Back to Jazz A La Creole: Seventh Ward Tour

Specialty Records Branch Office

1463 N. Claiborne Avenue
New Orleans LA 70116
Location Status: Same structure, different use
Curated by
The Ponderosa Stomp Foundation

Art Rupe, head of Specialty Records of Los Angeles, had scored huge New Orleans-recorded hits with “Lawdy Miss Clawdy” by Lloyd Price (1952), “The Things That I Used To Do” by Guitar Slim (1954), and “Tutti Frutti” by Little Richard (1955). In 1957, on a roll with a great run of Little Richard follow-up hits, Rupe felt the time was right to open a New Orleans branch office at 1463 N. Claiborne, above Houston’s for Music, a music store and school owned by society bandleader William Houston, president of the black American Federation of Musicians Local 496.

Rupe hired a bright, young modern-jazz musician, Harold Battiste, to manage the new office, finding, signing, recording, and promoting local talent. “Yes, I was one of the few outlets” in New Orleans, Battiste said in 1975. “I was easy to get to. There was still Dave [Bartholomew, at the Imperial branch office], but Dave was so busy with Fats [Domino]. He was sort of unreachable by the common little scared person with a little piece of paper in his hand, what they call a song. So there was room for them. I had to find a little cat to make the old Specialty sign; it was a funky little building.” Battiste went on: “My real assignment was to root out more Lloyds, Fats Dominos, and all that jazz. … Before I did a session for Specialty, it had been through the process of being approved [by Rupe and right-hand man Sonny Bono]. I also had to do the promotion rounds with the disc jockeys, the radio stations.”

The most successful record that Battiste cut in New Orleans, at Cosimo Matassa’s studio, was the classic rocker “Lights Out” by teenager Jerry Byrne in 1958, written by Mac Rebennack (later known as Dr. John) and Seth David. Other Specialty artists locally recorded by Battiste included Art Neville, the Monitors, and Larry Williams. Because of Rupe’s tight control, Battiste said in his autobiography Unfinished Blues that he missed out on signing Irma Thomas, Chris Kenner, and Allen Toussaint.

By 1959 Art Rupe was becoming disillusioned with the record business and shut down his New Orleans office. “The idea in my mind for the New Orleans office germinated after the successful Lloyd Price sessions in 1952,” Rupe said. “However, it became a reality later with Little Richard’s success. But our New Orleans office just didn’t make that much of an impact, or prove to be that competitive to Imperial Records.” Still, the Specialty branch office played its part in New Orleans R&B history, primarily as a stepping stone for the careers of Harold Battiste, Art Neville, and Mac Rebennack.

 

For more about North Claiborne Avenue, click here.

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