Complete' Roxy Music

Credit Keystone / Hulton Archive
Roxy Music's eight studio albums are now collected in one box set, titled The Complete Studio Recordings 1972-1982.

Originally published on Mon October 15, 2012 12:40 pm

Roxy Music's eight studio albums have just been collected in one box set, titled The Complete Studio Recordings 1972-1982.

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Music Reviews
1:52 pm
Mon October 1, 2012

Out Of Industrial Wasteland, The English Beat Was Born

Credit Adrian Boot / Urbanimage.tv
The English Beat.

Originally published on Mon October 1, 2012 3:40 pm

In 1978, it seemed that every kid in Britain wanted to be in a punk band. But in Birmingham, that blighted industrial scar in the middle of the island, there wasn't much punk to be seen. The oasis was a club called Barbarella's, and that's where Dave Wakeling and Andy Cox hung out.

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Music Reviews
10:42 am
Mon September 10, 2012

The Forgotten Story Of Memphis' American Studios

Credit Stan Meagher / Getty Images
"Son of a Preacher Man" was Dusty Springfield's debut on Atlantic. The entire album that spawned it, Dusty in Memphis, was recorded at American Studios.

Originally published on Mon September 10, 2012 11:41 am

Memphis has been a music town since anyone can remember, and it's had places to record that music since there have been records. Some of its studios — Sun, Stax and Hi — are well-known, but American Studios produced its share of hits, and yet it remains obscure. But that's all likely to change with Memphis Boys: The Story of American Studios, both a book and a CD out now.

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Music Reviews
10:14 am
Thu September 6, 2012

Harmony, Teenagers And 'The Complete Story Of Doo-Wop'

Originally published on Fri September 7, 2012 10:31 am

Music Reviews
10:06 am
Thu August 16, 2012

Autosalvage: The Psychedelic Band That Vanished

Credit Courtesy of the artist
Autosalvage, a New York quartet, made one album and then stopped playing.

Originally published on Fri August 17, 2012 1:14 pm

A little over 10 years ago, a friend with a small record company in England called me and asked if I wanted to do liner notes for an album he was re-releasing. When he told me it was the Autosalvage album, I flipped. Of course I did!

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Music Reviews
10:16 am
Wed June 13, 2012

The Untold Story Of Singer Bobby Charles

Credit Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images
Singer, songwriter and swamp-pop pioneer Bobby Charles poses for a portrait in 1972.

Originally published on Wed June 13, 2012 12:31 pm

When he was around 13, Robert Charles Guidry began singing with a band around his hometown of Abbeville, La., deep in the Cajun swamps. The group played Cajun and country music and, after he passed through town and played a show, Fats Domino's music. It was a life-changing experience for the young man, and he found himself with a new ambition: to write a song for Fats.

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Music Reviews
10:00 am
Fri May 25, 2012

James Burton: The Teen Who Invented American Guitar

Originally published on Fri May 25, 2012 1:11 pm

What were you doing when you were 16?

When he was 16, James Burton was inventing the American guitar. He'd been born in Dubberly, La., in 1939, and was apparently self-taught on his instrument. At 15, he cut a single backing local singer Carol Williams, and then one day he came up with a guitar riff that he liked. He took it to a singer from Shreveport he was touring with, and they worked out a song to use in his act. One thing led to another, and it wound up on a record called "Suzie Q," credited to Dale Hawkins, the singer.

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