Hank Ballard: "You know what inspired me to write that was when Fats Domino had that, I found my thrill on Blueberry Hill. I said, okay, Fats. You said there's a thrill up there. Let's Go and get it."
“Let’s Go” became one of the biggest hits for Hank Ballard and the Midnighters. The year was 1960. It reached number 1 on the R&B charts and crossed over to pop as a top ten hit, the second of only two top 10 singles for Hank Ballard and the Midnighters.
Hank Ballard: “Well, John Otis is the guy that was instrumental in getting us a recording contract.”
The Midnighters were originally called The Royals. Sonny Woods, a member of the first group, knew that The Royals needed to change their sound to keep up with the rising popularity of rock and roll.
That's when he found Hank Ballard.
Hank Ballard: “But Sonny Wood was the guy that found me on the assembly line at Ford Motors in Detroit, Michigan. That was during the war when the 16-year-old were allowed working permits, you know, because of the manpower shortage. But Sonny heard me singing on the assembly line one day just, you know, singing tunes, that was current on the radio. Sonny took me in for an audition, and I came out alright. I just, it took them two years to train me how to keep from singing flat.”
Hank Ballard was born November 18, 1936, in Detroit. His father died when he was seven years old and was sent to Alabama to be raised by relatives. It didn't take long before Hank Ballard had felt the itch to get back to the big city.
Hank Ballard: “My people in Alabama were fanatics, man. All they did was go to church and back home into the store, the grocery store, and that was it. That was one of the reasons why I ran off when I was 13 years old and went back to Detroit. I couldn't stand that restraint. You know? I wanted to sing the blues.”
Like hundreds of other examples in the annals of rock and roll history, Hank Ballard has a story of what could have been. It was 1959. King Records released a single by Hank Ballard, which became a minor hit.
It was called “Teardrops on Your Letter.”
Hank Ballard:“That song was written by Henry Glover. He was the president, the vice president of King Records, and naturally, he's gonna go with his song, man. He had written it and had it published. You know he's gonna push his side. You know, that's business. I can understand that. But I kept telling him, see, man, you gotta turn it over. The hit is on the other side. I kept pleading and pleading and pleading. They couldn't hear it, you know.”
The flip side was a little dance number written by Hank called “The Twist.”
Hank Ballard: “They just couldn't hear it, but Dick Clark heard it. He heard it and went and found Chubby Checker.”
Chubby Checker's recording of Hank Ballard's “The Twist” became an international dance sensation. Despite all that, Hank Ballard had a stellar career, which was reignited when he did some work with his old friend James Brown.
Hank Ballard was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990. He died on March 2nd, 2003.