Hot Dog (Buck Owens song) explained

Hot Dog
Type:single
Artist:Corky Jones
B-Side:"Rhythm and Booze"
Recorded:c. Spring 1956
Studio:Lu-Tal Recording Studio, Bakersfield, California
Genre:Rockabilly
Label:Pep
Producer:Buck Owens
Prev Title:Right After the Dance
Prev Year:1956
Next Title:I'd Rather Have You
Next Year:1957

"Hot Dog" is a rockabilly song by country singer Buck Owens, initially released under the pseudonym Corky Jones in September 1956 by independent Californian country label Pep.

Background and release

Wanting to stretch himself musically and influenced by the likes of Elvis Presley and Gene Vincent, Owens wrote and recorded the rockabilly songs "Hot Dog" and "Rhythm and Booze". Not wanting to upset his country fans or for its release to affect his aspiring country career, Owens released the single under the pseudonym Corky Jones. The single was commercially successful locally, but did not get any further due to lacking in national distribution.[1]

In 1961, the single was re-released by Tennessee label New Star as Buck Owens with overdubbed additional instrumentation.[2] The original Pep record was also reissued in 1975.[3] In 1988, Owens re-recorded "Hot Dog" for his album of same name, and it was released as a single by Capitol Records on 28 September that year, upon which it charted at number 46 on the Billboard Country chart.[4]

Personnel

Original recording:

1988 re-recording:

Charts

Weekly charts

Shakin' Stevens version

Hot Dog
Caption:Cover of the single released in the Netherlands
Type:single
Artist:Shakin' Stevens
Album:Take One!
B-Side:Apron Strings
Released:[5]
Recorded:1979
Studio:Eden Studios, London
Genre:Rock and roll
Label:Epic
Producer:Mike Hurst
Prev Title:Spooky
Prev Year:1979
Next Title:Hey Mae
Next Year:1980

Welsh rock and roll singer Shakin' Stevens released a cover of the song in January 1980 as the only single from his album Take One!. It became his first UK hit, peaking at number 24 on the Singles Chart.

Release

Despite being release at the beginning of January, the single did not enter the UK Singles Chart until the second week of February. It stayed in the charts for nine weeks, reaching its peak on the third week of March. The success of the single led Take One! to enter the Album Charts and peak at number 62.

The B-side "Apron Strings" is a cover of the song written by George David Weiss and Aaron Schroeder, first released by David Hess in 1959 under the name Billy the Kid.[6] However, the B-side of the single released in New Zealand was a cover of Smiley Lewis' "Shame, Shame, Shame", written by Kenyon Hopkins and Ruby Fisher (the record miscredits the song to Bob Geddins and Jimmy McCracklin who wrote a different song of same name).[7]

Reception

Reviewing the song for Record Mirror, Robin Smith wrote "One more from the lumbering rock 'n' roll mastodon that refuses to die. Off we go with cats and chicks gathering round the hot dog stand of a summer's evening. The sort of thing you've heard time and lime before, and will no doubt be tortured with time and time again."[8]

Track listings

7"

  1. "Hot Dog" – 2:48
  2. "Apron Strings" – 3:06

7" (New Zealand)

  1. "Hot Dog" – 2:48
  2. "Shame, Shame, Shame" – 2:09

Charts

Other cover versions

Notes and References

  1. Book: Sisk, Eileen. Buck Owens: The Biography. 2010. Chicago Review Press. 978-1-55652-768-5. 22, 286, 335, 367. en.
  2. Web site: Buck Owens - Sweethearts In Heaven / Hot Dog. 2021-01-29. Discogs. 1961 . en.
  3. Web site: Corky Jones - Hot Dog / Rhythm And Booze. 2021-01-29. Discogs. en.
  4. Buck Owens. 2021-01-29. Billboard.
  5. 5 January 1980. News. Record Mirror. 4. 29 January 2021.
  6. Web site: Billy The Kid [Kapp] - I Hardly Know Me]. 2021-01-29.
  7. Web site: Shakin' Stevens - Hot Dog. 2021-01-29.
  8. 12 January 1980. Singles. Record Mirror. 8. 29 January 2021.