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Rockabilly Rebellion: The Very Best Of...

1.4M streams

1,353,493

The Hollywood Cats

738.9K streams

738,902

Perpetual Stomp

228.5K streams

228,519

Rockabilly Rebellion: The Very Best Of...

173.4K streams

173,390

The Rollin' Rock Recordings, Vol. 2

148.3K streams

148,325

Dim Café's Vol 2

141.7K streams

141,717

The Original Rockabilly Album

115.8K streams

115,814

Recalls the Music of Woody: More Hard ...

81.7K streams

81,718

The Ultimate Jimmie Skinner Songbook

80.3K streams

80,328

Play It Cool

49.4K streams

49,388

Biography

Rockabilly wildman Ray Campi recorded several classic singles during the music's prime era, and later staged a comeback that earned him a substantial cult audience over the '70s and '80s. Campi was born in New York in 1934 and moved with his family to Austin, TX, at age ten. He started listening to country music, learned the guitar, and formed his first band in high school, which played on local radio stations. Campi made his first recordings in 1951, but it wasn't until 1956, when he cut the single "Caterpillar" b/w "Play It Cool" for the small TNT label, that any of them were released. He went on to record for Domino ("Screamin' Mimi") and Dot ("The Ballad of Donna & Peggy Sue"), and moved to Los Angeles in 1959, where he signed with Colpix and recorded "Hear What I Wanna Hear." During the early '60s, Campi lived in New York and spent two and a half years as a staff writer at Aaron Schroeder's publishing firm, but was never allowed to record any of the songs he'd written. He returned to Austin in 1967 and recorded "Civil Disobedience" for the Sonobeat label, but nothing came of it, and he settled in Los Angeles and became a junior-high school teacher. Around 1973, Campi hooked up with Ronny Weiser's revivalist Rollin' Rock label and started making new recordings in the classic, high-energy rockabilly style. A steady stream of albums followed into the '80s, which also brought a couple of sets for Rounder, 1980's Rockin' at the Ritz and 1986's Gone, Gone, Gone!. Campi continued to record into the new millennium, releasing occasional albums on his own label. He died in Los Angeles on March 11, 2021, at the age of 86. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi