Born in
Old Fort, North Carolina, Lytle was a guitar player before joining
Bill Haley's
country music group, The Saddlemen, in 1951. But Lytle was hired to play double bass for the group, replacing departing musician
Al Rex, so Haley taught Lytle the basics of
slap bass playing. Lytle, who was only a teenager at the time, grew a moustache in order to look a little older, and became a full-time member of The Saddlemen and, in September 1952, he was with the group when they changed their name to Bill Haley & His Comets. Soon after, Lytle co-wrote with Haley the band's first national hit, "
Crazy Man, Crazy" although he did not receive co-authorship credit for it (until 2002). Lytle played on all of Haley's recordings between mid-1951 and the summer of 1955, including the epochal "
Rock Around the Clock" in 1954 (fellow Jodimars saxophonist
Joey Ambrose and drummer Dick Richards also appeared on the original of the classic track). He was paid $41.25 for the three-hour Decca recording session which also included the original A side, "Thirteen Women (And Only One Man in Town)". He played a late 1940s model
Epiphone B5 upright double bass, purchased in October 1951, for about $275. He used gut strings for the G and D strings while the A and E strings were wound. Lytle's style of playing, which involved slapping the strings to make a percussive sound, is considered one of the signature sounds of early rock and roll and
rockabilly. The athletic Lytle also developed a stage routine, along with Ambrose, that involved doing acrobatic stunts with the bass fiddle, including throwing it in the air and riding it like a horse. This became a signature performance for The Comets that later musicians working for Haley were instructed to emulate. He was part of the band when they appeared on the
NBC Texaco Star Theatre show hosted by
Milton Berle and the
Ed Sullivan Show on
CBS in 1955. He also appeared in the 1954 Universal International Pictures movie short
Round Up of Rhythm. In September 1955, Lytle, along with drummer
Dick Richards and Ambrose, quit The Comets in a salary dispute and formed their own musical group,
The Jodimars. Before leaving, Lytle and his colleagues offered to train their replacements in the art of rock and roll playing, Comets style. Lytle was succeeded by Al Rex—ironically, the same musician he had originally been hired to replace. The Jodimars became one of the first rock and roll groups to take up residence in
Las Vegas showrooms, but only managed to score minor hits for
Capitol Records and, later, smaller labels. By 1958 they had broken up, though Lytle attempted to continue the group on his own. Lytle continued to work in music off-and-on into the 1960s, but also got involved in other interests, changing his name to
Tommy Page and getting into real estate and later opening an interior design business. ==Reunion==