With his emphatic, hiccuping vocal style, strong and elemental guitar work, and engaging personality,
Charlie Gracie was one of the first truly international rock & roll stars, rising to fame in the United States as well as Great Britain. Embracing a style that mixed pop, rockabilly, and R&B,
Gracie was also Philadelphia's first rock & roll star, the first successful artist on that city's famed Cameo Records, as well as an early regular on American Bandstand.
Gracie was still in high school when he began performing at local talent shows, parties, and social events, and he released his first single in 1953. He was a seasoned performer when he recorded "Butterfly" in 1957, which became a number one hit in America and the U.K. Months later, he scored another major hit with "Fabulous," and became only the second American rock & roller to do a British tour. While
Gracie would continue to record through the '60s, digging deeper into his R&B influences, he would never have another major hit in America, but he continued to perform regularly in the United States as well as England, Europe, and the Netherlands.
Gracie was cited as a major influence by
George Harrison,
Graham Nash,
Van Morrison, and
Paul McCartney. Beginning in 2001,
Gracie began recording again with the album I'm All Right, and in 2011, he teamed with studio legend
Al Kooper to cut the LP
For the Love of Charlie.
Born May 14, 1936 (the same day as
Bobby Darin), with his surname originally spelled "Graci",
Charlie Gracie grew up in South Philadelphia, listening to country music and big-band jazz. At age ten, he obtained his first guitar, and by 15 he was a prodigy, performing regularly and winning contests on the simulcast radio and television show of early jazz great
Paul Whiteman. Signed first to Cadillac Records,
Gracie's first single, "Boogie-Woogie Blues," recorded in 1951, was not a hit, nor were a couple of follow-ups for other labels. In 1956, he was signed to the fledgling Cameo label.
Gracie's first recording for the label consisted of two songs written by the label's co-owners,
Bernie Lowe and
Kal Mann, "Butterfly" and "Ninety-Nine Ways." With repeated appearances on American Bandstand, as well as The Ed Sullivan Show and other TV programs of the day,
Gracie's popularity soared, and by April 1957, "Butterfly" had reached number one in the States. ("Butterfly" also became a chart-topper for crooner
Andy Williams the same year.)
Gracie's style was not as raucous as fellow early rockers such as
Gene Vincent or
Eddie Cochran, but he made up for any loss of grit with an undeniable professionalism and easy likability. likability guitar style has been described as a mix of rockabilly, jump blues, swing, and country boogie, while his vocals incorporate pop, blues, R&B, and rock & roll influences.
Another
Mann-
Lowe composition, "Fabulous," followed "Butterfly" in the spring of 1957, reaching number 16 in the U.S. and number eight in the U.K.
Gracie subsequently toured the U.K. -- only the second American rock & roll act to tour there, following
Bill Haley & the Comets -- headlining at the Hippodrome Theater. He scored only one further hit in America, "I Love You So Much It Hurts," written by country singer
Floyd Tillman, which only reached number 71 (although it reached number 14 in the U.K.). His biggest hit in England was yet to come, "Wanderin' Eyes," which reached number six there, and he logged his final U.K. hit with 1957's "Cool Baby."
Gracie continued to record for Cameo into 1958, when he had a falling out with
Lowe;
Gracie would later file suit against Cameo for unpaid royalties. Dick Clark, who had a business relationship with Cameo, didn't book him on American Bandstand after that, and
Gracie faded from the charts.
He recorded for several other labels into the '60s, including Coral and Roulette, and he continued to perform regularly both near Philadelphia, in the U.K., and in Europe, where the rockabilly revival kept his popularity high for decades. In 2001,
Gracie struck up a friendship with
Quentin Jones, a guitarist and rockabilly enthusiast who ran the independent Lanark Record label.
Jones and
Gracie began working together, with
Jones anchoring the band when
Gracie played a string of dates opening for
Van Morrison, as well as producing his 2001 studio effort I'm All Right. In 2006, after many years out of print,
Gracie's Cameo Records material was finally released on the CD compilation
The Best of Charlie Gracie 1956-1958, and the following year, a documentary film chronicling his life story, Fabulous, was aired on PBS stations. In 2011,
Gracie and
Jones teamed with legendary producer and sideman
Al Kooper to cut a new album.
For the Love of Charlie included guest appearances from longtime fans
Graham Nash,
Peter Noone (of
Herman's Hermits),
Jimmy Vivino (from
Conan O'Brien's band), and
Dennis Diken (of
the Smithereens). ~ Mark Deming & Jeff Tamarkin