The Blue Caps were a pioneering American rock and roll band of the 1950s, the backing band for early rockabilly icon Gene Vincent. They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2012, as part of a class of overlooked backing bands selected by a special committee.[1][2]
Robert Burke Warren, writing for the Hall of Fame, called them "One of the first self-contained rock & roll bands",[1] while Rolling Stone has called them "The first rock & roll band in the world".[3][better source needed]
Members inducted into the Hall of Fame were guitarists Cliff Gallup, Tommy "Bubba" Facenda, Paul Peek, Willie Williams, and Johnny Meeks; bassists Bobby Jones and Jack Neal; and drummer Dickie Harrell, who died in 2023.[1] Drummers Juvy Gomez and Clyde Pennington, bassist Bill Mack, piano player Max Lipscomb, and guitarists Grady Owen and Jerry Merritt were also members at various times.
Vincent knocked the lights out of every stage he hit, and his Blue Caps picked up the pieces and threw them out the window.
The Blue Caps wore flat light blue caps on stage.[1]
The Blue Caps disbanded before the end of the 1950s, but reformed with original members Meeks, Peek, Harrell, Jones, and Facenda for a 1982 tour of England and a new record.[5]