Al Reed’s Visit to SA Was a Flashback to the Past
Photo and story by
Ramón Hernández
hispentarchives@yahoo.com
Al Reed is among the last of the
Mohicans when it comes to true Chicano rock’n’roll
music legends.
This means the January 1958 Fox
Tech High School graduate – born Albert Gonzales --
preceded the Royal Jesters plus Little Joe and Sunny
Ozuna, who with Isidro López are considered to be the
"Founding Fathers of Tejano Music," in recording his
first single.
"My Padrino (Godfather)
sparked my interest in music when he gave me a guitar
and my first performance was when I sang Hank
Williams’ ‘Jambalaya’ during a talent show at Ira
Ogden Elementary School," the 72-year-old vocalist
said during an interview at Mi Tierra Café.
"I remember I would stand in front
of the mirror with my guitar and pretend to be singing
in front of an audience," he continued.
There was still much discrimination
against Americans of Mexican descent during the 1950s
so the Anglo looking hazel-eyed vocalist, who admired
blues musician Jimmy Reed took his last name and
shorted his first name to become Al Reed.
In 1955, Mando and the Chili
Peppers had their own radio show on KCOR and they
invited Reed to perform live, but his band had broke
up so he asked Rudy Treviño Gonzales, who headed the
Reno Bops to back him up on a couple of rockabilly
songs.
After he put a second band together
again, he was invited to appear on the "Scratch
Phillips" Monday night television show on KCOR-TV.
"I was sick with the flu," Reed
recalls. "And when he asked me for the name of my
group, I said, ‘The Blue Notes because this morning I
woke up with the blues."
Reed, Joe "Moco" Sánchez, guitar;
Felix Velásquez, bass; "Big" Ralph Sánchez, saxophone;
and Raúl García on drums; made up the Blue Notes.
They, Rudy and the Reno Bops, the
Lyrics, Sonny Ace and the Rhythm Rockers, later the
Del-Sharps, would perform at high school teen
canteens, the San Fernando Gym, the Fox Tech Gym,
Patio Analuz, the Tiffany Lounge, the Tourist Club,
Mr. Brown’s Cadillac Club on Navarro Street and the
Fort Sam Houston NCO Club. Also the Northside Lounge,
which was across from El Chamizal and La Cita
Nightclub across from the Alameda Theater.
As Reed, Ace, who looked up to
rhythm and blues singer Johhny Ace, went from Solís to
Ace and changed his first name from Domingo to Sonny.
Those were also the days of Mike
(Villa) and the Bel-Airs, Little Sammy Jay (Jaramillo)
and the Tiffaniers plus Rickie (Arguello) and the
Keys. The onda chicana came later. There
was no chicano music in 1956. It was either
rock'n'roll or rhythm and blues.
A showman at heart, during this
period, Reed would wear red, green, yellow, baby-blue
colored suits and blue suede shoes, long sideburns and
a pompadour.
"I wanted to be a big star so I
went to see Bob Tanner, owner of TNT Records and
convinced him to record me. However, it was for one
side of a single. I wrote ‘I Love Her So’ and Sonny
Ace wrote and recorded ‘Darling of Mine
.’
The 5-feet-8-inch tall songwriter’s
inspiration for this 1957 tune was his
then-girlfriend, Annie "Maybellene" Garza.
That single became a double-sided
regional hit and it was picked up by Dot Records whose
roster included Pat Boone, Eddie Fisher, Liberace, the
Mills Brothers and years later, Barbara Mandrell and
Freddy Fender. This turned Reed and Ace’s single into
a national hit.
This is the same year when Rudy Tee
recorded "Cry, Cry" as a 78 rpm single for Rio
Records.
At the height of his success, Reed
decided to move to California and he asked Annie to
make the move with him. However, her father wouldn’t
hear of it.
"He relented when my mother told
him, ‘Let them or they’re going to elope.’ I was 15
and he was 19 when we got married and left that same
night," said his wife of 42 years.
Marriage plus the birth of JoAnn
and Sandra brought his musical career to an end.
However, that didn’t stop him from getting up on stage
and sing with different bands and stay in touch with
his 1950s colleagues throughout the years.
When the Dell Kings – Randy Garibay,
Cleto Escobedo, Frank Rodarte and Richard Garza --
moved to California, they stayed at Reed’s home in
Santa Ana.
Last week, Rudy Tee and promoter
Juan Mendoza presented Reed with a plaque in
recognition for his musical contributions. Reed’s
wife, Annie, his daughter JoAnn, his grand-daughter
Kristal and Rudy’s wife Linda were in attendance
during this plaque presentation from Henry Parrilla
and the Citizens of San Antonio.
For those readers who are lost in
the ‘50s, there are plans to have an Edgewood Canteen
Reunion of stars featuring Sunny and the Sunliners,
Joe Bravo, Bobby Mack of the Sunglows and Rudy Tee.
More on that as information becomes available.

