FRANK " FLOORSHOW " CULLEY
He was born in Petsworth, Gloucester County, Virginia (though some sources give Salisbury, Maryland),and grew up in Norfolk. He learned to play the tenor saxophone, and began playing in local bands before turning professional as a member of Johnson's Happy Pals in Richmond. In the mid-1940s he formed his own band, and began recording accompaniments for artists including Wynonie Harris, on several small labels, before joining Atlantic Records as their house band leader in 1948. His band backed many of Atlantic's most successful R&B artists of the period, with the recordings often featuring Culley's pianist, Harry Van Walls. He also recorded under his own name, having a #11 R&B hit in 1949 with his version of the instrumental "Cole Slaw", originally written (as "Sorghum Switch") by Jesse Stone and also recorded by Louis Jordan. The follow-up, "Floorshow", gave Culley the nickname with which he was credited thereafter. At the end of 1949, another Culley recording, "After Hour Session", reached #10 on the Billboard R&B chart.
After continuing to perform in clubs, he retired from the music business in 1975, and moved to Newark, New Jersey, where he died in 1991.
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