This past November, I read an article that approximately 550 to 600 World War 2 veterans -- all members of 'the greatest generation' -- are dying on a daily basis. Proportionately, 2013 - 2014 has taken it's toll on dozens and dozens of some of the greatest pioneers of pop, rock, and rockabilly music. So far, in 2014, we lost one half of what could easily be called the greatest duo (and certainly the most influential) in the history of rock and roll, Phil Everly. We also lost one of the most noted lead singers, Jay Traynor of "Jay & The Americans" and lately of "The Tokens."
2013 took a far greater toll. We lost hundreds of singers, musicians, songwriters and a few key non-performer legends, perhaps, most notably Grammy Award winning producer / engineer Phil Ramone, "Crawdaddy" creator / publisher / author Paul Williams, impresario / promoter Sid Bernstein (95 years old and still snubbed by the RRHOF), Bobby Martin, producer / engineer and one of the architects of "the Sound of Philadelphia," producer / engineer Andy Johns (Stones, Hendrix, Rod Stewart, Clapton, Zeppelin), "Shindig" host / radio deejay Jimmy O'Neill and the incomparable 'star' of WLS and WCFL Radio, Chicago's Larry Lujack.
When we read about these fallen trailblazers in Forgotten Hits -- every few weeks or a few times a month -- it does not hit you like seeing them all in one place.
But below are 'some' of the folks who influenced our lives with their musical contributions.
RIP:
"Forgotten Hits" regular and friend, Alan O'Day (that one REALLY hurt - kk)
Former Mouseketeers and hit makers "Annette" and Dick(y) Dodd (The Bel Airs and Standells)
Patty Andrews (The Andrews Sisters)
"The Singing Rage, Miss Patti Page"
Marshall Lytle (Bill Haley and The Comets)
Bob Engemann (The Letterrmen)
Lou Reed
Bobby Blue Bland
Jewel Akens
Eydie Gorme
Richard Street (The Temptations)
Bobby Rogers (Smokey Robinson and The Miracles)
Jim Sundquist (The Fendermen)
Stanley Knight (Black Oak Arkansas)
Ray Manzarek (The Doors)
Floyd "Buddy" Mc Rae (The Chords / "Sh-Boom")
Reg Presley (The Troggs)
Leroy Bonner (Ohio Players)
Rick Huxley (The Dave Clark Five)
Ken Hodges (Spanky and Our Gang)
Robert "Bobby" Smith (principal lead singer, The Spinners)
Marvin Junior (The Dells)
Virgil Johnson (The Velvets)
Richie Havens
Shadow Morton
Tony Sheridan
Claude King
Peter Banks ("Yes")
Eydie Gorme
Clarence Burke (Five Stairsteps)
Joe Kelly (Shadows of Knight)
Drummer Tommy Wells
Gordon Stoker (The Jordanaires)
Marshall Sewell (The Edsels)
Alvin Lee
JJ Cale
Billy Adamson (The Searchers)
Pete Haycock (Climax Blues Band)
Allen Lanier (Blue Oyster Cult)
Doug Grasser (Ohio Players)
I'm sure there are a number of you out there who can add to this list --and, sadly -- there were dozens more including a number of additional musicians and songwriters.
We owe a debt of gratitude the wonderful musical legacy they left us.
Fred Vail
Treasure Isle Recorders, Inc.
Music City, USA
Right off the bat you can add these names to the list:
Sammy Johns ("Chevy Van")
Larry Verne ("Please Mr. Custer")
Bobby Parker (who we interviewed a couple of years ago in FH ... and very likely was screwed out of the royalties for the popular '60's song "You Got What It Takes", a hit for both Marv Johnson and The Dave Clark Five) Bobby also recorded the hit "Watch Your Step", the guitar riff from which John Lennon said inspired him to write The Beatles' #1 Hit "I Feel Fine". (It's always sounded a lot more like The Allman Brothers' "One Way Out" to me!!!)
Country Singer Jack Greene
Noel Harrison
Apple Records artist Jackie Lomax
Hugh McCracken (guitar whiz session player)
Emilio Pericoli (Al-Di-La)
Tompall Glaser
Marvin Rainwater (he spoke with Forgotten Hits many moons ago)
The legendary Slim Whitman
and Country Superstars George Jones and Ray Price
as well as (in addition to legendary DJ Larry Lujack), our FH Buddy "Wild Bill" Cody
Yep ... a VERY tough year for saying goodbye. (kk)
re: Diggin' The Charts /
The Saturday Surveys:
Kent,
I thoroughly enjoyed
looking through the radio surveys of other radio stations here in the country
and to see what records made the surveys and which ones didn't that would turn
out to be big hits on a national level.
You mentioned that the song
GEORGIANNA was big in Chicago and didn't make the national charts. You said you
didn't understand that. Many years ago, a man in record promotions told me that
the question could be answered in one word and that one word was PAYOLA. I have
had record promotion men look at weekly surveys and would and or could tell
which ones were considered to be of the PAYOLA type. Who knows? Would be
interesting to know just how many copies were sold at the various record shops
in Chicago.
Finally, I learned something today. I was familiar, though not
all that much, of the singing group Dave, Dee, Dozey, Beaky, Mick and Tich. I
did not know they recorded the song BEND IT. That particular song by that group
didn't chart here in OKC. However, a local group which called themselves the
Noblemen did record it. For the week of March 16, 1967 here in OKC, their
version of BEND IT peaked at #2. It was on CJL record label with a flip called
STOP YOUR RUNNING AROUND.
Larry Neal
I have ALWAYS loved the song "Bend
It" and it got a TON of airplay here in Chicago despite never making any of our
local charts. (Even WIND used to play the heck out of this one.) My Mom loved
it, too, and bought (and played) the 45 ... a couple of us kids bought copies,
too.
I didn't learn until many, many
years later that Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich recorded two DRASTICALLY
different versions of the song ... we covered this AGES ago in FH (and I'll have
to dig through the archives to see if I can find that piece) as apparently some
folks thought the version we featured the other day was perhaps a little too
"suggestive" for its time. To this day, I still don't get it ... and thought
this song should have been a MONSTER hit here. (It never charted in Billboard
and only spent one week at #100 in Cash Box. Back home in Great Britain (where
these guys were a HUGE success), it peaked at #2. GREAT track as far as I'm
concerned. The song that DID chart for them was the infinitely inferior
"Zabadak" from 1968. Go figure. (kk)
UPDATE: No need to go digging through the ancient
2002 - 2006 archives ... I found highlighted excerpts up on the current website
after all. You can check out this article, posted after Dave Dee died in
2009:
I'm reading Mac Gayden's autobiography "Missing String Theory," and
in one chapter he writes about his hit song "Everlasting Love." He states that
the record (original Robert Knight recording) reached Number 13 on Billboard,
and would have reached the Top Ten if Monument Records had agreed to buy a full
page ad in Billboard . They refused, and the record stalled, then dropped. Have
you heard of this kind of situation?
David Lewis
Unfortunately yes, and although not openly
talked about in outside circles, apparently it was a fairly common practice
exercised by all of the major publishing trades at the time. (Suffice to say
that payola was NOT confined to radio stations and disc jockeys!!!) In fact,
word is it still continues to this day, just in different "work around"
formats. There has long been talk about which artists have gotten the Rock And
Roll Hall Of Fame nod in the past based on which record labels bought the
$25,000 tables for the awards ceremony. Makes you wonder if ANYTHING was real
back then. How do you truly trust ANY of the chart information when you know
that tactics like this were going on behind the
scenes.
And don't miss our brand new weekly feature, The
Saturday Surveys, spotlighting charts from around the country. Be sure to check
back tomorrow to see this week's edition! (kk)