The true Father of Rock n Roll was way before Chuck. Maybe Arthur Crudup or Howlin Wolf or numerous others. Chuck Berry was a blues guitarist who jumped on the RnR train after he saw it being successful. He was obviously great at it but certainly not "the father". Chuck's first record "Maybelline" came out in 1955 and Elvis already had "That's All Right " out in 1954 and Bill Hailey and the Comets had "Crazy Man Crazy" out in 1953. And there were lots of RnR sounding songs before that.My father loved Chuck Berry. He wore out the record Johnny B Goode, and I'm still tired of it.
I did like Chuck Berry, but Father of Rock and Roll? I dunno. I vote Little Richard for that title.
Exactly. No one invented RnR. It just morphed over time. On one side you had black R&B turning RnR and on the other you had Western Swing turning that way too. That was one of the things with Elvis , he combined both sides in his early Sun sessions with R&B songs like "Good rockin' Tonight" and "That's All Right" and rocking up country songs like "Blue Moon of Kentucky" and "I'm Left,You're Right, She's Gone". Check out that album if you want to hear some great early RnR.Father of Rock and Roll? He was certainly a great contributor, as was Elvis, but Rock and Roll had already been annoying parents for years before the big names showed up. What comes to my mind is Rock Around the Clock, by Bill Haley and the Comets. I remember my parents shocked by that song. Granted Bill Haley was not all that good, and the equipment back then was limited, but I think he was there earlier. I could be wrong. Although, I wouldn't call Bill Haley the Father of Rock and Roll either. I suppose every genre needs a "Father of", but I'm thinking that going from "Swing" to "Rock and Roll" was more of a transition, with no real father, but just a bunch of innovators reaching out to those that were moved by something new, probably some of the early Blues Men that took Blues in a new direction that caught on.
Chuck's hit "Maybelline" was basically a rewrite of the song "Ida Red"Anyone who thinks that Chuck's main focus wasn't commercialism need only to reference his release of the novelty trash "My Ding-A-Ling." He finally got a no. 1 Billboard pop hit.
Not saying there's anything wrong with commercialism, just sayin'.
I think he should've been embarrassed though when later albums and concert tours listed "Surfin' USA" as one he wrote. Yes I know that Brian Wilson admitted that the song's source was "Sweet Little Sixteen" and Chuck deserved a part credit for writing it, but still .... Frankly, I think that Chuck's "Promised Land" is a clearer rip-off of the old "Wabash Cannonball" although "Wabash" may have been in the public domain at the time Chuck wrote his song.
Recall reading in "Ramparts" magazine as well as "Chuck Berry -- The Autobiography" that early promoters ripped him off and he always demanded payment up front. He once told a promoter that if he was ever offered less than $1K for a performance he would say, "Congratulations sir, you have just retired the great Chuck Berry."
Little Richard, Jerry Lee.My father loved Chuck Berry. He wore out the record Johnny B Goode, and I'm still tired of it.
I did like Chuck Berry, but Father of Rock and Roll? I dunno. I vote Little Richard for that title.
Nothing in that link where Elvis calls Chuck the Father of RnR. Elvis was very nice when it came to discussing other RnR stars , never saying a bad word about anybody. He said he wished he could write a song like Chuck, said he couldn't sing rock as well as Fats Domino ( which I think is ridiculous, Elvis was 10 times the singer Fats was)etc.I loved Elvis, but even he called Chuck Berry the Father of Rock n Roll .....
https://www.thetoptens.com/rock/father-of-rock-and-rill/
Top 5 greatest rock n roll song of all time, no question, and probably #1Definitely one of the greats. Couldn't count the number of times I've danced to "Johnnie be Goode". Arguably one of the most dance-able tunes ever written.
Nothing in that link where Elvis calls Chuck the Father of RnR. Elvis was very nice when it came to discussing other RnR stars , never saying a bad word about anybody. He said he wished he could write a song like Chuck, said he couldn't sing rock as well as Fats Domino ( which I think is ridiculous, Elvis was 10 times the singer Fats was)etc.
It's just silly to call Chuck the Father when that connotates being the first and as I've already stated Elvis, Bill Haley, and lots of other acts had RnR records out before Chuck. Call him the greatest if you want, or most influential, etc but he can't be the Father of RnR.
Chuck's beginnings were blues, everybody started somewhere. "That's All Right " wasn't rockabilly at all. It was an old Arthur Crudup blues song. "Baby Let's Play House " was certainly rockabilly though. Rockabilly was a precursor to RnR.Elvis' beginnings were Rockabilly .... "That's All Right Mama" , etc. ... '54, '55 ..... Chuck Berry was strictly Rock n Roll.
In July 1954, in his first session for Sam Phillips’s Sun label of Memphis, Tennessee, Presley recorded two songs that would lay the foundation for rockabilly: “That’s All Right,” written by Mississippi bluesman Arthur “Big Boy” Crudup, and a hopped-up version of “Blue Moon of Kentucky,” a mid-tempo waltz by Bill Monroe, the creator of bluegrass. Presley sang with African-American inflections and more emotional intensity than country singers of the time. He accompanied himself on strummed acoustic guitar, Scotty Moore provided fills with electric guitar, and Bill Black added propulsive upright bass as the trio established rockabilly’s quintessential instrumentation. Following this blueprint, rockabilly records typically featured a wildly expressive vocalist tearing into a bluesy song while flailing away on an acoustic guitar. Backing was provided by a bass played in the slapping style, frequently supported by a drummer; an electric guitarist filled the gaps and took an energetic solo; and the whole sound was enlarged by a studio effect called slap-back, or “Sun echo,” developed by Phillips.
https://www.britannica.com/art/rockabilly