On Turn Table Talk, the topic was “It’s No Act!” . We all can think of musicians who’ve tried to make the leap to acting – David Bowie, Cher, Sting, among many others – but this month we’re looking at actors/actresses or other celebrities who’ve decided to try to launch a music career after being noted in other entertainment fields. I picked Ricky Nelson. Thanks Dave!
I think Ricky Nelson is one of the few examples of actors who went into music and were remembered as musicians. He was a good actor, but he will be remembered more as a musician.
I went through a Ricky Nelson phase when I graduated in 1985. I purchased a greatest-hits package and was learning more of his songs. I wanted to go see him perform that year, and I kept waiting for him to appear somewhere because I heard he was touring. This was before the internet, and you had to read the newspapers for announcements and listen to the radio. Musicians would play at places, and you would never know sometimes.
I never got a chance to see him because on December 31, 1985, his chartered jet crashed, killing him and six other passengers. Ricky was a rockabilly guy and a great one. He gets lost in the shuffle because he was a huge teenage actor at the time on his family’s show…The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet. In the rock world, being a teen idol knocks you down the respect ladder.
Before Ricky Nelson became one of the biggest teen idols of the 1950s, he was already a television star. He was born in 1940 into a show business family. His parents, Ozzie Nelson and Harriet Nelson, starred in the popular radio and television series The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet. Ricky appeared on the show as himself beginning in the early 1950s. Millions of viewers watched him grow up on screen each week. By the time he reached his teenage years, he was already one of the most recognizable young faces in America.
Music came almost by accident. Ricky wanted to impress a girl (she was a massive Elvis fan) and claimed he was a recording artist. To make the story true, he recorded Fats Domino’s I’m Walkin’ in 1957. The song became a hit. Soon he was recording regularly and turning out hits such as Poor Little Fool, Travelin’ Man, and Hello Mary Lou. Unlike many teen stars of the era, Nelson worked with strong musicians and was full tilt in rockabilly and early rock and roll.
As the 1960s arrived, Nelson continued acting while building a successful music career. He later dropped the “Ricky” and became known as Rick Nelson. His sound matured and moved toward country rock before the style became popular. While television gave him his start, music became his legacy. He is remembered as one of the few entertainers who successfully made the jump from television star to respected recording artist.
The sad part is that his music wasn’t taken as seriously later on because he was a teen idol. That started to change over time, and he was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1987. I always considered Rick Nelson a musician and a great rockabilly artist, along with country rock. I always considered him the real deal.
I’ve heard the phrase “The universal language is not music, nor love; it is loneliness,” and this song fits it perfectly.

Ricky Nelson was deeper and much more diverse than people gave him credit for, and much of that realization didn’t come till after he’d died, as evidenced by his posthumous induction into the Hall of Fame. I remember when “Garden Party” was laughed at and panned as Ricky trying too hard to be cool or surreal …. “wants to be like the Beatles or “American Pie”,” people were saying. You treated Ricky right, Max. Excellent write up, Max.
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Thanks Nancy! I always thought exactly what you said. You are right, he wouldn’t have been elected that soon I don’t think if he wouldn’t have been killed. His catalog is wonderful to listen to. Yea he was told that Garden Party would come off as arrogant if he released it…I’m glad he didn’t listen.
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That personal connection and the impact of his death must have been a powerful thing. Especially with you being a musician. He really did have more to offer, evidenced by this excellent profile. Really well done Max.
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Yes it was…I was totally immersed in his music at that time. Thanks Randy!
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I grew up on Ozzie & Harriet. And sneaking in a prom scene so Ricky could sing. He was the cute brother – like Davy Jones as the cute Monkee, and Paul McCartney as the cute Beatle.
I didn’t really follow him later, but appreciated “Garden Party” and his giving voice to the frustration of being pigeon-holed as a teenager.
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That is one show I have never went back and watched. It’s amazing that it was on the air as long as it was…I think 12 years.
Yea he was stuck with that label…
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Thanks for taking part again Max! Rick was a good choice and popular one too, and the comments when I had this on the other site suggested my feeling that ‘Garden Party’ was one of the great songs of the early-70s. I knew some of his story and some of his songs but this showed me there was more to him than I realized.
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Thanks Dave! He was really pumping out some classic songs in the 50s. I got to know them listening to oldies channels…then I made the connection…hey this is the same guy that did Garden Party.
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Ricky Nelson. The early stuff hit me as acceptable as oldies. But Garden Party truly earned my respect. He still has it. The Stone Canyon Band, Ricky included, never got the respect they deserved,
Good post
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I totally agree!
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