I know very little about this record. I think that the Al Schultz Orchestrations mentioned on the label was some sort of music agency based in Chicago, but not sure if that means The Shy Guys were from Chicago too? The date hand written on the label of 16/1/70 seems too late for the sound of the record, that I'd guess to be closer to mid-60s. I would be grateful if anyone can point me towards more info.
What I do know for sure is that this is a storming two sider of a 45. My pick is the B-side, 'You Are My Sunshine'; a raw slice of soul with rough gospel style vocals and swinging garage rock instrumentation. On the plug side, a version of the Huey 'Piano' Smith classic, The Shy Guys add a horn section, but otherwise keep it raw and soulfull. Great stuff.
THE SHY GUYS- You Are My Sunshine
THE SHY GUYS- Rockin' Pnemonia And The Booga Loo Flu
Friday, January 29, 2010
Sunday, January 17, 2010
BILLY BLAND/GRANTLEY DEE- Let The Little Girl Dance
BILLY BLAND- Let The Little Girl Dance
Billy Bland's 'Let The Little Girl Dance' is an absolute classic RnB/pop crossover record. Nice to get an original copy on Old Town, a really consistent label out of New York.
The story goes that Billy was in the studio when Titus Turner was recording this song and stepped in to show him how to sing it, little knowing producer Henry Glover had the tape rolling and that Bland's demonstration would end up a hit single.
GRANTLEY DEE- Let The Little Girl Dance
In 1966, six years after Bland, well known Melbourne DJ Grantley Dee released his own version of 'Let The Little Girl Dance' it was a minor local hit and a sought after record now. The arrangement was kept pretty much the same for Dee's version (if it ain't broke...), except the parping sax is replaced by a nice raw guitar break, in fact it's a shame Bland's hadn't had more guitar considering the mighty Mickey Baker apparently played on the session.
Dee was the first blind singing star in Australia, and you can witness a little of his charismatic DJing style in this great 60s doco about Melbourne radio.
Grantley Dee with trade mark black glasses.
Labels:
Australia,
BILLY BLAND,
GRANTLEY DEE,
Melbourne,
MICKEY BAKER,
USA
Friday, January 15, 2010
JACK SCOTT- The Way I Walk/Midgie
Sticking with rock'n'roll/rockabilly here is another of my all time faves that I managed to score on 45 recently. Jack Scott (or Giovanni Dominico Scafone Jr to his mother) was one of the very best of the second devision rock'n'rollers; a position pretty well illustrated by his billing on this concert poster:
Like Bob Luman (the subject of my last post) Scott went on to have a long and varied career in pop, rock and country, but made his most exciting records in the 1950s. 'The Way I Walk' is probably his best known track thanks mainly to the Cramps, but he recorded a few other classics around the same time, 'I Never Felt Like This' being a personal favourite.
JACK SCOTT- The Way I Walk
JACK SCOTT- Midgie
Jack with his backing singers The Chantones
Labels:
Canada,
JACK SCOTT,
Midgie,
The Cramps,
The Way I Walk,
USA
Thursday, January 14, 2010
BOB LUMAN- Red Hot/Whenever You're Ready
BOB LUMAN- Red Hot
One of the very first rockabilly tunes I got into, Bob Luman's version of 'Red Hot' is still one of my all time favourites. It's everything rockabilly should be: fun, swaggering, wild, crude, sexy and above all a great dance record. It also features some incendiary guitar playing from a 17 year old James Burton, who then repeats the trick on the slightly more restrained B-side.
BOB LUMAN- Whenever You're Ready
This 45 came from Licorice Pie possibly the best used record store in Melbourne. Unfortunately (though appropriately) I seem to have warped the record by leaving it on the player during a couple of days of plus 40 degree heat- not something I had to look out for in Scotland!
Perhaps the warping is a sign that the vinyl is a 70s repress? I really find it hard to tell what's an original with rockabilly records, as the bootleggers got in there so early on compared to other genres. The good news is that it still plays great as you can hear above.
The following youtube footage is from Roger Corman's 1957 rock'n'roll exploitation movie 'Carnival of Rock' and features the same band as play on 'Red Hot'. Shortly afterwards Burton and bassist James Kirkland would jump to Ricky Nelson's ship.
Labels:
BOB LUMAN,
JAMES BURTON,
Red Hot,
rockabilly,
USA,
Whenever You're Ready
Sunday, January 10, 2010
PAUL REVERE and the RAIDERS- Let Me
A brilliant slice of late period garage rock (1969), or early glam depending on how you look at it, from Mark Lindsay and the gang. A really cool false ending too.
Considering their first single came out 1960 and they kept recording into the 70s, the Raiders had an amazing run of often great records and managed to weather all sorts of musical fashions while maintaining popularity; they wouldn't even have their biggest hit until 1971. Partly down to their novelty image, but mainly because hardly any of their records sold in the UK, I'm still discovering their songs and thankful for it.
PAUL REVERE and the RAIDERS- Let Me
Friday, January 8, 2010
The BEAT MERCHANTS- So Fine
I've seen this single a few times over the years and always wondered what the deal was, considering the other side of the record is Freddie And The Dreamers' 'You Were Made For Me' (Freddie's second biggest US hit). Apparently this was how all the Tower copies were issued and internet sources claim The Beat Merchants taking the B-side was down to some kind of pressing mistake, but I'm not so sure since the "Introducing The..." legend seems to suggest a marketing ploy by Tower, though if it was one it was unique and quite unsuccessful considering The Beat Merchants never followed up on the exposure.
Whatever the story it's a stroke of luck, as an otherwise very rare record (the original UK issue bombed) is easily available and it's a stunning track. Like 'Pretty Face, The Beat Merchants first single, 'So Fine' is a stone cold classic. Raw British RnB pop following the Yardbirds into the stratosphere. One of the great bass intros leads into tight harmonies, wild harmonica and undulating rhythms, it almost defines a genre a year before most so called freakbeat records were recorded.
The BEAT MERCHANTS- So Fine
Whatever the story it's a stroke of luck, as an otherwise very rare record (the original UK issue bombed) is easily available and it's a stunning track. Like 'Pretty Face, The Beat Merchants first single, 'So Fine' is a stone cold classic. Raw British RnB pop following the Yardbirds into the stratosphere. One of the great bass intros leads into tight harmonies, wild harmonica and undulating rhythms, it almost defines a genre a year before most so called freakbeat records were recorded.
The BEAT MERCHANTS- So Fine
Labels:
England,
FREDDIE AND THE DREAMERS,
So Fine,
The BEAT MERCHANTS
Thursday, January 7, 2010
MARQUIS OF KENSINGTON- Sister Marie/Flash
I found this 45 for a few cents at Camberwell Market, the reverse of the German picture sleeve was particularly enticing with the word BEAT prominently featured above a fine selection of CBS LPs. Turns out 'Sister Marie' is a pretty abysmal slice of badly sung 60s kitsch with lyrics about a nun and what sounds like humming through grease proof paper and comb. I nearly didn't post it. But I did. Sorry!
MARQUIS OF KENSINGTON- Sister Marie
The instrumental B-side, though still total kitsch, is a much more fun and atmospheric proposition. Heavy drums dominate, keyboards stab and some nice fuzz guitar adds colour. It puts me in mind of the sort of stuff that soundtracked European porno movies in the early of 70s. In fact an Italian calling himself The Duke Of Burlington had a hit single with a note for note cover of 'Flash' in 1969.
MARQUIS OF KENSINGTON- Flash
However, it turns out the story of this record is much better than the music.
The men behind The Marquis Of Kensington were actually Mike Leander and Robert Wace. Leander was a great producer and arranger who played a part in many classic records. While at Decca he produced or arranged Marianne Faithful, Billy Fury, Cliff Richard, The Rolling Stones, The Small Faces, Them... I could go on but I think you get the idea. He then had a short spell in America with Atlantic where he arranged 'Under The Boardwalk' for the Drifters, was back in England in time to arrange 'She's Leaving Home' for The Beatles and spent the early 70s at Bell where he helped craft Gary Glitters glam hits.
Robert Wace though certainly not as musically talented as Leander is just as interesting a figure in the British pop. Like Kit Lambert with The Who, Wace and his partner Grenville Collins were bored ex public school types who saw pop music management as a way into show business and the rapidly exploding excitment of what would become the swinging sixties. With their connections and talent for publicity, hype and provocation, they helped The Kinks become one of the biggest bands in the England and managed them right through to 1971.
In fact in Wace's case he'd actually fancied being the star himself, and had initially employed The Kinks as his backing band until the limits of his vocal style, which Dave Davies described as a "kind of mixture of Noel Coward and Buddy Holly", became all too apparent and he joined Collins in management.
This record is evidence that Wace did not put his singing completely behind him. 'Sister Marie' is sung by an incognito Robert Wace and was the follow up to another Marquis Of Kensington single 'The Changing Of The Guard', which had been a hit in continental Europe. 'The Changing Of The Guard' is a great little tune, sort of sub Kinks, with nostalgic lyrics that actually suit Wace's 'upper class' vocal style.
There is a comment below this video on youtube which I'd like to think comes from Grenville Collins:
"Great to hear this again, it was the last throw of the dice, the Kinks were not working and money was tight - desperate times, desperate measures. We took the track to Germany and sold it, got the contract and the cheque all in one day! We thought no more about it until one day the record coy called and said that it was a hit and they wanted to do a TV promo tour. This is where our troubles began, Robert Wace refused to go so we found a good looking kid on the King's Road and taught him to mime."
I guess 'Sister Marie' was then thrown together to keep the German record company happy and earn a bit more cash. I wonder what ever happened to the guy they got in to mime, who's also featured on the above record sleeve?
Labels:
England,
Flash,
MARQUIS OF KENSINGTON,
Mike Leander,
Robert Wace
The TWILIGHTS- Needle In A Haystack/I Won't Be The Same Without Her
This stomping beat guitar version of The Velvelettes classic was a monster Australian hit in 1966 for The Twilights who were one of the country's best pop bands in the mid to late 60s.
The B-side is a version of Goffin and King's 'I Won't Be The same Without Her'. The Monkees also recorded this track in 1966, though they wouldn't release it until their 'odds and sods' LP, Instant Replay, in 1969. I'm curious as to whether The Twilights got an early listen to The Monkees version; which is most likely considering the subsequent attempts to turn them in an Australian Monkees with an aborted TV series, or if there was a Carole King demo of the song that made it down under?
Wouldn't it be great if someone put together a decent compilation of Carole's Brill Building demos? The ones I've heard (on shoddy budget compilations- the rights must be a mess) are amazing and there are supposed to be a lot more floating around...
The TWILIGHTS- Needle In A Haystack
The TWILIGHTS- I Won't Be The Same Without Her
Monday, January 4, 2010
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