01 Fats Noel - You Belong To Me
Fats Noel– You Belong To Me
2:56
Composed by Chilton Price, Pee Wee King & Redd Stewart
Fats Noel & His Orchestra
Orville "Fats" Noel: Tenor Sax
Other musicians unknown
Recorded in New York City, N.Y. 1953
Originally issued on the 1953 single (Herald 401) (78 & 45 RPM)
This recording taken from the 1998 album "Honkers & Bar Walkers" (Delmark DL-438) (LP)
A bandleader, saxophonist and singer who recorded briefly in the early 1950’s without success but his frantic style and racy subject matter brought him more attention posthumously than he ever enjoyed in his lifetime.
Not much is known about Orville “Fats” Noel. It’s been written that he might’ve been from Connecticut or New York, born perhaps in 1926, but as to where or when he got his start and how got noticed, those questions have never been answered and may never have been asked.
On his most rock-centric sides he’s still playing with a jazzman’s view of the music, just sped up and made more crude, and so it stands to reason, considering the time period he was active in (1951-1952) that he began by playing jazz and switched to rock when it offered more opportunities, especially for someone whose vocal style was untutored.
The rest of his output though showed good diversity with limited opportunity – six sides in total, mostly instrumentals ranging from bluesy rock to jazzy rock and covering both fast and slow tempos nicely.
His most notable record came on his first – and only – release for DeLuxe, a legendary label finally starting to expand its roster again, featuring his lone vocal appearance. Despite its ribald content that made it perfect for rock, it drew little notice at the time and a year later he was on the newly formed Herald label for one session which resulted in two singles, neither of which sold either.
Reportedly Noel passed away soon after that, at the end of 1952, an obscure figure in his own time but a lingering name in the history books thanks to his first release with a title and subject that offered a little more than its author could deliver.