The Braun Brother had beat him to The Crescent City by recording Paul Gayten and Annie Laurie first, but with Bartholomew's help, Chudd was able to sign Fats Domino, Smiley Lewis, Archibald and Jewel King, dominating the New Orleans R&B scene. This week, we continue our Imperial series with part three, focusing on the last half of 1951 and all of 1952. Due to a disagreement with Lew Chudd, Imperial was without Dave Bartholomew for most of this period, but Fats Domino kept crankin' out the hits with producer and songwriter Al Young, including his first R&B #1, "Goin' Home." Lil' Son Jackson, T-Bone Walker and Big Jay McNeely released some great records during this period and Smiley Lewis had his first charting record with "The Bells Are Ringing." Bartholomew returned to the fold in April of '52 and produced some scorchers from Fats, Tommy Ridgley and a beautiful, obscure single with Allen Matthews. We're keeping those records spinning on part three of the Imperial Records Story.
Sunday, 5/3/2026, 10pm - Juke In The Back