| PRESTON
EPPS (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
Preston Epps
(born 1931 in Oakland, CA) still performs in clubs in Southern
California and the Southwest region of the United States. A
one-hit-wonder, Epps scored a number 14 pop hit in 1959 with “Bongo
Rock,” but subsequent singles felled on deaf ears. He learned to
play the bongos and other percussion instruments during the Korean
War while stationed in Okinawa.
When his duties ended, he forsook Northern California for Southern
Cali, sustaining himself by working odd jobs; he hung around the
emerging beatnik, hippie set by frequenting coffeehouses, and
pounding the skins for the appreciative heads. DJ Art Laboe
discovered Epps at a cozy, laid-back coffeehouse and signed him to
his newly founded Original Sound Records. Epps’ “Bongo Rock” became
the label’s first hit; Laboe released a second single, “Bongo,
Bongo, Bongo,” in 1960 that slotted 64 positions lower.
Epps first album, Bongo Bongo Bongo, dropped in 1960 on the heels of
the second single and did okay. However, subsequent singles, “Bongo
in the Congo,” “Bongo Rocket,” “Bongo Boogie,” “Flamenco Bongo,”
“Mr. Bongo,” “Bongo Shuffle,” and other Bongo derivatives failed to
generate any interest. Two more albums, Bongola (1961) and Surfin’
Bongos (1962), went unnoticed; you can find select recordings by
Epps on numerous vinyl and CD compilations. The Incredible Bongo
Band updated “Bongo Rock” (Epps co-wrote the instrumental with
Arthur Egnoian, a pseudonym for Arthur Laboe) and rode it to number
73 in 1973.
Epps played a bongo player in the movie Girl In Gold Boots, released
in 1969. The flick was about a draft-dodger, a drifter, and his
wannabe-dancer girlfriend; all get implicated in a murder centering
around drugs, sex, and rock & roll in the late ’60s. Epps has done
extensive session work, including an appearance on Gypsys’ debut LP
for Metromedia Records. Still active, Epps plays a variety of clubs
in Southern California including Monteleone’s West, the Lozano
Restaurant, and the Atlas Supper Club. |