Looking For My Baby -Tony Allen & Wonders '59 Jamie 1119
Hello, this is
Tony Allen. I was born
Anthony Penia [pronounced Pan-yay]
Allan in
New Orleans on August 13, 1932, the son of
Oscar and Johnie [Jo-nay] Allan. My mother was a Geechie, which is a
French Creole, and my father was a mix of
Indian and black.
Music came from my mother's side of the family. She once played saxophone in The
Sweethearts of Rhythm. Her brother was
Frank Penia, who owned the Dew-Drop Inn, one of New Orleans's top
R&B; clubs in the '
40s and '50s.
I learned to play piano in church when I was six. My friends used to call me sissy when they'd see me practicing, but I was determined to find my way in music someday. My father, who was a butcher, resented my musical ambitions--even after I started making records. I grew up in the
Ninth Ward, not too far from
Fats Domino's house, so I'd often go over and watch him play, and naturally he was an inspiration for me.
I came to
Los Angeles for the first time in
1941 and went back home because I didn't like it. But my
Uncle Frank sent me back out here to live with my Aunt
Nila Love, who I came to call
Mother because she was a great love of my life. I lost her during the
Watts riots in
1965. I attended
George Washington Carver High with
Arthur Lee Maye and
Eugene Church.
Later I went to
Jefferson High, where I knew
Cornel Gunter and
Bobby Freeman.
Arthur introduced me to
Jesse Belvin, who only lived a block away from me, on 41st
Place and
Long Beach Boulevard. We all became good friends.
Tony Allen
I recorded my first record when I was 14. It was called "
Angel Child." [According to other sources, it was called "
Strange One."] I recorded that song at
Austin McCoy's backyard studio for a man named Emmett
Jose, who released it on his label,
Aries. If you can find that record today, I'd sure like to see it. Then I wrote "I'm Your
Mojo Man" for
Larry Brice [
Tide Records] and "
No One" for The Furys. I also sang with
Big Jay McNeely's vocal group, Three
Dots & a
Dash.
Jesse Belvin is the one who took me out to
Specialty Records and introduced me to
Bumps Blackwell. While
Jesse was taking care of business, I started playing around with the piano there, and
Bumps came over and asked me if I was under contract. I said I wasn't, so he called me back not too long after that when he was having trouble with Jesse.
Nite owl was a name my 'mother" Nila had for me because I was always staying out late at night. I turned that phrase into a little song and recorded it on
July 4,
1955, at
Master Recorders in
Hollywood, with
The Chimes singing behind me, even though they were billed on the record as
The Champs. The Chimes backed everybody on Specialty. They were
Charles Jackson,
David Cobb,
Pookie Whooten and
John Talbert.
The labels for that record got mixed up at
Al Levine's pressing plant. I know this because I was working there at the time."I" was supposed to be the
A-side, but when jocks played "I," they heard "Nite Owl" instead, and liked it. By the time [Specialty owner]
Art Rupe caught the
error, "Nite Owl" was already a hit around town. I was pressing my own record at Levine's when
Art called me up to say that it was a hit.
I went on the road with a lot of Specialty's top acts, like
Little Richard, Eugene Church,
Larry Williams,
Wynona Carr,
Lloyd Price and
Clifton Chenier.
When I left Specialty I recorded for everybody. My cousin Buelah Mae and me recorded as The
Cupids for
Aladdin Records. I sang with The Jayos for
Johnny Otis on his
Dig label, and they backed me on my single there. I did a lot of stuff with
Vernon Green's brother
Jimmy; he was in my group at
Bethlehem and
Original Sound.
Charles Wright was also in The Twilighters [Bethlehem]. I kept making records right into the
1960s, but then other things kind of took me away from music.
But
I've never stopped performing.
Thanks to "Nite Owl" being such a big hit around
Southern California and other parts of the country, I'm always singing somewhere these days. I've sung at five or six Doo-Wop
Society shows.
My favorite was the time
Gaynel Hodge,
Richard Berry, Eugene Church and I formed a vocal group together, a one-time-only group, and sang our asses off. We sang "
Pretty Girls Everywhere," "
Louie Louie," "
Earth Angel," "
Emily," some of Jesse Belvin's songs, and "Nite Owl" of course. Man, that was a night
I'll never forget.
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