![]() ![]() ![]() (laughs) Hey man, that's one appointment we're all gonna keep. Q - You lost some guys in The Pharoahs, didn't you?Ī - Yeah. Then I think it was released nationally in April or some time like that in 1965 by M.G.M. ![]() Not the old Sun Records Studio, but the new one. Q - Where then did you record "Wooly Bully"?Ī - I recorded it in Sam Phillips recording studios on Madison, his new studio. (laughs) I mean, what is it? Success has a thousand fathers. Is that story true?Ī - I never heard of him. He turned you down and later calculated he lost two million dollars. You approached the owner of Riposo Studios, Tony Riposo, and offered him a percentage of future sales of the record instead of having to pay for studio time. Q - I've heard this story for years that you were in Syracuse, New York in the early 1960s and you were trying to record "Wooly Bully". We spoke with Sam about the history of Sam The Sham And The Pharaohs. Along the way Sam The Sham even made an appearance on the top-rated television show, The Ed Sullivan Show. Other hits followed, including "Juju Hand", "Oh That's Good, No That's Bad", and "Lil Red Riding Hood". Domingo Samudio, better known as Sam The Sham, enjoyed a big hit record with a song called "Wooly Bully", a song that sold over three million copies in the U.S. ![]()
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