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"Susie Q" is a rockabilly song co-written and performed by American musician Dale Hawkins [4] released in 1957. The song was a commercial success and became a classic of the early rock and roll era, being recorded by many other performers in subsequent years.
Susie Q is a 1996 fantasy-comedy television film directed by John Blizek and starring Justin Whalin, Amy Jo Johnson [2] and Shelley Long.It originally aired on Super RTL in Germany, followed by Disney Channel's airing of it in the United States on October 3, 1996, as a Disney Channel Premiere Film. [3]
The guitarist on the original Hawkins version, James Burton, would also exert a major influence on Fogerty, with the singer telling Lynne Margolis of American Songwriter, "James Burton was a huge influence on me going back to when I was a child, when I bought that record, 'Susie Q,' and that was James Burton playing that guitar—which I didn't ...
"Suzie Q" Dale Hawkins Robert Chaisson Stan Lewis Eleanor Broadwater † Creedence Clearwater Revival: 1968 [9] "Sweet Hitch-Hiker" John Fogerty Mardi Gras: 1972 [8] "Take It Like a Friend" Stu Cook † Mardi Gras: 1972 [8] "Tearin' Up the Country" Doug Clifford † Mardi Gras: 1972 [8] "Tombstone Shadow" John Fogerty Green River: 1969 [2 ...
By 1968, AM radio programmers around the U.S. took note when CCR's cover of the 1956 rockabilly song [13] "Susie Q" received substantial airplay in the San Francisco Bay Area and on Chicago's WLS-AM. [16] It was the band's second single, its first to reach the Top 40 (No. 11), and its only Top 40 hit not written by John Fogerty.
Susie Q, a 1995 American TV film; Suzie Q (manga), a fictional character from Part 2 of the Japanese manga JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Battle Tendency; Suzi Q. Smith (born 1979), American poet; Suzy Q, a 1999 Dutch film starring Carice van Houten; Susie Q, a nickname for Susan Delfino (Teri Hatcher) on the TV show Desperate Housewives
The latter disc, from 1970s Portrait of the Originals, sold more than one million copies and received a gold disc awarded by the R.I.A.A. [3] Both songs became seminal soul music recordings, and both have since been covered: 1990s R&B group After 7 re-recorded "Baby, I'm for Real" and made it a hit again in 1992, while another 1990s R&B group ...
Suzy Q was released in 1958. Creedence Clearwater Revival's version of the song on their 1968 debut album helped launch their career and today it is probably the best-known version. [5] In 1958 Hawkins recorded a single of Willie Dixon's "My Babe" at the Chess Records studio in Chicago, featuring Telecaster guitarist Roy Buchanan. [6]