ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Beatles - Anthology 2025
ADVERTISEMENT
The Beatles - Anthology 2025
ADVERTISEMENT
The Beatles - Anthology 2025

‘Rudy The Fifth’: Rick Nelson Dares To Be Different

Rick had been developing a country-influenced sound for many years when an October 1971 concert brought him to a crossroads.

Published on

Rick Nelson 'Rudy The Fifth' artwork - Courtesy: UMG
Rick Nelson 'Rudy The Fifth' artwork - Courtesy: UMG

Sometimes a hit career can be a heavy burden, especially when it’s founded on being one of the biggest heartthrobs in American pop music history.

The Rolling Stones - Black & Blue
The Rolling Stones - Black & Blue
The Rolling Stones - Black & Blue

After his massive success as first a radio and TV star as a child, and then with the  adulation of being the ultimate teen pin-up recording artist, Rick Nelson had been maturing as an artist and developing a country-influenced sound for many years, when he arrived at a crossroads on October 15, 1971.

Nelson and his Stone Canyon Band had just released the Rudy The Fifth album, which narrowly missed the top 200 chart in the US but was widely acclaimed. As a measure of how far he’d come from the days of “Poor Little Fool,” “Hello Mary Lou” and countless other hits of his youth, it included covers of the Rolling Stones“Honky Tonk Women” and Bob Dylan’s “Just Like A Woman” and “Love Minus Zero/No Limit.”

Nevertheless, the star was still closely identified with his past, and took part in the seventh annual Rock ‘n’ Roll Revival concert at Madison Square Garden in New York. The bill also featured such fellow long-runners as Chuck Berry, the Coasters, Gary “US” Bonds, Bo Diddley, the Shirelles, and Bobby Rydell.

Nelson played his old hits, but didn’t want to be defined by them, and dared to play new material from Rudy The Fifth. Boos rang out from the rock‘n’roll crowd, although there is a school of thought that they weren’t directed at Rick, but at the police for refusing to let fans on stage. Either way, the artist would have the last laugh. He was moved to write “Garden Party,” which specifically referred to the experience and, in 1972, gave him a spectacular comeback hit.

Click to load video

“I went to a garden party to reminisce with my old friends,” Nelson wrote of the concert. “They all knew my name…no one recognized me, I didn’t look the same.” He even included a specific reference to singing the Stones’ song. “Played them all the old songs, thought that’s why they came/No one heard the music, we didn’t look the same/I said hello to Mary Lou, she belongs to me/When I sang a song about a honky-tonk, it was time to leave.”

Listen to uDiscover Music’s official Ricky Nelson Best Of playlist.

But Nelson couldn’t have been more right when he concluded on the song’s memorable chorus: “You can’t please everyone, so you got to please yourself.” He did just that, and the song wound up in the US Top 10 — which, with rich irony, also contained new hits by fellow rock‘n’roll heroes Berry and Elvis Presley.

Buy or stream the Rick Nelson album Rudy The Fifth.

1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. LIN BUTLER

    March 17, 2017 at 1:43 pm

    Rudy the fith was one of the most under rated albums ever . great album helped kick off the california country rock.

Comments are temporarily disabled and will return shortly.
The Beatles
The Beatles
Anthology Collection
12LP Box Set
ORDER NOW
The Smashing Pumpkins - Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness Super Deluxe 6LP
The Smashing Pumpkins
Mellon Collie And The Infinite Sadness
Super Deluxe 6LP
ORDER NOW
Various Artists
Various Artists
Classic Holiday Singles Box
14 x 7in Singles
ORDER NOW
The Rolling Stones - Black And Blue 5LP and Blu-ray
The Rolling Stones
Black And Blue
5LP and Blu-ray
ORDER NOW
Guns N' Roses - Live Era
Guns N' Roses
Live Era '87-'93
4LP
ORDER NOW
Carly Rae Jepsen - E•MO•TION 2LP
Carly Rae Jepsen
E•MO•TION
Magenta Swirl Color Vinyl 2LP
ORDER NOW
uDiscover Music - Back To Top
uDiscover Music - Back To Top