Roy Montrell
Biography
Roy Montrell (27 February 1928 – 16 May 1979) was an American rhythm & blues guitarist who performed on hundreds of records produced in New Orleans. Born Raymond Eustis Montrell, in New Orleans, Louisiana, he performed as a session musician for many famous artists, as well as playing in Fats Domino's band. He played on Little Richard's "Lucille", Good Golly, Miss Molly, "Heeby-Jeebies", and "All Around the World," all charting R&B hits recorded in 1956. Montrell's 1956 recording of "(Everytime I Hear) That Mellow Saxophone", co-written with John Marascalco and Bumps Blackwell, has been widely covered by acts including the Stray Cats, Imelda May and Supercharge. It was chosen by Bob Dylan for the "Musical Instruments" episode of his Theme Time Radio Hour series and is featured on the 2-CD set of tracks from the show. Montrell died, aged 51, in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, while on a concert tour.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Here's Little Richard
1957

Stray Cats
1981

Fats Domino '65
1965

The Ultimate Collection (Recorded Live)
2004

Rip It Up: The Best of Specialty Records
2021

Hollywood Be Thy Name
1975

'Hello Josephine' Live At Montreux
1974

Ya! Ya!
1962

But I Do
1961

Little Richard: The Georgia Peach
1991

Holy Cow! The Best Of Lee Dorsey
1985
Credited work
295 releases · 64 albums · active 1956–2026
- Performance · 375
- Other credits · 3
Studios: Eden Studios · Jam Studios · Radio Recorders · Master Recorders
