Original released on LP Sun 109
(US, 1958)
Best known
to most listeners for the aptly titled instrumental smash "Raunchy,"
Bill Justis was also a longtime linchpin of the
Justis
would nevertheless score only more chart hit, "College Man," which
only went as high as number 42. He continued recording the occasional single
(including "Flea Circus," penned by Steve Cropper), but by and large
focused the remainder of his career on studio work, arranging sessions for
Jerry Lee Lewis, Johnny Cash, and Roy Orbison. Justis also discovered Charlie
Rich at Memphis
night spot The Sharecropper Club and brought him to Sun in 1960, arranging
Rich's first major hit, "Lonely Weekends." However, squabbles with Phillips
prompted Justis to leave Sun soon after, and he formed his own label, the
short-lived Play Me Records. After moving to Nashville and briefly reuniting with Rich at
RCA, he landed with Mercury, which remained his home for the remainder of his
career. In the years to follow, Justis would arrange records for everyone from
Patsy Cline to Dean Martin to Tom Jones, also recording a series of
instrumental LPs for Mercury's Smash subsidiary. In 1972 he scored his first
film, "Dear Dead Delilah". In 1977, he scored the smash Smokey and the Bandit,
reuniting with star Burt Reynolds a year later for Hooper. Justis died of
cancer on July 15, 1982.



