Best known for their 1965 smash "Wooly Bully," which helped introduce Tex-Mex rhythms to mainstream rock & roll,
Sam the Sham & the Pharaohs were formed in Dallas by lead singer
Domingo Samudio, who took the name
Sam the Sham from a joke about his inability as a vocalist.
The Pharaohs consisted of guitarist
Ray Stinnet, bassist
David Martin, saxophonist
Butch Gibson, and drummer
Jerry Patterson. Before hitting it big with "Wooly Bully," a song about
Samudio's cat, they recorded the independent single "Haunted House," which helped the band get a deal with MGM. Following "Wooly Bully," the group recorded a series of largely novelty singles, but only "Li'l Red Riding Hood" approached the success of its predecessor. Frustrated at being perceived as a talentless novelty act,
Samudio broke up
the Pharaohs in 1967 and recorded as the Sam the Sham Revue, and adopted the name
Sam Domingo in 1970. His lone solo LP, Sam, Hard & Heavy, featured slide guitarist
Duane Allman, but failed to establish him as a major talent.
Samudio contributed two songs to the 1982 film
The Border and later moved to Memphis and became a street preacher. "Wooly Bully," of course, remains a bar band staple.
–
Steve Huey, Rovi