10 Doc Sausage - Sausage Rock
10 Doc Sausage With Earl Johnson– Sausage Rock

Doc Sausage and his Mad Lads

Drums, vocals – Doc Sausage (Lucius Tyson)
Guitar – Charlie Jackson
Piano – Charles Harris
Tenor Saxophone – Earl Johnson
2:35

Regal Records 3236
recorded 1950

Sausage Rock
Written-By – Sausage, Biggs

Lucius Antoine Tyson (7 March 1911 – September 1972),[1] who performed as Dr. Sausage or Doc Sausage, was an American singer, dancer, drummer and bandleader. He was active from the 1930s to the 1950s and is best known for his 1950 recording of "Rag Mop".

Career
He was born in Brunswick, Georgia, and moved to New York City in 1936.[2][3] By 1938, he was performing with his group, Dr. Sausage and His Five Pork Chops. Regarded as a novelty act,[4] the group included Al "Dr. Horse" Pittman.[5] His pianist Jimmy Harris was killed in a car crash that year,[6] but the following year the group performed as a "specialty" feature in a revue, Lew Leslie's Blackbirds of 1939, at the Hudson Theatre. Their act was influenced by performers such as Cab Calloway, and contained comedy, swing jazz, and vocal harmonies.[4] The group first recorded for Decca Records in 1940, on a version of "Wham (Re-bop-boom-bam)" featuring Gerry "The Wig" Wiggins on piano. However, neither it nor other tracks for Decca were commercially successful.[4]

Tyson did not record again until 1950, when his new group, Doc Sausage and His Mad Lads, recorded for the Regal label. As well as Doc Sausage on vocals and drums, the group comprised Earl Johnson (tenor saxophone), Charles Harris (piano), Charlie Jackson (guitar), and Jimmy Butts (bass).[7] The group recorded eight tracks, including a version of "Rag Mop" which reached number 4 in the Billboard R&B chart,[2] and its follow-up, "Sausage Rock".[8] The record company went out of business soon afterwards, and Tyson seems not to have recorded again.[4]

Tyson died in New York in 1972 at the age of 61.[1]