Saturday Night Fish Fry

"Saturday Night Fish Fry" is a popular song, written by Louis Jordan and Ellis Lawrence Walsh, best known through the version recorded by Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five.

The single was a big hit, topping the R&B chart for twelve non-consecutive weeks in late 1949. It also reached number 21 on the national chart, a rare accomplishment for a "race record" at that time (although the very popular Jordan had already had earlier crossover hits). Jordan's jump blues combo was one of the most successful acts of its time, and its loose and streamlined style of play was highly influential.

"Saturday Night Fish Fry" was first recorded by Eddie Williams and His Brown Buddies, which featured the talk-singing vocals of Ellis Walsh. The act had recently had a number 2 R&B hit with the song "Broken Hearted", and "Saturday Night Fish Fry" was intended to be the band's followup. However, the acetate for the Williams band version found its way to Louis Jordan's agent and as Williams later recalled, "They got theirs out there first."

However, Jordan also reconfigured the song, taking a refrain that had been intermittent in Wiliams' version -- "And it was rockin', it was rocking, you never seen such scuffling and shuffling 'til the break of dawn" -- and refocusing it as the recording's hook, singing it twice after every other verse. The Jordan band also dropped the shuffling rhythm of the Eddie Williams original, accelerating the pace into a raucous, rowdy jump boogie-woogie arrangement.

The recording, which at 5:21 ran longer than a standard side of a 78 record, was broken into two halves, one on either side of the release. The song's lyrics are in the first person, and describe two itinerant musicians going to a fish fry on Rampart Street in New Orleans, Louisiana. The scene becomes a wild party that is raided by the police, and the narrator ends up spending the night in jail.

Jordan's "Saturday Night Fish Fry" has been called one of the first rock and roll records. Chuck Berry was quoted as saying, "To my recollection, Louis Jordan was the first one that I hear play rock and roll." The number has since been covered by many other artists, including Pinetop Perkins, B.B. King, and The Coasters. Jordan himself re-recorded the song in 1973 for an album entitled I Believe In Music.

BBC comedy-show host Stephen Fry adapted the song's title into a play on his own name and used the result for his six-part 1988 programme Saturday Night Fry. American radio station WHRV, broadcasting from Norfolk, Virginia, uses the song's name for its Saturday night early-jazz program hosted by Neal Murray.

Famous quotes containing the words saturday night, saturday, night, fish and/or fry:

    Saturday night is the loneliest night in the week.
    Sammy Cahn (1913–1993)

    The return of the asymmetrical Saturday was one of those small events that were interior, local, almost civic and which, in tranquil lives and closed societies, create a sort of national bond and become the favorite theme of conversation, of jokes and of stories exaggerated with pleasure: it would have been a ready- made seed for a legendary cycle, had any of us leanings toward the epic.
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)

    Captain Quinlan: When this case is over, I’ll come around some night and sample some of your chili.
    Tanya: Better be careful. May be too hot for you.
    Orson Welles (1915–1985)

    Let a man get up and say, “Behold, this is the truth,” and instantly I perceive a sandy cat filching a piece of fish in the background. Look, you have forgotten the cat, I say.
    Virginia Woolf (1882–1941)

    Comedy is an escape, not from truth but from despair; a narrow escape into faith.
    —Christopher Fry (b. 1907)