— Main Menu —
Of The 50s
–
The Artists
–
The Songs
The Golden 50s
The Golden 60s
The Golden 70s
Articles
Home
PLACE_LINK_HERE?wmode=transparent” width=”1600″ height=”1600″ >
LILLIAN
BRIGGS
“I WANT YOU TO BE MY BABY”
(Jon Hendricks)
Epic 9115
No. 18 October 1, 1955
.
,,
From the age of 12 on, Philly Lillie spent all her spare time messin’with the instruments: the
accordion, piano, violin, and, in high school, the trombone. Lill became so good on the trombone
that she represented her school at a district festival. In her senior year, she joined the Swingettes,
an all-girl boogie-woogie band. After graduation, she worked the window at a movie theater and
continued making rounds with the Swingettes. When the group broke up, Lill formed her own
orchestra, playing the Philadelphia night spots and appearing weekly on radio WAEB. By day,
she drove a truck.
.
In April of 1954, Briggs, joining Joy Cayler and her All-Girl Orchestra, started singing. Alan Freed
discovered her during her New York City singing debut at the Arcadia, “The Million Dollar Ballroom.”
Legend has it that Freed–attracted to Lill’s vocal talents as well as her skin-tight silver- and gold
lame dresses–helped Briggs get an audition with the folks at Epic Records. The boys there looked’n liked her,
too, and waxed her in alsolutely no time flat.
.
“I Want You to Be My Baby” was Lillian’s first offering, and, unfortunately, her only hit recording.
If not for Georgia Gibbs’s competing rendition, “IWant You” might have wriggled its way into the Top
10. The seasonal “Rock ‘n’ Rol-y Poly Santa Claus” failed to break any chart ground. Next up and quickly
down was Lillian’s cover of “Eddie My Love.” Competing with the original version by THE TEEN QUEENS
and covers by the Chordettes and the Fontane Sisters, Briggs’ tasty take flopped. ABC-Paramount, Coral,
and Sunbeam all tried their best to mold her into a choice chart item, but nothing worked.
.
For some years thereafter, Lillian Briggs continued working Alan Freed’s many New York rock’n’roll
shows. Perhaps, determined as she was, she is still out there somewhere, rockin’ her stuff in an all-girl
boogie woogie bar band.
COPYRIGHT 1997 Wayne Jancik