
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Air Week: July 14-20, 2025
Varetta Dillard might be a footnote in R&B and Rock n’ Roll history, having only scored 3 R&B charting records, but her body of recorded work speaks for itself. She was more than just a Ruth Brown impersonator, though she could sound a lot like her idol. Dillard was also part of pop culture, having waxed a tribute record to the recently deceased Johnny Ace (“Johnny Has Gone” in 1955) and making the top 10 with it. She scored 2 R&B shuffle hits with “Easy Easy Baby” in ’52 and “Have Mercy, Mr. Percy” in ’53. Both tunes are very catchy and are well-remembered today, but the other side of Varetta Dillard’s story is one of unfulfillment. The bosses at Savoy Records, her first label where she scored her 3 hits, and RCA subsidiary Groove Records, believed that Dillard had the sound and talent to crossover to pop. Both labels really tried to get a pop hit out of her, but it just wasn’t in the cards. This week, Matt The Cat loads up the ol’ Rockola with Varetta Dillard’s best remembered 78s from 1951-56 as we ponder one of R&B’s nearly-forgotten chanteuses on the “Juke In The Back.”
LISTEN BELOW
4.9
5959 ratings
Air Week: July 14-20, 2025
Varetta Dillard might be a footnote in R&B and Rock n’ Roll history, having only scored 3 R&B charting records, but her body of recorded work speaks for itself. She was more than just a Ruth Brown impersonator, though she could sound a lot like her idol. Dillard was also part of pop culture, having waxed a tribute record to the recently deceased Johnny Ace (“Johnny Has Gone” in 1955) and making the top 10 with it. She scored 2 R&B shuffle hits with “Easy Easy Baby” in ’52 and “Have Mercy, Mr. Percy” in ’53. Both tunes are very catchy and are well-remembered today, but the other side of Varetta Dillard’s story is one of unfulfillment. The bosses at Savoy Records, her first label where she scored her 3 hits, and RCA subsidiary Groove Records, believed that Dillard had the sound and talent to crossover to pop. Both labels really tried to get a pop hit out of her, but it just wasn’t in the cards. This week, Matt The Cat loads up the ol’ Rockola with Varetta Dillard’s best remembered 78s from 1951-56 as we ponder one of R&B’s nearly-forgotten chanteuses on the “Juke In The Back.”
LISTEN BELOW
14,365 Listeners
38,713 Listeners
43,969 Listeners
91,011 Listeners
77,846 Listeners
30,845 Listeners
43,483 Listeners
16 Listeners
56,285 Listeners
8,366 Listeners
24 Listeners
21 Listeners
6,447 Listeners
4 Listeners
1,220 Listeners