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The Escapades
The Escapades
1
Randy and the Radiants
Randy and the Radiants
2
The Breakers
The Breakers
3
Sam Phillips
Sam Phillips
American businessman, record executive, record producer and DJ
4
Lawson and Four More
Lawson and Four More
5
Jackie Brenston
Jackie Brenston
American R&B singer, saxophonist, songwriter
6
Wanda Jackson
Wanda Jackson
American singer, songwriter, pianist and guitarist
7
Luther Perkins
Luther Perkins
American musician
8
Warren Smith
Warren Smith
American rockabilly and country music singer and guitarist
9
The Paragons
The Paragons
10
The Wilde Knights
The Wilde Knights
11
Jim Dickinson
Jim Dickinson
American musician
12
Allman Brothers Band
Allman Brothers Band
American rock/blues band
13
Carl Perkins
Carl Perkins
American recording artist; rockabilly musician, songwriter
14
Sam Cooke
Sam Cooke
American recording artist; singer-songwriter and entrepreneur
15
The Cure
The Cure
English rock band
16
Malcolm Yelvington
Malcolm Yelvington
American musician
17
Paul Burlison
Paul Burlison
American rockabilly guitarist
18
Spacemen 3
Spacemen 3
band
19
Gene Vincent
Gene Vincent
American musician; rock and roll and rockabilly pioneer
20
The Cramps
The Cramps
US psychobilly band
21
The Savages
The Savages
22
D. J. Fontana
D. J. Fontana
American musician
23
Sonny Burgess
Sonny Burgess
American rockabilly guitarist and singer
24
Scotty Moore
Scotty Moore
American musician
25
Roland Janes
Roland Janes
American musician
26
Light Crust Doughboys
Light Crust Doughboys
American band
27
Bill Black
Bill Black
American bassist
28
Iron Maiden
Iron Maiden
English heavy metal band
29
The Reverend Horton Heat
The Reverend Horton Heat
American psychobilly trio
30
Jimmy Rogers
Jimmy Rogers
Chicago blues singer, guitarist and harmonica player
31
The Blue Moon Boys
The Blue Moon Boys
32
Patsy Cline
Patsy Cline
American country music singer
33
The Smiths
The Smiths
English rock band
34
Charlie Feathers
Charlie Feathers
American country music and rockabilly musician; songwriter
35
Don Randi
Don Randi
American pianist
36
Ike Turner
Ike Turner
African American musician, songwriter, and producer (1931-2007)
37
Syd Barrett
Syd Barrett
English musician, co-founder of Pink Floyd (1946-2006)
38
Rising Storm
Rising Storm
musical artist
39
Jerry Lee Lewis
Jerry Lee Lewis
American recording artist; singer-songwriter and pianist
40
The Grifs
The Grifs
41
Tora Tora
Tora Tora
American glam metal band
42
The Stranglers
The Stranglers
Rock band
43
Tav Falco's Panther Burns
Tav Falco's Panther Burns
American rock band
44
The Monks
The Monks
rock band
45
Public Nuisance
Public Nuisance
46
Junior Parker
Junior Parker
American Memphis blues singer and musician
47
Jellyfish
Jellyfish
American power pop band
48
George Martin
George Martin
English record producer, arranger, composer, conductor, audio engineer and musician

The Jesters were an American garage rock band from Memphis, Tennessee who were active between 1963-1964 and 1965-1967. They became one of the most popular groups in the Memphis area during the time. Led by Teddy Paige, they were unique amongst garage bands of the time in that they did not display any of the musical influences of the Beatles and the British Invasion, but reflected rather the a style of early rock and roll, rockabilly, and blues. Their work has attracted the interest of garage rock enthusiasts in recent years.

The original version of Jesters was founded by Teddy Paige in 1963 in Memphis, Tennessee, when he was a student at Christian Brothers High School. The Jesters quickly became one of the most popular bands in east Memphis and one of their chief competitors was the Escapades, who were led by Tommy Minga. In 1964, after some of the members of the Jesters left for college, the band broke up. Their rivals, the Escapades, also disbanded around this time. But, in 1965 Paige decided to re-form the Jesters, and brought in former members from the Escapades: Minga on vocals and Jerry Phillips, son of record producer and owner of Sun Records, Sam Phillips on guitar, as well as Billy Wulfers on bass, and Eddie Robertson on drums. Unlike most garage bands of the era, the Jesters' sound was not influenced by the Beatles and the British Invasion, but rather firmly rooted in early rock and roll, Memphis rockabilly, as well as the blues.

The Jesters went to Sun Studios to record a number of cuts including a version of a song written by Minga, "Cadillac Man", where the group was accompanied on piano by famed Memphis session man Jim Dickinson. However, Paige and producer Sam Phillips felt that the both "Cadillac Man" and the song to become its flipside, "My Babe", needed a different kind of lead vocal and enlisted Dickinson, instead of Minga, to sing on both tracks—much to the chagrin of Minga, who soon departed to re-form a new version of the Escapades. "Cadillac Man" received good local airplay, but did not gain wider exposure. The Jesters broke up in 1967.

The Jesters' work has come to the attention of garage rock and roots music enthusiasts. Their complete recordings have been released on the anthology Cadillac Men: The Sun Masters issued by Big Beat Records.