WHO AM I, REVIEWS, INTERVIEWS, STORIES, ON THE AIR

Friday, May 10, 2013

BETTYE SWANN "a missing link between Muscle Shoals and Motown"

Born in Shreveport, La., in 1944, Betty Jean Champion was one of 14 children. Growing up in the rural town of Arcadia, her earliest musical memories went hand in hand with the hard life of African-Americans in the pre-civil rights era South.




"I remember being with my mother at times as a young person singing at church," she says. "I remember the work that we did -- the sharecropping, working for the landowners in the cotton field -- I remember singing anything by Sam Cooke, Booker T. and the MG's. And I remember my sisters listening to Little Richard and Chuck Berry. I remember going to see my first movie in Arcadia. My brothers dropped me off at the movie theater so that I could watch Elvis Presley in Love Me Tender. I went up to the balcony; you couldn't go downstairs if you were black. It didn't bother me; I was just a little kid. I sat there all day long. I saw that movie over and over and over again. My brother came back for me, and he couldn't believe that I'd stayed in the theater that long. I didn't know that you were only supposed to watch the movie one time and then leave."

"I left Louisiana in 1963. I was 18 and had just finished high school," she says. "I went to live with a sister, and probably the way I got into show business was that I was always singing something. I wasn't aware all the time that I was singing, but people brought it to my attention. When I first got to L.A., my friend Emma would always say, 'Hey, that sounds good. Why don't you do something?' She introduced me to someone who knew Huey Harris, who wrote some well-known blues songs. That's the person who introduced me to Al Scott [an R&B disc jockey], who had a radio show that was sponsored by Ruth Dolphin, [owner] of [a record store called] Dolphins of Hollywood and Money Records."

She chose the stage name Bettye Swann, because she always thought swans were "lovely." Later on, it would cause tension among her family. "I had a fight with someone in the family over the name Swann. 'What are you trying to do, disown the family?' they said. 'Well,' I said, 'I never thought about it until you said something. Does it bother you?'"

Scott became Swann's manager and quickly got her into the studio with producer Arthur Wright. Wright would go on to create the perfect package for Bettye's music. Whenever I hear the joyous, loping bass line that introduces "Make Me Yours," I'm transported to another place, another time -- specifically, America in the year 1967: Martin Luther King Jr. is still alive and fighting back with nonviolence, and Che Guevara is stone-cold dead. Racial violence threatens to consume Detroit, the home of the Motown sound. China explodes a hydrogen bomb. Sinatra nearly sweeps the Grammys. Supreme Court justice Thurgood Marshall, an African-American and the grandson of a slave, is sworn in. The Graduate mocks the word "plastics." The Packers annihilate the Chiefs.

"It had a good beat, a good story," she says. "When I sang ['Don't Wait Too Long'], I was convinced that it was true. Between writing it and recording it, it took about a week, and it was on the radio about a month later."

Wright, who lives in Compton, Calif. today, recalls the sessions for "Don't Wait Too Long" and the other tracks that comprised Swann's debut full-length for Money: "She never sang with a live group. I always overdubbed her voice. We'd get the music done, and she'd finish her vocals in one or two takes. She was a real professional."

There had been other Swann songs ("The Heartache Is Gone," "What Can It Be"), but none of them had traction. "Make Me Yours" was different, though. It has that elusive "fluttering" quality that marks the best of Smokey Robinson, Sam Cooke and Otis Redding. It sounds entirely effortless, as if the song had been put together for the sole purpose of brightening our few, precious, remaining days on Earth.


The song is a plea for spiritual and physical possession, for a place in the heart of another: "Now that I've found you/I wanna stay around/So make me yours." It's a minor masterpiece of Southern soul filtered through a brilliant (if somewhat poorly engineered) West Coast arrangement of Wright.

The song perched itself at No. 1 on the R&B charts and was a certified Top-20 pop hit.



To this writer's amazement, Swann says she was paid $7,000 for "Make Me Yours" -- in advance. (Since then, however, she says she has received no royalties.) Things soured soon after, particularly her relationship with Scott. She left L.A. for Athens, Ga., and acquired a new manager, George Barton, an established music promoter in the South.

After Swann's contract with Money expired, Motown Records expressed interest in Swann. She passed on the label and instead hitched her wagon to Capitol Records in 1968. In essence, Swann jumped from the frying pan of a small, independent, Southern soul label with a built-in audience and into the fire of a mainstream record company that now had to sell a new artist to the larger listening public (i.e., white folks).

The results were stellar. The reason was Wayne Schuler, a multi-talented producer/ songwriter/A&R guy from Louisiana and son of Eddie Shuler, a Cajun music producer and founder of Goldband Records. Wayne says he was the only one at Capitol who understood R&B. He was deeply fond of Swann's "Make Me Yours," and he was ambitious. He longed to have Swann sing tunes like "Stand By Your Man," a hit made most famous by Tammy Wynette (but also a smash for another soul singer named Candi Staton). Shuler wanted to make Swann a crossover artist, bridging the gap between country and soul.


That gap has never really been filled, leaving music writers like myself to wonder how the landscape of contemporary pop might look today if Shuler and Swann had succeeded. Now more than ever, it seems, blacks and whites listen to radically different music. But just 40 years ago, we could all agree on a mainstream artist like Presley. Those days are gone, and the worlds of country and R&B have never been further apart.

In any case, Swann had already recorded cowpoke numbers like "I Can't Stop Loving You" for Money. But it was with Shuler that she would record "Stand By Your Man" and Merle Haggard compositions like "Just Because You Can't Be Mine." Yet it was a sultry, down-tempo duet with Buck Owens on the Haggard classic "Today I Started Loving You Again" that thwarted Shuler's plan to catapult Swann into stardom.

According to Shuler, the heads of Capitol blew a gasket when they heard Owens perform a love song with a black woman (even though Owens was all set to book Swann on his TV show "Hee Haw"). The label quickly shelved the single. And then lost it.

"I know they've got [the tape] somewhere," says Shuler, during a recent phone conversation. "They're just not looking hard enough. Hell, I always had to talk Capitol into the country things; they didn't want to do it. It was a work of love. Like so many tasty things, the public wasn't ready for it."

Shuler only has fond memories of working with Swann from her '68-'70 tenure at Capitol. "Bettye had a romantic streak, same as me," says Shuler, "but I never had a problem with her. If she seemed hesitant to try something, I'd just use my friendly persuasion."

Swann, meanwhile, characterizes Shuler as "a wonderful producer," but recalls that she felt a little pressured. "I had the feeling they wanted me to be a black female Charley Pride," she says, laughing.

Of the dozens of songs he recorded with Swann, when asked what his favorite is, Shuler is hesitant to choose. "I loved them all. I mean, which one of your children would you favor? I guess I'll go with the version of 'Today I Started Loving You Again' that she cut with Buck Owens. But I also love 'Words' and 'No Faith, No Love.' I didn't produce many albums, but that's certainly my best work."

British music writer Tim Tooher agrees. To this day he's never heard any other record that sounds quite like those Swann made with Shuler in Los Angeles.

"For me," says Tooher, "they sound like they straddle the Mason-Dixon line sonically, neither having the gravity and roughness of the music of Tennessee and Alabama nor the spring and lightness of Detroit. I think a lot of this has to do with the musicians Wayne used, who were as capable of playing on pure pop records, California country or anything else they were called upon to perform. They weren't a group of musicians who had an instantly identifiable sound, but they were no less effective for that."

Of course, Swann's unique voice is what made things happen. As Tooher and others -- mostly Southern soul enthusiasts in Britain, where American music has traditionally been harder to find -- have already noted, it is Bettye's "inherent optimism," even when singing sad material, that makes her voice stand out.


After leaving Money, Swann made Athens, Ga., her home and a launching pad for what many African-American musicians referred to as "the chitlin circuit." (Chitlins are deep-fried pig intestines.) According to Washington, D.C.-based music journalist Bill Carpenter, whose most recent book is Uncloudy Days: The Gospel Music Encyclopedia, the chitlin circuit was made up of a bunch of "Delta juke joints where anything goes."

In the old days, poor blacks ate chitlins, because it was the cheapest thing to eat.

"They would cook chitlins at these remote places throughout the South," says Carpenter, "where anything that you could ever imagine went on. But the music was always good. Every black entertainer has had to engage it. You could be on the R&B Top 10 and still have to play the chitlin circuit."




Over the years, music writers have only mentioned the chitlin circuit in passing, and no one has yet to significantly cover the topic. But artists like Swann and Candi Staton spent many days and nights driving up and down the South, performing in less-than-posh places, often on the same bill.

"We'd do shows so far up into the country you'd wonder who lived up there," says Staton, Swann's friend and fellow Southern soul sensation who enjoyed her own success last year with Honest Jons/Astralwerk's reissue of her R&B work. "The sun would set and suddenly -- boom! -- there'd be 2,000 people, the place is all lit up. The shows were billed around the 1st and 15th of each month -- 'Mother's Day.' That's when the welfare checks came in the mail. It was like the Wild Wild West. All of us went through hell. People have since tried to make it pretty, but it wasn't."

Staton has many stories of bedlam on the chitlin circuit, including public sex and straight-up murder. She carried a gun for protection, and to ensure that she got paid after each performance.

"People like me -- a good Christian girl from the country -- had to grow up fast," says Staton. "I had to start cussin' right away. You had to cuss 'em out ... to let 'em know you mean business. That's the only language they understood."





Unlike Staton, Swann denies seeing any orgies or shoot-outs on the chitlin circuit -- though she confesses that her manager George Barton often had to pull a gun on someone in order for Bettye to get paid.

"That's how George got a bad reputation," says Swann. "He was always fighting to get me my money. He stood up for me and protected my interests. I loved him from the beginning for the type of person he was."

Swann married Barton in 1970. By then she had jumped ship to FAME, based in Muscle Shoals, Ala., before switching over to Atlantic. She continued to record music and tour until 1976, when she and Barton moved to Las Vegas into an apartment on Bonanza Road. (Shuler helped her secure a lounge gig at the Mint.)

Swann picked up other gigs at the Town Tavern and Union Plaza, and her last public performance took place in 1980, the year Barton passed away. (He was 20 years her senior.) It was the same year Bettye Swann died, and Betty Barton was reborn as one of Jehovah's Witnesses.

Now Swann lives in her home in North Las Vegas, suffering from a degenerative spine condition and collecting disability. She wants to complete her degree in education, but recurring pain keeps her from achieving her goal. She attends services at Kingdom Hall off of Rancho Drive






























































































Friday, March 8, 2013

GEATER DAVIS (Sir Shambing source)





Due to the great double tribute LP recently released by Ubiquity Records, would like to spend some words about one of the underrated soul singer of every time, Mr. Geater Davis.
Geater inhabited the twilight world where southern soul meets the blues, and like every other performer of this musical style he owed a huge debt to Bobby Bland.
But he was much more than a Bland imitator, possessing an anguished and impassioned voice perfectly suited to the songs of loneliness and despair that he wrote so well, often in collaboration with another southern soul hero Reuben Bell.
At the end of the 60s the late Allen Orange, then a staffer for John Richbourg, was knocked out by hearing Davis and Bell perform and arranged for them to record in Birmingham, AL. 
He started his own House Of Orange label for their output and was rewarded with a smash for his first 45 with Geater’s Sweet woman love. A super deep blues ballad, it had all the Davis trademark rasps and growls, and the arrangement, particularly the horn section, gave the result great character. This went to no 45 on the R & B charts in the summer of 1970. 




 Other fine recordings for HOO followed including “I Can Hold My Own”, and an intense cut of “Best Of Luck To You”. His first album, named after the big hit, contained the early 45s and, interestingly too, a couple of Bland covers, “Cry Cry Cry” and the wonderful “St James Infirmary”. It wasn’t a great seller but is now considered a deep soul classic.
Orange closed his label around the start of 1972 and Davis moved to Richbourg for the best series of recordings in his career, many using the brilliant Fame Gang musicians. Tracks like “Long Cold Winter”, “Your Heart Is So Cold” and “A Sad Shade Of Blue” are the epitome of anguished desolation.




The brilliant ListenA Whole Lot Of Man, which not only has the best guitar fills ever from Muscle Shoals but also Geater singing his heart out with some lovely screams in the run out groove is a masterpiece. The tuneful, loping, conga propelled Fame cut ListenDon’t Walk Off And Leave Me is another particular favourite, as is the superbly structured typical Davis “bad times” song “You Made Your Bed So Hard” - but he didn’t make a poor recording during this period. The wonder is that so many of these cuts were unissued at the time.
Davis cut sessions for Ace that produced fine tracks like “Nice And Easy” and “There’s Got To Be Some Changes Made” in the mid 70s, but his later work in the decade suffered from the dreadful disco disease. Tracks like “Disco Music” and “Booty Music” for the revitalised House Of Orange were as bad as they sound. The best cut from this time was a strange one off “Wherever You Are” for ex-Malaco guitarist Jerry Puckett’s Sunbelt label. In the 80s he signed for James Bennett in Jackson, MS who issued several singles and a good LP “Better Days”. Like so much of Bennett’s output some of the tracks were decidedly underproduced but in ListenRight Back For More he got it just right. The song was issued twice and the version with overdubbed horns was to be Davis’ last great release.
Vernon Davis died in September 1984 – he was only 38. His tortured vocals and spine tingling delivery will continue to be held in high regard by all knowledgeable fans.



Discography

ListenSweet woman's love / Don't marry a fool ~ HOUSE OF ORANGE 2401 (1970)
I can hold my own / My love is so strong for you ~ HOUSE OF ORANGE 2402 (1971)
For your precious love / Wrapped up in you ~ HOUSE OF ORANGE 2405 (1971)
Best of luck to you / I know (my baby loves me) ~ HOUSE OF ORANGE 2407 (1972)
I've got to pay the price / I'm gonna change ~ LUNA 801 / 77 136 (1972)
ListenDon't walk off (and leave me) / I don't worry (about Jody) ~ LUNA 804 (1972)
Long cold winter / Why does it hurt so bad ~ 77 124 (1972)
You made your bed so hard / Your heart is so cold ~ 77 130 (1973)
Nice and easy / Strange sensation ~ ACE 3006 (1974)
I’ll play the blues for you / My love is so strong for you ~ ODDS AND ENDS 7600 (1975)
Tired of busting my brain / There's got to be some changes made ~ ACE 3019 (1976)
Cold love / Short version ~ HOUSE OF ORANGE 2410 (1977)
I'll play the blues for you / Disco music ~ HOUSE OF ORANGE 79100 (1979)
Wherever you are / Pt 2 ~ SUN BELT 7179 (1979)
Right back for more / Pt 2 ~ MT 001 (1981)
I'll take care of you / ListenRight back for more ~ MT 002 (1981)
Booty music / Breath taking girl ~ HOUSE OF ORANGE 2615 (1982)
Don't give up / Better days ~ MT 005 (1983)
Baby love / Go your way ~ MT 007 (1983)
Sweet woman’s love ~ HOUSE OF ORANGE LP 6000 (1971)
Baby love ~ MT LP 0001

Saturday, December 22, 2012

RAY T. JONES (source: FUNKY VIRGINIA)

There is a crazy blog called Funky Virginia, where I discovered amazing pearls included the awesome story of Ray T. Jones that I would like to share with you. 


By the mid 60's, as the U.S. dramatically ramped up its involvement in the Vietnam Conflict, Philadelphia native U.S. Navy Seaman E3 Raymond Thomas Jones, was assigned to duty in Norfolk, VA. In February of 1967, Jones's ship, the USS Barney, was deployed to the combat zone off the coast of Vietnam. The ship would return to Norfolk seven months later.

Like many black sailors stationed in Hampton Roads, Ray found himself drawn to Church Street, the nucleus of African American nightlife in a still heavily segregated Southern city. He spent much of his precious off-duty time taking in live shows at legendary spots like The Eureka Lodge, The Enterprise, and The Plaza Hotel. This vibrant scene had a lasting impact on him.


Ray was just starting a family when he came to Norfolk. In a lot of ways the new life he and his wife Vennel had embarked upon seemed a world away from the North Philly neighborhood where they both grew up. With Ray at sea for as long as nine months at a time, and not much of a support system in place for navy families at the time, the young marriage was under strain. One day Ray came home to an empty apartment to find that Vennel had left him, taking their son Ray Jr. with her. As the split stretched on, Ray was moved to write about the situation, forming what would become the lyrics to his first song. "Cause You're Coming Home" tells the story of heartbreak and separation, but also hope, reconciliation and his wife's eventual return. While back home in Philadelphia visiting family, Ray showed the song to his brother Paul, himself an established bassist who had recorded and toured extensively with Freda Payne, Bo Diddley, Garnet Mimms, Jean Wells, The Coasters and The Platters among others. Paul helped Ray with the arrangement, got some musicians together, and booked time at the legendary Virtue Recording Studio on Broad Street. The resulting 1969 recording captures a young Ray Jones delivering a touchingly personal ballad. The tape would remain safely tucked away and unreleased for the next six years.

Ray T. Jones "Cause You're Coming Home"

Jones's military duty continued throughout the seventies. While serving as First Class Fire Control Technician
Jones's military duty continued throughout the seventies. While serving as First Class Fire Control Technician on the Destroyer USS C.V. Ricketts, he facilitated classes and seminars for fellow personnel regarding race relations. In addition, Ray started singing in the ship's band. The racially integrated group performed at a number of USO functions throughout Europe with a repertoire that ran the gamut from R&B to Rock to Country & Western and everything in between. Ray was becoming a fan of all these types of music, and was incorporating different elements of them into his own emerging style. He was particularly enamored with the story telling nature of Country music. An idea started to form. Why not take his favorite parts of the Country sound and combine them with his Soul roots? The band began working with the "Country Soul" concept.

Back on Church Street, at the corner of East Brambleton, Queen's Lounge was probably the hottest club in town. Norfolk heavyweights The House Rockers were packing them in as the resident band upstairs at Queen's Top Side. In addition to the nightly House Rockers gigs, amateur nights were put on by the club. Adventurous souls would give it their best shot fronting the band and braving the usually merciless audience. After being back in town for a while on shore duty, Ray Jones decided to take the stage, no doubt bolstered by his Navy buddies. He put his USO experience to work, and won the crowd over. It probably didn't hurt that he had packed the place with his fellow servicemen ahead of time.

It took a few more strong showings from Ray to convince the club owner to grant him his own 30 minute slot for a set of popular R&B covers backed by the House Rockers. In order to capitalize on the opportunity, Ray sought out his neighbor, former House Rockers front man Sebastian Williams. He paid Williams $50 out of his own pocket to make a guest appearance during his set. Ray started promoting the show and creating a buzz. Sure enough, on the night of the gig Sebastian showed up at Queen's dressed to the nines. "Ladies and Gentlemen... Sebastian Williams!!!", Ray announced as his special guest stepped up to the microphone. The band launched into a smoking version of Wilson Pickett's "634-5789", and Sebastian proceeded to blow the roof off the place. When he was done with his one song, Seb mater-of-factly turned and exited into the Church Street night. Probably the best $50 Ray ever spent!

Word got around, not only about Sebastian's exploits, but the up and coming Ray T. Jones. Noah Biggs of Shiptown Records took Ray under his wing, acting as a mentor and manager. As much as his naval duties would allow, Ray began doing shows around the region at venues including the Moton Theatre in Newport News, supporting the likes of Barbara Stant and General Johnson.
With guidance and encouragement from Mr. Biggs and even a little coaching from the legendary Frank Guida, Jones decided to start his own label. In 1975, Ray used his connection with bassist Maurice Glass to enlist the mighty 35th Street Gang (AKA: Raw Soul) to back him on a recording date at Lenis Guess Studio. The first single from the self-produced session, "That Norfolk Sound" was paired with his earlier recording of "Cause You're Coming Home" and released on the newly launched Wee-Too. Ray decided to use his family's Philadelphia address on the label.

Ray T. Jones "That Norfolk Sound"

"That Norfolk Sound" is a gritty ode to the sometimes seedy, always exciting Church Street scene. Jones deftly fuses his diverse influences into a unique mixture of sustained psychedelic fuzz and folky acoustic guitar anchored by a stripped down funk rhythm section. Ray's delicate, almost mournful vocal takes us on a tour through a darker side of the seaport city, down Granby Street and even to a rowdy Country/Western bar to see "fists flying in the night". "Come on down to Norfolk and get some ghetto in your life".

"Are We Ready? Are We Together?" The follow up single came in '76. "Beat The Knees" is probably the record Ray Jones is best known for. It was born out of a vamp that Ray and the 35th Street Gang came up with on the spot in the studio. The hard hitting drums of Grover "Groove" Everett and Maurice Glass's beefy bass line lay the foundation for this deadly groove. Irresistible Fender Rhodes keyboard adds a whole other dimension of hip. The guy named Leroy that Ray raps about was actually a shipmate who was quite the ladies' man. You can use your imagination as to what "beating those knees" signifies. Turns out, last Ray heard, "do-it-do-it man" Leroy had become a man of the church, a preacher. These days he's hitting his knees to pray.

Ray T. Jones "Beat The Knees"


The flipside, "Take Me Back To Norfolk Town", with it's twangy slide guitar and tale of longing, sees Ray's vision of Country Soul fully realized. The song is simultaneously a love letter to his woman and the city he calls home. Out at sea, the sailor "left a lot of love, a lot heartache in Norfolk town". Not only does he miss his family, he craves "the smell and the taste of Virginia ham / the taste, the flavor of fresh steamed clams!" "There's no place like that Norfolk town."

Ray T. Jones "Take Me Back To Norfolk Town"

With two records under his belt, Jones approached Norfolk's WAVY with a proposal for a half hour TV special showcasing his Country Soul music. In December of '76 the project was green-lighted. That winter an outdoor show was filmed on a makeshift stage in a lot right next to the old Bishop Grace House of Prayer (AKA: Sweet Daddy G's) at the corner of Princess Anne and Church Street. The show, entitled "That Norfolk Sound", featured live footage of Ray Jones along with Navy bandmates Jerry Potter, Ron Morin (guitar), Mike Terlouw(Keyboards), Robin White (bass), Art Swimp (drums) and Dennis Eaves. The finished program also included interview footage and aired locally on Channel 10 in the Summer of 1977.

Ray had plans to follow this up with a full length LP entitled (what else) "That Norfolk Sound". He shopped the idea around and even struck an informal distribution agreement with Frank Guida, but a deployment to the Mediterranean put the project on hold. In the ensuing years, Ray's military service and growing family took priority over an entertainment career, although he never really fully gave up on his music. In fact, in the later part of the eighties Ray made a little bit of a comeback, re-releasing "Take Me Back to Norfolk Town" b/w "Cause You're Coming Home" on a Wee-Too 45.

After hitting the Cash 5 Lotto for $100,000 in 1995, Ray bought a house in Virginia Beach where he currently lives with his wife of 25 years Judy. A proud father of seven and grandfather of 14, Ray is retired from the U.S. Navy after 30 years of service, having risen to the rank of Master Chief.

Right now Ray is preparing to re-release his classic Wee-Too 45's. Also in the works is an album (on vinyl!), "I'm Going Back To Norfolk", which will contain unreleased tracks, including ones he cut with his Navy bandmates back in the 70's. Ray continues to write and record songs as Ray "2 Beers" Jones (a nickname he got in the Navy). These days his sound draws a lot more from the Country side of the Country Soul equation. You can get a sampling of what he's been up to on his myspace page. Ray also plans to eventually release a collection of his recent Country flavored material.


Friday, December 21, 2012

JOE MAYFIELD



Don't ask me who is Joe Mayfield. I really don't know.
Tried to find out something about his life his career but no tracks.
Just this crazy 45 "I'm On The Move/How's Thing With You" cut for Excello Records in 1965 that I bought a couple of years ago on ebay.
What I can say?
"I'm On The Move" is an average midtempo bluesy tune with cool horns arrangement but...
"How's Thing With You" is magic.
A stunning farfisa with a crazy vibrato and Joe's trembling and raspy vocals...so sweet and obscure.



TARHEEL SLIM (ALLEN BUNN)


                        

Bunn grew up in the countryside, working in the tobacco fields and listening to his mom's Blind Boy Fuller 78's. Eventually he learned to play guitar, and was heard singing and playing in church by Thurman Ruth, the leader of a local gospel quartet called the Selah Jubilee Singers (they'd soon drop the Jubilee part of their name).





Ruth recruited Bunn into his group (putting off his debut until tobacco season was over) and for the next eight years he sang baritone and played guitar with the Selah Singers, who also recorded secular material as the Larks, the Four Barons, and possibly a few other names. As the Larks they cut some nice sides for the Apollo label, and Bunn's lead vocals and guitar can be heard on their 1951 single "My Little Sidecar"
He had already been recorded as a blues singer by the Gotham label in 1949 cutting four sides with only his guitar for backing, but these would not be released until the 1980's. 
His first solo sessions to see the light of shellac were for Apollo in '51 where he recorded two sessions that produced four singles -- The Guy With The 45  b/w She'll Be Sorry.




Discouraged b/w I Got You Covered, Wine b/w Baby I'm Gonna Throw You Out, and My Flight b/w Two Time Loser. These were issued under the name Allen Bunn, and good as they are, none of them sold very well. He was still touring with the Larks/Selah Singers when he cut his first session for Bobby Robinson, the Harlem based record store owner/producer/entrepreneur who is one of the most important figures in the history of New York City rock'n'roll and until recently could be found sitting out front of his record store on 125th Street until a rent hike finally forced him out. For Robinson's Red Robin label Bunn cut Too Much Competition b/w My Kinda Woman. Some of these discs were issued under the name Allen Bunn others as Allen Baum. Around 1955 he met and married Lee Sanford aka Little Ann and they began singing together, first as The Lovers, under which name they recorded some fairly dull sides for the Aladdin's Lamp subsidiary in 1957. 
He also recorded with a group called The Wheels on Premium whom he evidently managed (they also recorded as the Federals on Deluxe), these are also some forgettable sides although enough people like Let's Have A Ball that it regularly shows up as a repro, as well as appearing on recordings by the Southern Harmonaires and Mahalia Jackson on Apollo. 


In 1958 he entered the recording studio again, this time renamed Tarheel Slim, under the aegis of producer Bobby Robinson and with Wild Jimmy Spruill on guitar and Horace Cooper on piano cut his greatest record, a two sided monster--Wildcat Tammer b/w Number 9 Train, issued on Robinson's Fury label, it remains one of the pinnacles of New York rock'n'roll. Both sides feature Slim's burning guitar, with Spruill's scratchy rhythm guitar driving both tunes at full steam, they remain the type of classic performances that never sound old or dated.



Strangely enough, he never again had a solo record released. His next session, held nearly a year later, introduced the public to the recording duo of Tarheel Slim and Little Ann, and their first disc--It's Too Late b/w Don't Ever Leave Me was a minor hit. The record was released by both Robinson's Fire label and Chess' Checker subsidiary out of Chicago, not to mention pressing that have turned up on the Hermitage and Bobby Robinson labels. I assume Robinson leased the record to the Chess brothers and then changed his mind. It's Too Late is a doom laden dirge with Slim's tremolo laden guitar work and Ann breaking down into a sobbing fit at the end.



Robinson really liked these overwrought crying ballads, and would later have some success with the kings of the genre-- Jackie And The Starlities
The follow up--Much Too Late reversed the formula, basically it's the same tune, only this time it's Slim who breaks down. While neither record charted, they were good sellers in the New York area and can be found cheap even today. Speaking of which, I once stumbled onto an entire dumpster of Fire, Fury and Enjoy 45's and 78's on Broadway and dragged home hundreds of free records, every one of them was good. Getting back to our subject, in 1959, Tarheel Slim and Little Ann cut a couple of killer rockers- Security and Lock Me In Your Heart , both tunes are excellent with Slim and Jimmy Spruill's guitar work predominant on both tunes, kind of like Mickey and Sylvia playing rockabilly. 


Unfortunately their commercial peak had already passed with their second release and soon they were recording drek like covers of country tunes Send Me The Pillow You Dream On and I Love You Because and standards like Good Night Irene. Leaving Robinson briefly they recorded for Atco, then returned to record for Robinson's Port and Enjoy labels. Bobby Robinson had more labels than some people have hairs on their head. Since he was an indie with no way to collect from distributors, every time he'd get a hit record-- Wilbert Harrison's Kansas City, Lee Dorsey's Ya Ya, etc., he'd end up getting run out of business since he had to pay to have the discs pressed but couldn't collect from the distributors until he delivered another hit. Each hit record seemed to be followed by a bankruptcy. Still, Bobby Robinson was a tenacious sort, and always bounced back with a new label, and kept making great records. He would go on to record Lightnin; Hopkins, Lee Dorsey, Elmore James, Wilbert Harrison, and dozens of street corner doo wop groups. Meanwhile Taheel Slim and Little Ann pretty much dropped from sight, their career seemed to peter out around the early 60's and nothing was heard from them until the early 70's when blues researcher Peter Lowery dug up Tarheel Slim to play a few gigs where he performed with an acoustic guitar in the style of Brownie McGhee (who was earning a good living playing to white college audiences in a style that has been dubbed "folk blues"). Tarheel Slim played a few festivals in 1974 and was well received, but once again he seemed to drop from sight. In 1972 he released two killer and unlucky acoustic blues records "No time at all" and "Superstitious" for Pete Lowry's Trix Records.



How he spent the years from 1975 until his death in 1977 we do not know, I imagine some of it was spent watching Sanford and Son, Good Times and The Jeffersons. That's what I was doing.
In 1977 he was diagnosed with throat cancer and died from pneumonia brought on by the chemotherapy.


Sunday, November 18, 2012

ARCHIE BROWNLEE AND THE FIVE BLIND BOYS


Archie Brownlee was one of the greatest hard gospel lead singers of all time. Archie Brownlee could sing sweetly, then suddenly make his voice soar into a piercing scream - he seemed to get more music into a scream than any singer imaginable. The emotional heat from his singing caused many who listened to fall out, perhaps because his spiritual fire was too intense, even for him to contain. He died at the peak of his career on February 8, 1960 at the age of 35. For his entire career, Archie Brownlee sang with only one group, The Five Blind Boys of Mississippi.



The Five Blind Boys of Mississippi are among the greatest singing groups in popular music history. Their smashing harmonies and the leads of Archie Brownlee not only influenced numerous gospel ensembles, but such secular artists as Ray Charles or Jerry Butler. Their origins date back to the '30s, when Archie Brownlee (Brownley in some accounts), Joseph Ford, Lawrence Abrams, and Lloyd Woodard formed a quartet. They were students at the Piney Woods School near Jackson, Mississippi. They began as The Cotton Blossom Singers, and did both spiritual and secular material. The quartet sang on the school grounds in 1936, then were recorded in 1937 by Alan Lomax for the Library of Congress. After graduation, they decided to become professional singers and for a time performed under dual identities; they were the Cotton Blossom Singers .for popular songs and The Jackson Harmoneers singing almost strictly religious material for black church audiencesl. By 1944 the group decided to go professional, singing pop material for primarily white audiences.  Their repertoire and singing style was a mixture of sprituals and jubilee tunes similar to the Golden Gates. Around that time they got another lead singer to work with them, Melvin Henderson and moved the base of the operations to New Orleans. Here they became popular on local programs and began a daily radio program on WWL. They regularly shared programs with the biggest local quartet, the New Orleans Chosen Five also known as Soprocco Singers.
When Percell Perkins replaced Henderson in the mid-'40s, they became The Five Blind Boys.
Oddly, Perkins, who doubled as their manager, was not blind. 
They made their recording debut for Excelsior in 1946, after meeting label owner Leon Rene in Cleveland. They recorded for Coleman in 1948, the same year Joseph Ford was replaced by J.T. Clinkscales. But when they joined Don Robey's Peacock label in 1950, the Five Blind Boys became superstars.



 The single "Our Father" was a Top Ten R&B hit, and they became a prolific ensemble, recording 27 singles and five albums for Peacock through the '60s. Brownlee died in New Orleans in 1960. His riveting, chilling screams and yells were among gospel's most amazing. Perkins left the group soon after becoming a minister. The list of replacements included Revs. Sammy Lewis and George Warren, as well as Tiny Powell. Roscoe Robinson took over for Brownlee, and was assisted by second lead Willmer Broadnax, who was also a masterful singer. The Five Blind Boys continued through the '70s and '80s and into the '90s, though Woodard died in the mid-'70s, and Lawrence Abrams in 1982.

Saturday, November 10, 2012

THE JACKSON SOUTHERNARIES "DOWN HOME"

On Friday, April 15th 2011, Malaco's historic studio and headquarters at 3023 West Northside Drive in  Jackson, Mississippi was destroyed by an EF2 Tornado.



I've been concerned, for the most part, with the essential role they played in keeping Southern Soul music alive during the seventies and eighties. Especially they did something I'd like to try and focus on that for a moment  here.
In late  1975 was targeting the gospel market again with the Jackson Southernaires. 


The Jackson Southernaires have a long history of musical training and awards that have made them one of the best gospel groups in Mississippi. 
This group contains five members: Huey Williams, Roger  Bryant Jr., Maurice Surrell, James Burks and Luther Jennings.  
In 1940, the Jackson Southernaires were organized by Frank Crisler in Jackson,Mississippi. The Jackson Southernaires began much the same way as the Mississippi  Blind Boys. They began singing at an early age and did a lot of performing around their hometown. The Jackson Southernaires was the first gospel group to use bass, drums, keyboard and guitar in Mississippi. The Jackson Southernaires have signed many recording contracts during their singing career. They signed their first contract with Duke/Peacock Records in 1963. Too Late was one of the top recording albums on this label. Later on, the Jackson
Southernaires signed a contract with the ABC/Dunhill Label. "Save My Child" and "Look Around" were the top two albums on this record label in 1972-75. 
In 1975 the Jackson Southernaires signed a recording contract with Malaco Records. 
"Down Home" is their debut on Malaco


Stunning Record.
Though lyrics, powerful vocal harmonies and a great rhythm section.
Here we have :
"don't let him catch you (with your work undone)"

 



And the soulful Travel on:




Every album that was released by this record label reached national acclaim. 
In conclusion, the Jackson Southernaires have had a long and prosperous career. 
They believe without God they cannot make it,  with God on their side they will be a success.
Huey Williams, the leader of this group, says on the liner of one of their albums,
 "God has allowed the Jackson Southernaires to sow seeds across America and abroad".