Archive for the ‘Dee Dee Warwick’ Category
Thursday, December 25th, 2014
Listen: Do The Monkey With Mr. James / Perry & The Harmonics
Do
If you haven’t heard or heard of Perry & The Harmonics, then get to steppin’. For years, I too slept on this single and the sole album from which it came, INTRIGUE WITH SOUL.
Seemingly led by saxophonist Clarence Perry, the ’65 studio-only Perry & The Harmonics attempted to cash in on the extremely successful and then current craze of James Bond / 007. The bulk of the album being soul interpretations of the film’s various theme songs, plus a few originals like ‘James Goes To Soulville’ and then, this spectacular single ‘Do The Monkey With James’.
The album is scarce, and this single even more so. That’s Ed Townsend, possibly most known as co-writer of Marvin Gaye’s ‘Let’s Get It On’, doing the voice overs, which double as lead vocals, and I doubt a better delivery could have been conjured by anyone. His credits as a songwriter and producer are fairly deep, particularly in the Mercury catalogs, where he was a house producer working closely with Dee Dee Warwick. His label ties included Vee Jay, Capitol and Scepter. As well, as an unsung hero, his writing and producing credits covered Etta James, Big Maybelle and The Shirelles. He was particularly good with the female voice.
Tags: Big Maybelle, Capitol, Clarence Perry, Dee Dee Warwick, Ed Townsend, Etta James, Mercury, Perry & The Harmonics, Scepter, The Shirelles, Vee Jay
Posted in Big Maybelle, Capitol, Clarence Perry, Dee Dee Warwick, Ed Townsend, Etta James, Mercury, Perry & The Harmonics, Scepter, The Shirelles, Vee Jay | Comments Off
Thursday, August 11th, 2011
Listen: Baby Come On Home / Hoagy Lands
Baby Come On Home / Hoagy Lands
Anything associated with Bert Berns gets my radar sky high. A master of New York RnB productions, I grabbed this in a stack somewhere along life’s journey years ago. The not often used black and white, as opposed to red and white, Atlantic promo label giving this obscure single from ’64 even more of an odd one out feel.
There was no way ‘Baby Come Back Home’ was going to disappoint despite the rather un-soulful sound of an artist named Hoagy Lands. Gladly, that first instinct, triggered by the Bert Berns namecheck, was right. The record is a gem.
Through the years I’ve picked up his other titles on Laurie and ABC, yet always found it baffling that, for such an obvious musical fit, ‘Baby Come On Home’, with Cissy Houston, Dee Dee Warwick and Judy Clay on backups, became his only Atlantic release.
Tags: ABC, Atlantic, Bert Berns, Cissy Houston, Dee Dee Warwick, Hoagy Lands, Judy Clay, Laurie Records, Led Zeppelin
Posted in ABC Records, Atlantic, Bert Berns, Cissy Houston, Dee Dee Warwick, Hoagy Lands, Judy Clay, Laurie Records, Led Zeppelin | Comments Off
Monday, February 14th, 2011
Listen: Country Girl, City Man / Billy Vera & Judy Clay
Country Girl, City Man / Billy Vera & Judy Clay
Judy Clay got a raw deal. An early member of The Sweet Inspirations, she grew up singing with her relatives, Cissy Houston, Dee Dee Warwick and Dionne Warwick. She’s on endless sessions (mostly Atlantic) for Wilson Pickett, Don Covay, Aretha Franklin, God only knows how many. When she finally had a hit with ‘Storybook Children’, as one half of the intentionally multi-racial duo Atlantic Records had masterminded: Billy Vera & Judy Clay; network television wouldn’t touch them. Instead Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazelwood got their slots, including performing ‘Storybook Children’ on The Hollywood Palace. Hey, we love Nancy & Lee but hold on.
I used to hear the follow-up, ‘Country Girl – City Man’, on a bunch of stations. It featured The Sweet Inspirations (as did ‘Storybook Children’ and most tracks on their Atlantic LP), mixed RnB with country beautifully, and appealed to lots of formats. It’s another permanent jukebox fixture. I play it a lot. She sounds like she could’ve been an actress, that phrasing.
Listen: Private Number / Judy Clay & William Bell
Private Number / Judy Clay & William Bell
If you’re not a believer, check her duet with William Bell.
Posted in Atlantic, Billy Vera, Booker T, Dee Dee Warwick, Dionne Warwick, Don Covay, Hollywood Palace, Judy Clay, Lee Hazelwood, Nancy Sinatra, Stax, The Sweet Inspirations, William Bell, Wilson Pickett | No Comments »
Wednesday, October 13th, 2010
Listen: Oh No Not My Baby / Maxine Brown MaxineBrownOhNo.mp3
Infamous Carole King (did you know she married one of The Myddle Class) / Gerry Goffin classic. Like many of their compositions, ‘Oh No Not My Baby’ was recorded by a whole bunch of folks. Cher, Manfred Mann, Fontella Bass, Dusty Springfield and Dee Dee Warwick amongst my favorites.
The US hit version went to Maxine Brown (#24, 1964). Unfortunately, most of her singles for Wand (Pye International in the UK for this one), as well her duets with Chuck Jackson, achieved undeserved low Billboard pop chart peaks, Bubbling Under The Hot 100 entries or non hits whatsoever. Hence, their place in every last Northern Soul price guide.
As with most of her work for the label, Cissy Houston and The Sweet Inspirations provided backups. It had to have been a magical time around the New York studios that catered to the RnB sessions in those days. Seems a day didn’t pass without a classic being recorded, just think of all the unreleased, forgotten songs.
Worth getting: BEST OF THE WAND YEARS, a flawless cd comp from Ace UK with the usual amazing booklet. The details will have you drooling.
Above: Jukebox Tab signed by Maxine Brown
Tags: Ace Records, Billboard, Bubbling Under The Hot 100, Carole King, Cher, Chuck Jackson, Cissy Houston, Dee Dee Warwick, Dusty Springfield, Fontella Bass, Gerry Goffin, Jukebox Tab, Manfred Mann, Maxine Brown, Pye International, The Myddle Class, The Sweet Inspirations, Wand
Posted in Ace Records, Billboard, Bubbling Under The Hot 100, Carole King, Cher, Chuck Jackson, Cissy Houston, Dee Dee Warwick, Dusty Springfield, Fontella Bass, Gerry Goffin, Jukebox Tab, Manfred Mann, Maxine Brown, Pye International, The Myddle Class, The Sweet Inspirations, Wand | No Comments »
Thursday, June 24th, 2010
Listen: Sweet Inspiration / The Sweet Inspirations
Sweet Inspiration / The Sweet Inspirations
Listen: That’s How Strong My Love Is / The Sweet Inspirations
That's How Strong My Love Is / The Sweet Inspirations
Cissy Houston, Lee Warrick with daughters Dee Dee and Dionne Warwick, Judy Clay, Doris Try – they were all members of The Sweet Inspirations at one time or another. Even if you haven’t heard these classics by them – you have heard these voices many times, contributing to endless sessions by Solomon Burke, Wilson Pickett, Aretha Franklin, Esther Phillips, Van Morrison’s ‘Brown Eyed Girl’, The Jimi Hendrix Experience’s ‘Burning Of The Midnight Lamp’, even Elvis. Ahmet Ertegan finally decided in 1967 to record them as their own entity. Not only cutting an initial album, but in a one year window, they recorded three. Their versions of current hits became hits again – this time for themselves: ‘Why (Am I Treated So Bad)’, ‘To Love Somebody’, ‘Unchained Melody’. They really hit pay dirt with The Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section in Alabama during the early months of 1969 – from which these singles come. Their theme song is a classic. And the gospel purity of ‘That’s How Strong My Love Is’ makes for difficult upstaging.
Posted in Ahmet Ertegan, Atlantic, Cissy Houston, Dee Dee Warwick, Dionne Warwick, Doris Troy, Esther Phillips, Jimi Hendrix, Judy Clay, Muscle Shoals, Solomon Burke, The Sweet Inspirations | No Comments »