Rock & roll forerunner Freddie Bell exerted a profound influence on the young
Elvis Presley -- not only did Bell's energetic Las Vegas act shape The King's own larger-than-life stage persona, but
Presley also lifted his rendition of the raucous
Big Mama Thornton classic Hound Dog almost note-for-note, notching a landmark single in the process. Born Ferdinando Dominick Bello in Philadelphia on July 29, 1931, Bell studied trombone, bass, and drums as a teen, and made his professional debut in support of saxophonist Eddie Ventura. At age 20, he formed his own group, the Bellboys, with pianist Russ Conti, guitarist Frank Brent, trumpeter Jerry Mayo, saxophonist Jack Kane, and drummer Chick Keeney, together they honed a jump blues-inspired sound heavily indebted to
Louis Jordan. After spending six months touring the Midwest, Bell and the Bellboys landed an extended residency at the Las Vegas casino The Sands. Following the commercial success of the like-minded
Bill Haley the Comets, Bell and the Bellboys signed to Mercury and in 1956 issued their debut single Big Bad Wolf. While the record was a minor hit at best, the relative scarcity of white rock & roll acts was enough to secure the group a spot in producer
Sam Katzman's quickie feature #Rock Around the Clock, which co-starred
Haley the Comets as well as R&B immortals
the Platters. The film proved a blockbuster on both sides of the Atlantic, with Bell's performance of the novelty tune Giddy-Up-a-Ding-Dong enough to push the accompanying single into the British Top Five later that year.
Bell and the Bellboys were well into their headlining stint at The Sands when Presley took up residence across the Las Vegas Strip at The New Frontier on April 23, 1956. According to legend, Bell's swaggering choreography and knee-jiggling dance moves had a significant impact on the young singer. Presley was also smitten with Bell's arrangement of the Jerry Lieber/Mike Stoller number Hound Dog, and on May 16, 1956 Presley added the song to his own nightclub act, and his celebrated guitarist Scotty Moore even admitted "We stole [the song] straight from them." While Presley's rendition later sold four million copies in the U.S. alone, becoming the first-ever single to top the pop, country, and R&B charts, Bell remained philosophical, telling an interviewer "I didn't feel bad about that at all. In fact, I encouraged him to record it." In early 1957 Bell and the Bellboys toured Britain alongside native son Tommy Steele, followed by performances in Paris, Southeast Asia, and Australia. On returning to the U.S. in 1958, the group appeared on television's #Ed Sullivan Show, but a hit record eluded them and they soon resurfaced at The Sands, spending the next several years as a Vegas fixture. Following an appearance in the 1964 feature #Get Yourself a College Girl the Bellboys split, but in the decades to follow Bell headlined any number of rock & roll revival festivals in Europe and Japan. After a long battle with cancer, Bell died in Las Vegas on February 10, 2008 -- he was 76 years old. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi