Tue 28 October, 7pm, THE FORUM
 9-17 Highgate Road, London NW5
 
JERRY LEE LEWIS
 & THE KILLER BAND
 + LINDA GAIL LEWIS
with Darrel Higham and the Enforcers
 + very special guest (flying in from the US for this one show)
 WANDA JACKSON
with Wes McGhee & The London Party-Timers
 
 Tickets: £49 dancing (stalls); £69 unreserved seating (balcony)
 Tickets can now be bought from
www.smartermusic.net
 Joint tickets with the 100 Club show (£10 off Forum tickets) can
 be
 bought at
www.rhythmat.com This link will also let people who have
 already bought tickets for the Jerry Lee Lewis show @ the 100 Club
 buy
 discounted tickets for the Forum.
 Note: If you or anyone you know needs tickets for the private
 Jerry Lee
 Lewis show at the 100 Club, please buy them very soon... less than
 100
 are left and then that's it! Click for 100 Club tickets

 

Story of the Song : 'What's Made Milwaukee Famous' Jerry Lee Lewis (1968)

 

By Robert Webb   The UK Independent Friday, 20 June 2008

It was beer that made the industrial port of Milwaukee in Wisconsin famous. The song made a hit for the writer Glenn Sutton, who sadly died in April last year. In 1968, Sutton was working as a staff producer at Columbia. A burgeoning songwriter, he had also engaged a music publisher, Al Gallico, and was asked to come up with some material for Jerry Lee Lewis. In the mid-Sixties, the legendary wild man of rock, nicknamed "the Killer", had been persuaded by his producer, Jerry Kennedy, to switch styles to the more commercial sound of country and western. Sutton delayed the commission and was put on the spot when he took a call from Gallico. A song was needed for a Lewis session the next day and Gallico wanted to know what he'd got.

 

Sutton had nothing prepared, but he didn't want to lose the work. He glanced at a paper on his desk. There was an advert for Schlitz, "the beer that made Milwaukee famous". "I just said to Al, it's a drinking song," Sutton told the author Mick Brown. "I'd written a lot of drinking songs before then, but I'd never thought of that." Schlitz was one of a number of breweries, mostly established by German and Polish immigrants, which had sprung up in Milwaukee since the 19th century. Their slogan made a great title, particularly as a country number. Sutton burnt the midnight oil and "What's Made Milwaukee Famous (Has Made a Loser Out of Me)" was completed by daybreak.

His twist was in the subtitle. Beer may have put Milwaukee on the map, but it had put the song's protagonist on the skids. It appealed to the Killer's instinct, however, and he cut it the day after it was written. Paced around a rolling piano, and sweetened by a plaintive fiddle accompaniment, it shot up the Billboard Country chart and opened Lewis's album Another Place, Another Time. It was covered by many, including Sutton's wife, Lynn Anderson, of "Rose Garden" fame. Rod Stewart returned it to the charts in 1972 and on Lewis's recent CD Last Man Standing, the two singers duetted on an updated version of Sutton's epitaph.