The “Golden Hits Of The 50s”
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KINGSMEN
“Weekend”
East-West 115
(Rudy Pompilli, Frank Beecher, Billy Williamson)
No. 35 September 22, 1958
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The Kingsmen were the King’s men, the King of Rock’n’Roll’s men, that is; Bill Haley’s Comet’s, without Bill.
They existed as a separate recording entity–under this moniker–for two singles. They were Frank Beecher
(guitar),Ralph Jones (drums), Rudy Pompilli (sax), Al (Piccarelli) Rex (bass), and Billy Williamson (steel
guitar).
East-West Records was set up by the Atlantic label in 1957 as a subsidiary to handle the Lee Hazelwood and
Lester Sill productions. Although Lee and Lester would stir up a pack of hits for the Jamie Records and
Duane Eddy, in particular, their quiet release of the Kingsmen·s honky-sax single “Weekend” would be their
short-lived (1957-58) companies only charting. Reportedly, with Decca Records’ (Haley & the Comet’s
home label) consent provided their identities were cloaked and the Bill-less Comet’s cut but one other hard-
core rocker, “The Cat Walk.” Sales were unjustly slim; after all, these Bill-less comets rocked-out. Hey,
what’s to say, the name was shelved.
A year later the same line-up, in support of a Reading, Penn. buddy of Beecher’s named Bill Fisher (guitar),
the Comets recorded and nearly charted as the Lifeguards. Their noisy and right-rockin’ “Everybody Outta
the Pool” received a lot of “American Bandstand” airplay.