LINK WRAY & HIS RAY MEN

LINK WRAY & HIS RAY MEN

Genres: rockabilly, surf rock, Surf, Rock and Roll, rock

About LINK WRAY & HIS RAY MEN

(Sometimes spelled Link Wray and His Wraymen) Link Wray's 1958 hit Rumble was a staggering advancement in the development of rock instrumental music. The power chord was born and the record's dirty sound and threatening atmosphere were miles away from anything which had gone before. Despite it reaching #16 in the charts it was too controversial (yes, really) for Cadence label boss Archie Bleyer and he passed on a follow-up. Raw-Hide thus emerged on Epic Records and also made the Top 30, but Epic too insisted on watering Link down for his only 1950s album release. Link created his own Rumble Records and released the mighty Jack The Ripper in 1961. Its stinging chords are allied to some nifty damped picking, searing solos and a pounding beat that helped define the more aggressive side of surf music. Check out the The Surfaris "Play" album for evidence. The Swan label later picked up on Jack The Ripper and it eventually spent a full eight weeks in the Top 100 during the summer of '63.

Taken from Last.fm

81,584 listeners  ·  352,504 plays via Last.fm

On RadioStar

8
stations playing
4
countries
12
tracks tracked
most active station

LINK WRAY & HIS RAY MEN — Top 12 songs

Artist Song title Like / Dislike
Link Wray & His Ray Men Raw-Hide
Link Wray & His Ray Men "3 Deacon Jones" (In The Box on 103.3 Asheville FM)
Link Wray & His Ray Men Deuces Wild
Link Wray & His Ray Men Jack The Ripper
Link Wray & His Ray Men Alone
Link Wray & His Ray Men White Lightning
Link Wray & His Ray Men You Hurt Me So
Link Wray & His Ray Men Desperado
Link Wray & His Ray Men Creepy
Link Wray & His Ray Men Please Please Me
Link Wray & His Ray Men Girl From The North Country
Link Wray & His Ray Men Jack the Ripper (Vermillion)
"3 Deacon Jones" (In The Box on 103.3 Asheville FM)
Please Please Me
Girl From The North Country
Jack the Ripper (Vermillion)