Career
He is best-remembered for his rockabilly single "Jungle Rock" (1958), which was obscure on its original release but reached number 3 in the United Kingdom Singles Chart in 1976. He joined the United States Navy and served in the Second World War. After being discharged, he decided to take up singing professionally, with a band featuring guitarist Jim Bobo.
Settling in Montgomery, Alabama, Mizell sang on local radio, where one of the presenters nicknamed him "Hank", after the country singer Hank Williams.
Mizell recorded "Jungle Rock" in 1958 for Eko Records. The seemingly whimsical lyric tells of a narrator who happens upon a dance party in a jungle, with "a jungle drummer doing a knocked-out beat." The song did not chart but earned a positive review from Billboard, which suggested the song "would make good swingin" dance fare." "Jungle Rock" was reissued by King Records in 1959, but again failed to find success.
He recorded a handful of additional singles, none of which was successful. Mizell and Bobo continued playing live until 1962, when they split up.
In 1971, a Dutch bootleg compilation album, Rock "n" Roll, Volume
1, reissued "Jungle Rock," erroneously credited to Jim Bobo. The song came to the attention of Charly Records in the United Kingdom, who had scored hits with re-issued songs by American performers like The Shangri-Las. Charly then re-released "Jungle Rock" in March 1976, and it duly made Number 3 in the United Kingdom Singles Chart, and Number 1 in the Dutch charts.
Mizell was 53 years old when he finally made it into popular"s history books
When the record was played on British Broadcasting Corporation television"s flagship popular music show Top of the Pops in April 1976, host Tony Blackburn announced they could not find Mizell, and so the dance group Pan"s People dressed in khaki blouses, shorts and pith helmets, danced along to the record with several extras in animal costumes representing the animals mentioned in the song (eg, "a chimp and a monkey doing the Suzy-Q"). Later, Mizell was tracked down in Tennessee, and persuaded to come over to the United Kingdom.
Mizell made another recording of the song. This was eventually re-released in 1999 on the German Repertoire label on Civil Defense (Revue d’Economie Politique 4778-Working group), with three bonus tracks.
Mizell died in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, in December 1992, aged 69.
A cover version of "Jungle Rock" appeared on The Fall"s 1997 album, Levitate, interpreting Mizell"s song via the jungle style of electronic dance music