Rocky Dzidzornu | |
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Also known as | "Rocky" Rocky Dzidzornu Rocki Dzidzornu Rocky DziDzornu Rocky Dijon Rocky Dejon Kwasi Dzidzornu |
Genres |
R&B Rock Blues Funk World |
Occupation(s) | Percussionist |
Instruments | Congas, percussion |
Labels | Various |
Associated acts |
The Rolling Stones Taj Mahal Bill Wyman Nick Drake Ginger Baker Billy Preston Minnie Riperton Stevie Wonder Hugh Masekela Joe Walsh Jimi Hendrix |
Rocky Dzidzornu (1935 – March 13, 1993), also known as Rocky Dijon, was an African percussionist known for his playing contributions to recordings by The Rolling Stones, Nick Drake, Ginger Baker, Stevie Wonder, Billy Preston and Joe Walsh. During the 1970s he recorded extensively with Taj Mahal. Bill Wyman also enlisted him on his 1976 solo album Stone Alone.
War's drummer Harold Brown has named him as an important influence, and also credits him with teaching Ginger Baker.
Rocky was born in Ghana, Africa, and escaped poverty there by stowing away on a boat for weeks with hardly any food and water to make his way to England. He had a son Gary and a daughter Evonne with an English woman in London in the 1960s. Producer Jimmy Miller brought him in to work with the Rolling Stones.
Critic Ned Sublette has written that the addition of his conga drumming on "Sympathy for the Devil" transformed the song from "a dirge, and a dull one at that . . . making it come alive". He continued playing with them through 1968, on tracks like "Stray Cat Blues", "Factory Girl" and "You Can't Always Get What You Want" and also participated in the same era on the Rock and Roll Circus event. In 1970 they used him again on "Can't You Hear Me Knocking".