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Lotsa Lou ... And More Reviews!

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LOU CHRISTIE:
When it comes to prayer, I used to reply, "I don't do weather." Meaning I thought it should just take its course.  Then I realized:  If I don't ask, how will God know?  So, now I ask.  I do believe that God answers with "No" at times, but I have seen an increase in weather-related "answer to prayer" since I started asking.  And now it looks like you have a weather "break-through" for tonight.  Glad to see that it finally worked out!  In this case, the third time's the charm.  I say to my students, "two heads are better than one to figure it out.  Team Up!"  Enjoyed the review ... and so did Lou ... as soon as I notified Lightning Strikes, he twittered your review!  
https://twitter.com/egyptianshumba
Lou said he really enjoyed meeting and talking to you the other night and he loves your site.  The Lightning Strikes site noticed that your favorite Lou Christie song is 'Beyond the Blue Horizon'.  They said they get more email about that recording than any other Lou has done. 
That really sucks about Jay and the Americans ... I have seen them give outstanding and upstanding shows.  However, even in ours and their heydays, our music heroes got sick, over-partied, struggled through personal issues, etc. ... and come up with some bad reviews.  I truly think they are more diligent now in creating a memorable event for EACH concert, and alas, this cannot always happen.  As kids, we never thought about the fact of what would happen as our idols got older.  I'm amazed to see them, well into their 70's, still charming the stage.   
Shelley
"Beyond The Blue Horizon" has ALWAYS been my favorite ... even in the pre-"Rain Man" days!  (I remember being shocked when I heard it in the film because I didn't think anybody else even KNEW about this song!!!  It didn't perform very well on the charts and deserved a FAR better fate than it got.  They really should have re-released it to ride on the coat-tails of the film's success.)  The arrangement is just outstanding.  You can barely hear Lou whispering the lyrics on the first verse and then it just continues to build throughout into the tremendous crescendo at the end.  I absolutely LOVE it!  
As for Jay and the Americans, I was truly disappointed ... I was so anxious for Frannie to hear them as they completely blew me away the year before when they opened for Herman's Hermits starring Peter Noone ... so I absolutely know they are capable of putting on a killer show.  Probably just an off night ... and perhaps more due to the outdoor venue and sound conditions as The Bronx Wanderers were also really weak on Friday Night ... but blew the doors off on Sunday after they closed the Lou Christie show. (kk)  

Just to clarify the numbers, back in the day when WLS banned RHAPSODY IN THE RAIN and was instrumental in getting it banned from all the ABC radio stations, that meant only seven stations altogether, and I believe only one other station was top 40 at that time, namely WABC. As I recall, WXYZ in Detroit was well into the process of switching to MOR in that time frame. They're a maybe for making it three stations total if my memory is off, albeit those were three huge markets. 
The upshot is Gene Taylor's Gestapo tactics that yanked EVE OF DESTRUCTION, BALLAD IF JOHN AND YOKO, FRIDAY ON MY MIND, and so many other hits, including of course RHAPSODY IN THE RAIN, from the WLS playlist did damage to Lou's sales and career ... and no doubt many other stations were influenced by WLS' decision, thus taking the totally unfair ban beyond three key markets. 
WLS was a great station in its day, but they could be the Fun Police when they felt like flexing muscle. 
Bill Fortune
Gene Taylor's comments gained momentum when they were picked up by Time Magazine, thus prompting other stations outside the ABC umbrella to ban the song as well.  The re-recorded version was rushed to radio stations as soon as possible but by then most of the damage had already been done, thus stopping the record at #16.  (Here in Chicago, WCFL capitalized on the fact that WLS wasn't playing it ... and it ultimately peaked at #14 here.  (kk)

Kent, 
I enjoyed your assessment of the Lou Christie concert you attended over the weekend, and I especially enjoyed the photos you took. From what you said and wrote, Lou mentioned that his GYPSY CRIED went to #1. Through the years there have been some concerts I have attended in which said artist or group commented on a particular song they were going to sing or just sang, making it to #1. Probably the average concert fan doesn't remember if the song went to #1, only that it was a big hit as we know it today. Probably went to #1 in the artists' or groups' mind. To be honest with you his recording of BEYOND THE BLUE HORIZON, I am not familiar with. If memory serves me right, his RHAPSODY IN THE RAIN was pulled about two weeks after it was being played here in OKC. TWO FACES HAVE I has got to be my all time favorite of Lou's. Every so often when I hear that song, I am reminded of an incident in school when I was talking to a friend of mine about that song. I mentioned that the song was number one with a guy by the name of Robert Louis Stevenson. The friend never got the connection. 
Larry
Several years ago (back when The True Oldies Channel was still running here in Chicago) Scott Shannon read a news story about a woman in India who gave birth to a baby with two heads.  I called him immediately and told him that he had just missed the PERFECT opportunity to play "Two Faces Have I" on the station ... to which he replied "You are one sick puppy."  lol  (kk)   

Kent, 
It was great seeing you Friday night in Addison for the Italian fest.  I’m only bummed that I didn’t return Sunday night to see what sounded like a great concert!  I, too, agree that Jay and the Americans were way off Friday night.  I have seen them before and LOVED them.  Something was missing Friday night.  I also have to say that one thing for me put a big damper on Friday’s Bronx Wanderer’s show.  After Jay and the Americans were done, the crowd was subjected to over an hour of preparation, organization, and sound checks by the Bronx Wanderers.  I know the bands need time to set up, but this group subjects us to “Check Check Check” way too long.  I saw quite a few people leaving.  They just got tired of waiting.  There must be a way to speed up the process a bit.  I’ve seen the Bronx Wanderers quite a few times, and it has happened each time.  Consequently they had to cut short their show because of the curfew.  I hate to complain, though, as the summer outdoor concerts are the best bargain in town!!    I’m glad you finally got to see Lou, and I, too, would love to see him at the Arcada.  Hope it happens.  
Janet 
I know Ron's been trying to book him for a long time ... and I know that they discussed a return engagement ... so let's continue to hope for the best.  Meanwhile I'm just glad that I finally got the chance to see him after all these years!  (kk) 

Kent - 
The concert was great but too short. But some Lou is better them no Lou. Wish he did some of his songs for the encore (Painter,Trapeze or Shake Hands). What a great voice for his age!
Mike DeMartino
Pretty much exactly one hour ... but good from start to finish.  (I still can't get over how good the band was with just an hour of rehearsal.  Lou's Drummer and Musical Director Ron Wilson agreed that they were one of the best "pick-up bands" he'd ever worked with.)
Honestly, I think Lou may have been running out of gas by the end of the show ... but I was happy to see him hold it to an hour and give a solid performance throughout.  (kk)  

I got to meet Lou Christie at a meet and greet prior to a concert a couple of years ago and he was certainly one of the nicest entertainers I've ever had the pleasure to meet. I had a couple of 45's with me for him to sign and he graciously signed all of them, including "Shake Hands And Walk Away Crying" (which I never knew even charted, though it's long been a huge favorite of mine). Lou mentioned to me that his sister is singing background vocals on it. 
I've seen the Bronx Wanderers twice in concert and they were fantastic both times. I can't remember for certain, but I believe it was Stu Weiss who introduced me to their music when he was still on Topshelf Oldies.  
I've seen Jay III and The Americans once, and they were good.  
I've seen some artists I felt should "hang it up", but I admire them for wanting to still be pleasing to their fans, who come to see them and relive the memories, not necessarily to expect them to sound exactly like they did 50 years ago. One example is Jimmy Beaumont and the Skyliners ... always a fantastic show no matter what, but sometimes Jimmy's voice is not very strong and other times he sounds better than I've ever heard him (such as the last time I saw them).  
By the time he forcibly retired, Bobby Vee's voice was all but gone, but he was still putting out music that his fans loved and I admire him for that. I know he would've gladly kept on performing but that unfortunately was not the case. He loved meeting and chatting with his fans, as many artists do ... and I admire any artist who is willing to spend time meeting fans and signing autographs and taking pictures, because I know that's got to be physically hard on all of them, but they get to bring an extra added bit of pleasure to their fans that way.
Tom Diehl
So many of the performers I've met recently seem SO much more appreciative of their fans today.  Back in the day when they were in the eye of the hurricane, socializing with the fans was virtually impossible (and, in many cases, downright dangerous!)  But today as they look back at what really provided them with a life-long career, I think they have come to appreciate the fans that much more.
Some will sign, some won't.  I remember several years ago a discussion here in Forgotten Hits where artists were signing items but then DATING them ... because far too many "fans" were then taking these signed items and turning around and selling them on eBay trying to collect big bucks.  Others will sign just about anything.  (If you look at that one picture of me and Lou that ran the other day, you'll see the marker right in his hand!)
A FH Reader told me he once went to see Bobby Rydell and brought about 15 albums with him to the show for Bobby to sign.  MOST folks in line were probably pissed ... why is this guy over-doing it and taking advantage of Bobby's time ... surely ONE album would have been enough ... but Bobby, good sport that he is, told the reader "If you bought 'em all, I'll sign 'em all"!!!
I've seen some of these lines last for up to two hours after the concert ... and probably would have left rather than sit through all of that.  In that respect, some of these artists are EXCEPTIONALLY gracious, especially when some belligerent fans tell them "You wouldn't HAVE a career if it weren't for people like me."  Get over it ... nobody owes anybody anything!!! (kk)
 (photo by Frannie Kotal)

After seeing the Lou Christie show on Sunday, Frannie went to YouTube looking for more clips ... and let me tell you, you're going to find a WIDE range of assortment here, encompassing ALL of the good, the bad and the ugly!  (lol)  We were especially partial to this appearance Lou made on The Midnite Special back in 1974, possibly to promote his new release (which most likely would have been "Beyond The Blue Horizon" at the time) ... but also performing the biggest hit of his career.  (kk)



     Hi Kent,  
     Always good to see the great Lou Christie getting a  mention.  So good to know also that he’s still hitting the notes. Here are a couple of Lou’s songs from the 70s that you might like to share:    
   1.  The Neil Sedaka - Howard Greenfield song, “Sing Me Sing Me”, which Lou cut for Buddah in 1972. This was arranged by Lew Warburton who wrote arrangements for the Fortunes and Edison Lighthouse in the 70s. He also helped revive the Drifters’ career by arranging a string of UK hits for the group. Lou’s producer here, Biddu, produced a lot of good disco stuff in the 70s, including Tina Charles’  "I Love to Love (But My Baby Loves to Dance)" in 1976.  Neil Sedaka’s version of “Sing Me” appeared on his 1976 album, “Steppin’ Out”.    
2.  The Tony Romeo song, “Summer Days” on Slipped Disc in 1976. The late Tony Romeo also arranged and produced this one for Lou. It was originally recorded by the Partridge Family on their “Sound Magazine” album in 1971. Tony Romeo had written Lou’s big hit, “I’m Gonna Make You Mine” in 1969. He also worked with Lou on his albums, “Paint America Love” and a self-titled one on Three Brothers Records, both in the early 70s.  Lou certainly branched out musically, working with some of the best arrangers and producers over the years.     
Switching continents to Australia, Lou’s “Two Faces Have I” reached #20 in that country in 1963. That position was topped by a local band, Ol’ 55, who took the song to #15 in 1980. Ol’ 55 formed in the mid-70s along the lines of Flash Cadillac & The Continental Kids in the US and Showaddywaddy in the UK. They did originals along with great covers. Ol’ 55’s 1976 album, “Take It Easy, Greasy” peaked at #3 in Australia. Segue to 1980 and Ol 55’s album “The Vault” featured some more covers such as “Good Timin’”, “Keep Your Hands Off My Baby” and “Vacation”. There was also a version of Lou’s “Two Faces Have I” and a sticker on the cover stating this. “Two Faces Have I” was a Top-20 hit for the group and, hopefully, a little earner for Lou (as composer) from the Great Southern Land.   
Best wishes, 
Mike Edwards




 

Wow, I totally love the "Summer Days" track!  That's one that should have been a hit for sure!  (It went to #89 in Record World ... and didn't chart in Billboard at all!)  kk


UP-COMING SHOWS:
Don't miss tomorrow night's '70's Pop Fest at The Arcada Theatre ... check out this line-up:
Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods
Tim Corwin, original drummer of The Ohio Express
Frank Jeckell, original guitarist of The 1910 Fruitgum Company  
Elliot Lurie, original lead singer of Looking Glass
and Kyle Vincent, latter day member of The Bay City Rollers 
Now that's a rockin' line-up ... especially when you consider that Ron Onesti has also booked Bret Michaels, Quiet Riot and Blue Oyster Cult for his CineFest next weekend!!! 
Check out THIS hit list:
# 1 - Billy Don't Be A Hero - Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods (#1)
# 2 - Saturday Night - The Bay City Rollers  (#1)
# 3 - Brandy - Looking Glass  (#1)
# 4 - Simon Says - The 1910 Fruitgum Company  (#1)
# 5 - 1, 2, 3 Red Light - The 1910 Fruitgum Company (#3)
# 6 - Indian Giver - The 1910 Fruitgum Company  (#3)
# 7 - Yummy Yummy Yummy - The Ohio Express  (#4)
# 8 - Money Honey - The Bay City Rollers  (#7)
# 9 - You Made Me Believe In Magic - The Bay City Rollers  (#7)
#10 - Chewy Chewy - The Ohio Express  (#8)
#11 - I Only Want To Be With You - The Bay City Rollers  (#8)
#12 - Who Do You Think You Are - Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods  (#13)
#13 - Down At Lulu's - The Ohio Express (#19)
#14 - The Way I Feel Tonight - The Bay City Rollers  (#19)
#15 - Jimmy Loves Mary-Anne - Looking Glass  (#22)
#16 - Beg, Borrow and Steal - The Ohio Express  (#23)
#17 - Mercy - The Ohio Express - The Ohio Express  (#26)
#18 - Goody Goody Gumdrops - The 1910 Fruitgum Company  (#28)
#19 - Rock And Roll Love Letter - The Bay City Rollers  (#28)
#20 - Special Delivery - The 1910 Fruitgum Company  (#28)











Happy Together 2015

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Still getting lots of comments on this year's Happy Together Tour ... most feel that ALL of the artists perform too short a set ... but felt especially cheated by the four songs performed by The Turtles ... as headliners (and namesakes) of the tour, fans simply expected more.

This is one of the people I subscribe to on youtube. 
He has posted several from the 8/16 concert at Bolingbrook. 
Stacee  
https://youtu.be/AWtUwX1YVyQ  
Thanks, Stacee ... several clips here to watch!  You can even catch all 13 1/2 minutes of The Turtles set.  (Jeez, based on their share of the gross this year, I wonder what that works out to a minute???  Even The Beatles used to play a half hour back in the day!!!)  I can't help but feel that Flo and Eddie have abandoned their fans to a certain extent and it's become more about the money than the entertainment value or bang for your buck.  Granted The Turtles ALWAYS put on a great show ... and getting six headliners on the same stage for $60 - $75 is an incredible value ... but 13 1/2 minutes by the headliners?  And only four songs?!?!  It just doesn't seem fair.  (I guess maybe they've found that they can make more money in the courtrooms than on the road these days ... Siriusly!!!)  kk  

I agree with you 100% on your Happy Together review.  The Turtles should have played more than four songs - The Association's harmonies were painful to watch - and Mark Lindsay and The Cowsills absolutely stole the show. 
Janet 

Thank you SO much for telling us about the Happy Together show in Bolingbrook.  We were all set to shell out $70 a ticket to see the same show in Aurora - so seeing it for free was a real treat.  You just can't beat this line-up - worth every penny!  
Dan  

>>>Bruce Soboroff was playing keyboards for three nights including Bolingbrook. The regular keyboard player Manny Focarazzo's mom passed away suddenly and he had to rush back to NY. Bruce was good enough to fill in and did a great job with no rehearsal and over thirty songs to learn with all the transitions. Thank you Bruce.   All our thoughts and prayers go out to Manny and his family. (Carl Giammarese) >>>And ours as well ... but kudos to Bruce for stepping in and just nailing it under what had to be some enormous pressure.  Baptism by fire as they say!  WTG, Bruce!  A tip of the hat to his fine musicianship for sure!  (kk)  
Kent, 
I am so sorry to hear about Manny's mom.  She and Godfrey Townsend's mother attended The Happy Together show at Westbury.  The Turtles did salutes from the stage to both mothers with Howard Kaylan running into the audience yelling, "Maamaaaaa!" and dispensing hugs.  How great that she was able to see Manny performing locally (for her) and feel the pride and witness the love.  My prayers are with Manny and his family at this time. 
Shelley   

Saw the show in New Brunswick, August 2. Everyone was great except the Association, who just weren't in sync with the band on the slow songs.  
Charles Farina     

The Cowsills were the highlight for me ... they still sound great.  No offense to ANY of the other groups, but I have seen them before, at least once to six times.  There's just something about the Cowsills ... their song's just make you feel good! Beautiful voices! Great songs!! 
Patty  
I agree that The Turtles need to mix it up a little more from year to year ... too many repeat performers doing the same songs each time out.  In all fairness, they tried that last year by adding Mark Farner and Mitch Ryder to the line-up ... but those artists just aren't known for their "feel-good" songs of the '60's.  Others wrote in stating that now that since The Grass Roots don't feature ANY original members, they don't belong on a high-profile tour like this one ... they had absolutely NOTHING to do with the recording of these hits.  It's a fine line ... but there is absolutely NO doubt that The Cowsills were a GREAT addition to the line-up this year.  We've seen them three times now and they were spot-on excellent each and every time.  (kk)   

>>>Lou Christie would make the PERFECT addition to next year's Happy Together Tour Line-Up.  (Are you reading this, Flo and Eddie???)  Let Lou come out and do his four or five biggest hits and the audience will go nuts!  (kk) 
I think Lou Christie would make a GREAT addition to the Happy Together tour - change things up a little bit and pump in some new blood.  We seem to get the same act year after year and it starts to get old after awhile.  (I'll bet I've watched Carl put on his old jacket for at least ten years now - we get it - he's kept his "youthful, boyish figure" - he's still thin and and trim and fit and extremely good looking - but all of these guys have been doing much of the same schtick for YEARS now!!!)  Liven things up with some new blood. I have to believe that by this time most of the audience is "repeat business" anyway - so why not treat them to something new and different each year.  There are SO many artists from the 60's and 70's that are still out there performing that we never get the chance to see - give us something new and exciting to look forward to next year!  
Sandy  
Although the Lou Christie idea was mine, I doubt that it'll ever happen ... The Happy Together Tour seems to revolve around the stable of Paradise Artists.  That's why you get The Turtles, The Buckinghams, Gary Puckett and the Union Gap, Gary Lewis and the Playboys, The Grass Roots, Mark Lindsay, Micky Dolenz and Chuck Negron again and again.  Adding The Cowsills this year was a MAJOR coup.  (They even joked on stage that the reason they hadn't been asked before was because they were too young ... nobody in the group was over 62 ... and that typically the day you receive your AARP Card you also get an invitation to join The Happy Together Tour!)  They've gone over in a VERY big way ... and are definitely one of the highlights of the show ... and one of the best touring bands out there. 
But as mentioned earlier, Flo and Eddie DID try to mix it up a little bit last year by adding Mitch Ryder and Mark Farner of Grand Funk Railroad ... but these acts just don't fit the motif of "Feel Good"'60's Music.  Still I have to believe there are other artists out there who would make welcome additions to the show.  You're right ... they pretty much draw the same crowd every year ... so why not treat them to something new.  Many of these fans have been loyal to you for 50 years now ... and 30 years on The Happy Together Tour alone!  (kk)   


Like just about everything in life sooner or later all good things must come to an end ... and the 2015 Happy Together Tour is winding down right now with shows through the middle of next week.     

However, FH Readers in Arkansas, Iowa, Minnesota and Ohio still have a chance to see the show ... details below ...   

Friday, August 28th - Oaklawn Racetrack - Hot Springs, AR
Saturday, August 29th - Riverside Casino and Gold Resort - Riverside, IA  
Sunday, August 30th - Bluestem Center For The Arts - Moorhead, MN 
Monday, August 31st - Minnesota State Fairgrounds - Saint Paul, MN  
Wednesday, September 2nd - Mahoning County Fairgrounds - Canfield, OH

Danbury Fields Forever, 2015 - The Full Report

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IT WAS 50 YEARS AGO TODAY, SGT PEPPER HADN'T LEARNED TO PLAY!
 
But the first concert at Shea Stadium was shocking the world with the effects of Beatlemania.  Sid Bernstein didn't make it to the 50th anniversary, but he had attended several others here at Danbury Fields Forever.  This year it is dedicated to him and to Dennis Ferrante who engineered John Lennon, solo artist, to newer heights after The Beatles. 
 
This year it begins for me on June 4th, when Charles Rosenay sends me a reminder / invite.  I jump on the band wagon immediately.  One of my co-workers, also a DJ, emcees the show with Gary Theroux.  So I go to work and say, "Hey Ken, I have my ticket for Danbury Fields.  It's the 50 year Shea Stadium anniversary this year."  "Yeah, Charles Rosenay usually asks me to co-emcee so he probably will again."  "Oh Ken, he has your name on the advertisement so I would book the day off.  I already have."

And suddenly June, July and half of August are gone.  August 15th is here and I head out to Central Connecticut State College Ives Concert Park in Danbury, CT to participate in Danbury Fields Forever, 2015.  My first remark is:  More people need to know about this and utilize it!  This is the perfect place for families and friends to spend the day.  It runs from 12 - 8 pm.  There are playscapes for kids, food, drinks (alcohol and none) and an almost continuous string of performing groups paying tribute to The Beatles.  Someone slaps a VIP wrist-band on me.  This is the second time this week - both were surprises.  Nothing changes because I wear it, but it upgrades my self-esteem.  I enjoy being a viper.  WAIT!!  That should read VIP-er.

There are eleven bands that will play today.  All are co-ordinated to sing different Beatle eras.  This eliminates hearing 'I Want to Hold Your Hand' eleven times.  Nothing wrong with that, but as we discuss here on Forgotten Hits, there are so many other songs that are great.  Let's hear them all!  I cannot speak about each in turn as that is EIGHT HOURS of music and you will have fallen asleep after the fifth hour of my rhetoric.  I am going to attempt scanning and uploading photos, after I send this so hopefully, you can view this with the excitement and love I felt. 

What impresses me is that there are very young performers here, as well as seasoned Beatle lovers.  There are women in some units.  It is not a march of "Beatlemania" bands, each trying to outdo the other.  They are all there to express love of and for The Beatles, who changed music history so profoundly.  The final band, 'The Hofners', are attired in Shea Stadium clothing and will give the entire Shea Stadium set list.  Clever, huh?  'Penny Lane' is performing Sgt Pepper in full dress "Pepper" jackets, 'AfterFab' performs the solo years, 'NumberNine' does psychedelic, and 'The Blue Meanies' (who performed a benefit concert for Davy Jones at BB's) get to take the stage with Hilton Valentine of 'The Animals'.  Hilton is the honored guest here today, looking and sounding great!  I have never before seen Hilton perform live.  My videos show him as the sleepy eyed (yep, probably reasons for that) swaying lead guitarist on The Ed Sullivan Show.  A security guard says to me as I snap pictures, "If you buy something, he will let you take a picture with him."  My reply is probably abnormal, "I may just do that, but it won't be just to get his picture."

I must add a personal note that I see a high school friend of my kids' who played in a Beatles tribute band with two brothers and is now still playing bass with The Hofners'.  Eleven years ago I asked him what he wanted to do with his music.  "I hope to make a living playing Paul for the rest of my life."  I cry watching him.

There are memorabilia vendors, authors signing books about The Beatles and even one on The Monkees.  You can hear the music from the stage as you wander around 'Danbury Fields'.  You can sit in a lounging chair on the grass or in a folding chair in front of the stage.  You can be in the sun or the shade.  (MAN, IT'S HOT TODAY).  Ken Michaels is an enthusiastic emcee.  "Listening to eight hours of Beatle music ... is there any better way to spend the day?!"  Gary Theroux offers his Rock n' Roll history, which may be lost on some, but I think there may be ways to showcase it and blend it throughout the day.  Ken Michaels' radio show is called 'The Beatles, Every Little Thing'.  Gary's is 'The History of Rock n' Roll'.

Charles Rosenay is my idea of a good producer.  He is visible, handling cell calls and problems, but not star casing himself.  We gotta do something about the sound system though, guys!!!  We all kidded about the crackling making it feel like a vinyl record show and thankfully you could not hear crackling during the music but each time it cut out was frustrating and time-eating.  Thankfully, Charles extended the concert past 8:00 pm so all groups could perform fully. 

John and Paul met at a church fete'.  And the rest ... as they say ... is history.  What better way to honor The Beatles each year, but with a fair-like atmosphere? 
-- Shelley J. Sweet-Tufano
 
We got this from Charles Rosenay, who has been organizing these Beatles tributes and tours for quite some time now.  (In fact, he just wrote me from Liverpool where he and a bunch of Beatles fans are visiting many of The Beatles' old haunts right now ... and promises more info when he returns home in September!)
 
Thanks to everyone who attended the Fab 4 Music festival this past weekend. The bands were great, the venue was terrific and everyone who came had a FABulous time.
Now we would like to invite you to REMEMBER LENNON: IMAGINE 75 on October 9, 2015, the exact date of John's 75th birthday. Great seats are now available for this very special theatrical concert event at the College Street Music Hall on 238 College Street across from the Shubert Theatre in New Haven. 
 
 
REMEMBER LENNON: IMAGINE 75 presentsone of the greatest John Lennon impersonators in existence, a world-class backing band, and audio-visual accompaniment all adding up to a respectful tribute recreating the concert John may have performed had he still been with us.
With most of the world-renowned Lennon tribute acts, close your eyes and you think you're listening to John. With this production, keep them open and you'll be equally amazed. Fans from throughout the East Coast will "Come Together" to pay tribute to John on this landmark birthday. 
 
REMEMBER LENNON: IMAGINE 75 is a unique extraordinary musical theater experience celebrating the music, the memory, the magic and the LIFE of John Lennon. Don't miss this once-in-a-lifetime concert event. 
 
Imagine ... 75. 
 
Website : www.Imagine75.com 
Info: 203.795.4737, Liverpooltours@aol.com
Invite your friends on our Facebook "Event" page : www.facebook.com/events/411793212346086
 
We also heard from Gary Theroux, who has MC'd the Danbury Fields Forever extravaganza for the past couple of years ...  
 
Liverpool Productions produced the “Danbury Fields Forever: Fab 4 Music Festival” Saturday, August 15, at Ives Park in Danbury, CT.   For the second year in a row I hosted the show, accompanied by Beatles expert Ken Michaels, who has helmed his own Beatle-themed “Every Little Thing” radio series for more than 30 years.    
 
The day was a scorcher – over 90 degrees – but that didn’t stop multitudes of Beatle fans of all ages from coming out to celebrate the 50th anniversary of their favorite group’s legendary 1965 Shea Stadium concert.  All day and into the night the crowd was serenaded by a wildly diverse array of Beatle cover bands and soloists, all of whom took turns giving their own spin to songs John, Paul, George and Ringo recorded either collectively or as solo stars.  
 
The featured bands were The Blue Meanies, The Hofners, Penny Lane, Number Nine, The Oh Nos, AfterFab, The Navels, StrictlyBeatles and The School Of Rock.  Eric Herbst from DizzyFish and Nekita Waller also performed.    
 
A special treat was the presence of Hilton Valentine, who played lead guitar as a key member of The Animals on their 1964-6 hits (“House of The Rising Sun,” “I’m Crying,” “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood,” “It’s My Life,” “Don’t Bring Me Down,” “We Gotta Get Out Of This Place”).    
 
Hilton had a booth among the many vendors where he was signing memorabilia and had not intended to perform.  Fan encouragement, though, finally drove him to mount the stage for two numbers, including John Lee Hooker’s “Boom Boom” (which The Animals had revived in late 1964).   
 
Hilton looked almost ghost-like -- quite pale and frail as he strapped on his guitar -- but clearly he has not lost his finger-pickin’ prowess.  Hilton and I spoke briefly in the wings afterward and I hoped to score a post-show interview with him but as his wife was tired Mr. and Mrs. Valentine wound up leaving shortly after his brief set.
-- Gary Theroux, "The History of Rock 'n' Roll"
 
And while all of this was going on on The East Coast, here in Chicago we were celebrating the 38th Annual Fest For Beatles Fans (which will ALWAYS be known as "Beatlefest" to me, no matter WHAT they call it!!!)
 
FH Reader (and noted rock photographer) Mike Bush told me that the line of fans waiting to meet Dick Biondi was the longest line at the entire event.  (He is SO well-loved here in Chicago!)
 
Dick was signing simulated copies of the original WLS Silver Dollar Survey that first charted The Beatles'"Please Please Me" in March of 1963.  Several years ago, Forgotten Hits proved definitively that Biondi was the first disc jockey in America to play a Beatles record on the radio the month before.  Incredibly, Dick is still on WLS (albeit the FM station) all these 52 years later ... and was just the host for The Happy Together Concert in Bolingbrook a few weeks ago.  (I swear this guy has more energy than I do ... and he's 186 years old!!!)  kk
 

The Sunday Comments ( 08 - 30 - 15 )

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re:  Happy Birthday To Me:

This year's birthday concert was The '70's Pop Fest at The Arcada Theatre, featuring Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods, The Ohio Express, The 1910 Fruitgum Company, Elliot Lurie of Looking Glass and Kyle Vincent of The Bay City Rollers.  (Look for a review next week in Forgotten Hits).  Frannie's will be The Stylistics on September 11th, also at The Arcada ... and, as a birthday gift, we'll be going to see Stevie Wonder at The United Center in October.  (To clarify, we'll see him ... but he won't see us.)  

Meanwhile, thanks to all the well-wishers!  

Happy BirthdayYOU OLD FART!!!  You are NOT a Forgotten hit!!  
Clark Besch  

Belated birthday wishes ... Sorry for missing the 39th again, Kent!  
Ray Graffia, Jr / The New Colony Six   
I've actually taken the opposite approach ... told everybody I was turning 77 and then got a lot of "Man, you look GREAT for your age" compliments!  (lol)  Thanks, Ray!  (kk) 
 

My friend and I wanna wish you a happy birthday ... 
Take care,
Rockin’ Lord Geoff


Hey Kent!!!  Happy Birthday!!!  Hope you find that "nooner!"  LOL  
Hope you are having a wonderful Birthday!!!  
Cheers,  
Mark Bego


Happy birthday to you, our music man. Thanks for all that you do. I owe you a drink next time I see you, HAVE A GREAT B-DAY!  
Mike De Martino



Happy Birthday, Kent!
May your year ahead be filled with free promo copies, concert tickets and backstage passes, better radio and all the standard wishes of good health and happiness.
Thanks for keeping us diehard musicheads connected and entertained!
Regards,
Scott Paton


re:  LouChristie:  
Happy Birthday ... yesterday!  
I think this guy is shadowing you ...  
https://youtu.be/RQYfAi1En7E  
He again has several more posted as he did with the Happy Together Again concert.    
Stacee    
I think you may be right!  First the Happy Together Bolingbrook show ... and now Lou Christie in Addison!  I wonder who he is ... I may even know the guy!  Good video 'tho!  (kk) 


Loved the Lou Christie piece ... he's among the best!
- David Salidor


And the topper on the cake ...   

Happy Birthday!!!  
Thanks so much for all the kind words in your column. I had a great time at the Italian Fest. The audience was great, the weather was dry and, it was fun for all of us. So nice to meet you after the show. I'm definitely looking forward to returning to Chicago.  
Lou Christie  

re:  The Happy Together Tour:     
You are right on the markwhen you stated, " that The Turtles need to mix it up a little more from year to year ... too many repeat performers doing the same songs each time out ... but there is absolutely NO doubt that The Cowsills were a GREAT addition to the line-up this year." 
I suggest they consider Freddy Cannon, and throw a little "Action" into their show assuming his health is good enough for the tour!    
Paul Urbahns 
Radcliff, Ky 
Freddy "Boom Boom" Cannon would be a GREAT addition to the tour ... although they'll probably argue that he's "not '60's enough" ... which is complete bullshit of course.  (29 of Freddy's 35 chart hits came during the '60's ... the other six include three from the '50's, two from the '70's and one from the '80's!!!)  He has back doing shows again after heart surgery last year ... and we would LOVE to see him come to Chicago, with or without The Happy Together Tour.  (Actually Mark Lindsay sings "Action" as part of his set these days ... but this is ... and will always be ... Freddy Cannon's song!  (kk)   

Hi Kent -  
Enjoyed the Happy Together last year but couldn't go this year and really appreciate the reviews and photos!   
This might be a stretch but what about adding a girl group or female singer from the 60s!  Shirley Austin Reeves of the Shirelles, the Shangrilas, or Martha Reeves and the Vandellas just to name a few!!   Maybe your readers can suggest some more names.   
Just a thought. Don't forget the great woman of rock n roll!!!  
Carolyn  
You should have caught the free show in Bolingbrook!  
The possibilities are endless once you look beyond the confines of the Paradise Artists stable of artists ... there is absolutely no shortage of great '60's talent still on the circuit ... and if they're only going to get to sing four or five songs anyway, they should be able to find some GREAT talent to meet that criteria.  (Problem is the artists for Happy Together 2016 are typically booked before the 2015 show runs its course ... so maybe NEXT year The Turtles and company can step outside the box a little and be a bit more creative.)  kk   

Kent,  
I'm happy to get to go to this year's Happy Together tour. It stops at the MN. State Fair here in the twin cities but I always have something going on, probably gigs of my own. Can't wait to finally get to see Mark Lindsay. etc. 
When I was 10 I had a huge crush on Susan Cowsil. I'm going to try and figure out a way to meet her.  I probably won't have much luck, but it sure would be fun.   
Tickets here were only 21 or $22 plus the admission to the fair.  Think I'll listen to all the various acts' songs today. BTW Forgotten Hits is still my favorite place on the WWW. Still hoping for a Chicago Meet up -- a Forgotten Hits Get Together some day.   
Bil  
My biggest hope this year was to meet The Cowsills when The Happy Together Tour stopped in Chicago but, after seven years of covering this event, our backstage access was denied this year for some reason by The Paramount Theatre so I never got the opportunity.  (It's always fun to visit backstage after the show and take a few pictures for the website ... The Turtles, The Buckinghams and Mark Lindsay have been very accommodating in the past ... but the chance to finally meet The Cowsills ... and tell them how much we have enjoyed seeing their shows this past year ... would have been a welcome opportunity for me as both a FAN and a journalist.)  It just wasn't to be, however. If you are fortunate enough to get back there, snap a couple of shots and send them in ... would love to see them.  And please tell The Cowsills about Forgotten Hits ... they've been getting some GREAT coverage here for fifteen years now ... and the last year and a half in particular! 
As for a Chicago-area get-together, I would love to do something like that ... it's been YEARS since we've attempted one.  I'd love to block out a set of seats at The Arcada for The Ides Of March Christmas Show and get a few dozen readers to participate and meet up either before or after that show.  Maybe even have Jim Peterik come out and say hello to everybody.  Let's see if we can find anybody else out there is interested in doing so!  Thanks, Bill!  (kk)

re: This And That:
FH Reader Tom Cuddy sent us this article ... Darlene Love talks about her new solo album and working with Bruce Springsteen and Steven Van Zandt .. http://www.rollingstone.com/music/features/darlene-love-on-new-solo-lp-and-working-with-springsteen-steve-van-zandt-20150821   

Darlene's received quite a bit of press regarding her brand new release.  Here's the first video clip released from Darlene Love's new album (produced by Bruce Springsteen), "Introducing Darlene Love".  (Yeah, that makes sense ... she's just been a "hidden treasure" for the past 55 years!!!)  Be sure to watch for the super-star cameos as Tom Cuddy describes below ...  

Darlene Love breaks out the beachwear and the celebrity cameos in her new “Forbidden Nights” music video. Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Steven Van Zandt, Joan Jett, David Letterman, Bill Murray and Paul Shaffer all make guest appearances for her summertime single. 
The video shows Love driving to her beach concert with backup singers, picking up Jett and Shaffer along the way. Her packed red convertible passes by Costello playing soccer, Murray with a surfboard and Springsteen and Van Zandt choking each other out.  
Letterman’s appearance doesn’t come until the end of the video. The retired latenight host can be seen eating a bowl of cereal with a full beard shouting, “Hey! I love you.” 
Love has been a longtime favorite of Letterman’s. Every year, the singer would perform her most notable record and Phil Spector-produced seasonal classic, “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” on his “Late Night.”  
Love’s album, “Introducing Darlene Love,” bows Sept. 18.



 

re:  More Cool Clips:  
OK, this one's pretty clever ...  
Kent ... 
This is a garage in Chicago.  Maybe you can find out where it is and check it out for your readers.  
Frank B.  
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ft1MLaqcNYc   

Kent ...  
Check out this funny commercial.  Can I add another "Clip Of The Week" to my resume ? 
Frank B.







Kent,
It was fantastic those last five songs you posted on your website today. Always did like BEG, BORROW AND STEAL.
Larry.
P.S. No need to post this to FH. This is just one of the many thank you's to you.
Happy to post it, Larry, because I agree ... those are five GREAT songs that just never seem to get played on the radio anymore and represent the very essence of what Forgotten Hits is all about.  Each and every one of them was a good-sized hit at the time ... and are still fresh in our memories.  WHY does radio keep on insisting in squashing those memories by beating the same 200-300 songs into our heads every day?  (kk)



Kent,
The picture you posted of Dennis, Vern, Gary and Ron was from the Jamaica Queens concerts with Tony Burrows, Bo Donaldson and Kyle Vincent.  There were as many names off-stage as on.
Shelley
Yes, I had a feeling that the case ... and is why I mentioned that Bo Donaldson and Kyle Vincent were both coming to Chicago later this month to perform in what's being billed as "The '70's Pop Fest" along with The 1910 Fruitgum Company, The Ohio Express and Elliot Lurie of Looking Glass, singing their #1 Hit "Brandy".  Other adsfor this show Ron Dante and The Archies but Ron has already told me that he'll be in The UK that day due to a prior commitment.
The guy I REALLY want to see now is Tony Burrows ... but I checked three sources last night and they all say he has no shows currently scheduled ... so if somebody hears something about Tony coming out Chicago-way, please let me know.  (Memo to Ron Onesti ... THIS would be a good guy to book!  He was the "hidden voice" on SO many great early '70's hits like "Gimme Dat Ding" by The Pipkins, "Love Grows Where My Rosemary Goes" by Edison Lighthouse, "United We Stand" by The Brotherhood Of Man, "Beach Baby" by First Class and "My Baby Loves Lovin'" by White Plains.  (kk)
You can read Shelley's review of the "Feelin' Groovy" show she saw featuring all these great acts here:  http://forgottenhits60s.blogspot.com/2015/07/feelin-groovy.html
And watch for OUR review of the '70's Pop Fest coming up later next week in Forgotten Hits!  (kk)  

FH Reader Tom Cuddy tells us about a brand new radio documentary ...

http://www.distractioninc.com/projects/   

And, speaking of radio ... and our on-going Monday Morning 50th Anniversary Survey Flashbacks ...
Kent,
Just a few things I was pondering while going over Monday's survey of 50 years ago according to KOMA's Sing-A-Long-Survey ...
I really don't know or remember why LOUIE LOUIE made it to #1 a second time and even why it was reissued at this time. Going over the records listed under KOMA KLIMBERS and other records similar to that on other surveys, it's good to see which records would turn out to be hits as we know them today and, of course, which records didn't quite make it.
Now as for the record listed at #37, LONELY GIRL, by a local group known as the Centuries ... this record would go higher on the survey and would turn out to be the biggest record this group had, recorded on a local label by the name of Rich Records. This group went to my high school in OKC, Putnam City High School. The group was composed of some 4 - 5 members. Through the years, I have spoken to almost all of the members and the one thing that has surprised me is that none of them to this day has a copy of said record. That boggles my mind. I believe if I had been in high school and made a record, no matter how big it would turn out to be, that today I would have at least one copy of it. It's funny, no member of that group has a copy of the record, yet I do here at home. As one member of the Centuries told me recently, copies of that record are few and far between. They did have a follow-up with a Buddy Holly song they recorded. As far as the 11 KOMA personalities pictured at the top of the survey, at the bottom Paul Miller did mornings and every weekday spoke with the mayor on the phone. At the top, Dale Wehba is, of course, retired from broadcasting and currently lives here in OKC. Occasionally, he and I talk on the phone.
Larry
Has ANYBODY out there got copies of this Centuries record so we can send them to the original group member???  (kk)

I just now revisited your Last Kiss section. Wow! I’m worn out from all of your research.
I loved your comment “Must have been 200 in the studio that day”
Just dropped by to hello. And no, it should not have been all that complicated but for so many out there telling lies like politicians. Take care,
Sid Holmes

Coming up September 17 - 19th ...
My wife and I are going!
Hope to see you there.
Stu Weiss

Well, unfortunately you won't see ME there ... but this sounds like a pretty cool event ... exceptional line-up ... so hoping that some of our East Coast Readers can attend.  (And please report back to us if you do!)  Thanks, Stu!  (kk) 

Vintage Vinyl News is reporting an incredible continuous 54-year stretch of live Beach Boys concerts.  (In fact, Bruce Johnston is celebrating his official 50th year anniversary with the band this year!)  Here's the set list that the Mike Love / Bruce Johnston led Beach Boys are performing in 2015 ...
The current Beach Boys show features 42 songs: 
Surfin’ / Catch A Wave / Its OK / Don’t Back Down / Little Honda / Do It Again / Goin’ To The Beach / Surfin’ Safari / Surfer Girl / Farmer’s Daughter / Good To My Baby / You’re So Good To Me / Please Let Me Wonder / Kiss Me Baby / Getcha Back / I’m So Young / Why Do Fools Fall In Love / When I Grow Up (To Be A Man) / Darlin’ / Be True To Your School / Don’t Worry Baby / Little Deuce Coupe / 409 / Shut Down / I Get Around / Ballad Of Ole Betsy / Sloop John B / Wouldn’t It Be Nice / Then He Kissed Me / California Girls / Dance Dance Dance / Let Him Run Wild / God Only Knows / Pisces Brothers / Good Vibrations / Do You Wanna Dance / All Summer Long / Help Me Rhonda / Barbara Ann / Surfin’ USA / Kokomo / Fun Fun Fun

For months now we've been asking you to email the NTSB to reopen its investigation into the plane crash that took the lives of Buddy Holly, Ritcie Valens and The Big Bopper on February 3rd, 1959.
Now comes this appeal from the family of Ritchie Valens ... who simply wants to see justice done ... and the truth be told ..
The Day The Music Died Plane Crash Investigation ... 
The plane crash that took the lives of our brother Ritchie, The Big Bopper, Buddy Holly and pilot Roger Peterson has been a hot topic in the news, saying that The National Transportation Safety Board has agreed to consider re-opening the investigation. The key word being "Consider".  
A few years back,  a close friend of our family explained what he and a friend of his that works in aviation had discovered during their own investigation.  The plane, a Beechcraft Bonanza, was very popular with the doctors of the time ... they were relatively inexpensive as planes go, and easy to learn to fly. The Beechcraft Bonanza earned a nickname "Doctor Killers". The unsuspecting / inexperienced doctors would load too much weight into the planes causing them to become over- weight and unbalanced. The planes, being lightweight, would take off but were unable to gain altitude.  
No one really knows what happened on February 2, 1959, as the plane took off. It has been 56 years this Febuary, The world lost three great artists with budding music careers, and the pilot, who was recently married.
What will this investigation change? The original report said pilot error.  We were told that Roger could have flown this plane blind folded, that's how competent he was. Other theories state that Buddy had a gun.  Buddy was a brilliant song writer and musician. We, Ritchie's family, would love to see Roger Peterson's name cleared ... imagine what his family went through.  
Accidents happen. Are they going to go after the plane manufacturer for not labeling this plane as "may crash if over-weight or unbalanced"?  What about all the other people who lost their lives in the same type of plane? 
Closure is a good thing, but sometimes we can only receive little bits and pieces at a time, as we allow sweet memories and friendships to heal us. Forgiveness of others and ourselves also help us along this journey called life.  The word "Consider" is the key to this mystery.  The NTSB, may or may not go forth with the investigation ... they said it will take a couple of months for them to decide. 
The Family of Ritchie Valens
This is why it's important for the public to contact the NTSB ... let their feelings be known regarding reopening this investigation.  LJ Coon has listed some key email addresses below as points of contact.  Please, if you want to see this investigation reopened and reexamined, contact the folks below and let your feelings be heard.  (kk)
Dear NTSB:
I am sending you this e-mail in Support of The NTSB going forward with the Investigation into The Mason City Iowa accident of February 3, 1959, that took the lives of Roger Peterson, Buddy Holley, Ritchie Valens and J P Richardson.

Name: 
Location:  
Please Send SeparateCc or Bcc email's to: 
L J Coon

Batgirl is gone.  Yvonne Craig, who portrayed the super hero on the Batman television series, died from complications of breast cancer.  In addition to the female caped crusader, she also starred in TWO Elvis movies ("It Happened At The World's Fair" and "Kissin' Cousins") and made guest appearances on several popular TV shows of the day including Star Trek,Mod Squad and The Man From U.N.C.L.E.  (kk)



Here's the word on a brand releases we tipped here a couple of months ago ... the Micky Dolenz live shows at 54 Below, "A Little Bit Broadway, A Little Bit Rock And Roll" are being released as a live concert CD, which isnow available for pre-order.  More information below ...   

BROADWAY RECORDS ANNOUNCES THE RELEASE OF Micky Dolenz: A Little Bit Broadway, A Little Bit Rock & Roll Live AT 54 BELOW

August 20, 2015- New York, NY)- Broadway Records has announced that the newest addition to its Live at 54 BELOW series, “Micky Dolenz: A Little Bit Broadway, A Little Bit Rock & Roll – LIVE at 54 BELOW” will be released on September 25, 2015. The album is now available for pre-order at http://www.broadwayrecords.com/cds/micky-dolenz-a-little-bit-broadway-a-little-bit-rock-n-roll.  

In early July, Micky Dolenz performed several sold-out evenings at 54 BELOW, the famed performance venue in New York City. This charming Broadway performer and legendary rock ‘n’ roll star will be back to 54 BELOW September 25th and 26th by popular demand to celebrate the launch of his album.   

This brand new show was a way for Dolenz to combine his love of Broadway with his love for rock ‘n’ roll into one exuberating concert. The album consists of The Monkees greatest hits and some rarities, along with songs from the musical roles he has performed and the shows he loves. Dolenz framed each song with personal anecdotes and behind the scenes intel, such as his friendship with the Beatles, how he met his wife and the fact that stalwarts Neil Young and Ry Cooder played on the original recording session for “As We Go Along.” The compilation of songs and stories creates a joyous and nostalgic atmosphere for both Dolenz and the audience.  

“It was a little bit out of my usual comfort zone, but each show was better than the last and I guess our original concept worked. If the truth be known, the original TV-series was a lot like a half-hour Marx Brothers musical on TV. It’s great that we’ll have the live recording as a permanent record,” said Dolenz.

Van Dean, founder of Broadway Records adds, “I grew up on the Monkees re-runs and having the opportunity to create this show and resulting album with one of my idols is definitely a ‘pinch me’ moment.  It’s thrilling to see how much his fans have embraced this new show.  We anticipated they would sing along with some of the Monkees songs at the concerts but to also hear them sing along with his rendition of ‘Pure Imagination’, was pure magic.”

Hollywood Reporter said, “Delivering exuberant versions of several classic Monkees hits interspersed with theatrical songs both familiar and relatively obscure, the still youthful 70-year-old singer performed with an obvious joy that proved infectious.”

The Huffington Post said, “The highlight for me was the show tunes, ranging from "Don't Be The Bunny," from Urinetown, to "Mr. Cellophane" from Chicago. The guy's an amazing actor, and he emotes the hell out of these tunes. He's a little bit of a ham, on the over-the-top side, to be sure, but in a cabaret setting, it works. Oh man, does it work.”
Micky Dolenz was one of the stars of the sixties TV show "The Monkees," about a rock-and-roll band. The group sold over 65 million records (with Dolenz as their lead singer), and their albums included "The Monkees,""More of the Monkees,""Headquarters" and "Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones, Ltd.” Dolenz also starred in the West End musical The Point and later became a producer-director for the BBC and London Weekend Television. In 1996 the Monkees reunited for a 30-year summer tour around the U.S., and Dolenz directed an episode of the hit TV show "Boy Meets World." His other theatre credits include the National Touring Company of Grease, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the ForumTom Sawyer, Disney’s AIDA on Broadway; Pippin’; and, Hairspray in the West End where he essayed the character of Wilbur.


Micky Dolenz: A Little Bit Broadway, A Little Bit Rock & Roll – LIVE at 54 BELOW is produced by Michael J. Moritz, Jr. and Executive Produced by Van Dean.

This album is the latest in the “Live at 54 BELOW” series that started in 2012 with albums by Patti LuPone, Norbert Leo Butz, Christiane Noll, Andrea McArdle, Aaron Tveit, Laura Benanti and the most recently released Ahrens and Flaherty, Marin Mazzie, Danielle Hope, Jarrod Spector, Sierra Boggess and Shapiro Sisters. Many more titles in the series are currently in the works and more albums will be announced shortly.


BROADWAY RECORDS is one of the preeminent record labels in its industry and has produced cast albums for many major Broadway shows (i.e. the Grammy® nominated Matilda The Musical, the soon-to-be released Doctor Zhivago and the recently released The Visit and Side Show Original 2014 Broadway Cast Recording) as well as the preservation of shorter run Broadway shows (i.e. Bonnie & Clyde and Big Fish) and NBC’s television event, Peter Pan Live!. Broadway Records believes in delivering the best cast recordings to its customers, while also striving to innovate with the critically acclaimed "Live at 54 BELOW" series featuring top Broadway stars including Patti LuPone, Aaron Tveit, Norbert Leo Butz, Sierra Boggess, Marin Mazzie, Laura Benanti and many others. Recently, BroadwayWorld.com nominated 19 of Broadway Records’ albums for their inaugural 2014 Album Awards, all of which can be found by visiting www.broadwayrecords.com. 

54 BELOW, Broadway’s Supper Club, is the new performance venue in the grand tradition of New York City nightlife.  A few blocks from the heart of Times Square and just below the legendary Studio 54, 54 BELOW is a classically designed state-of-the art nightclub in the theatre district that hosts audiences with warmth and style.  The venue provides a food and beverage menu from early evening through the wee hours of the morning that is worthy of the world-class entertainment on the stage.  In their description of 54 BELOW, The New York Times writes “the club has the intimacy of a large living room with unimpeded views and impeccable sound; there is not a bad seat. Its sultry after-hours ambience is enhanced by brocade-patterned wall panels planted with orange-shaded lanterns. And the atmosphere is warmer and sexier than in Manhattan’s other major supper clubs.”   Located at 254 West 54th Street, 54 BELOW features up to three shows nightly with cover charges ranging from $15-$95. Tickets and information are available at www.54Below.com.





and one for the locals ...

Hey Kent,

AJK here - I am looking for a particular Jim Shea interview he did on Y103.9 that I am hoping maybe someone (perhaps Shea himself) might have recorded.  In 2008 (April / May?) he interviewed Peter Benjaminson, author of the book on Florence Ballard of the Supremes.  I seem to remember the interview was not only extensive and interesting, but included lots of great songs that would not normally be played.  Could you maybe see if he's got this show?  It's a long shot I'm well aware - so your help would be appreciated!

Y103.9 sure was great - I'd love any air checks from that station to be honest!

Best,

AJK

I asked Jim if he kept any of his interviews from the station and it sounds like he has a TON of them ... but he won't have access to them until Christmas break.  Believe it or not, he's down at The University of Miami right now in Medical School!  Jim tells us ...

  Hi Kent -

Good to hear from you! As I'm reading this I'm eating breakfast before my first day of medical school here in Miami

Before I drovedown I was looking at some old air checks ... and one of them was you and me kicking off a Beach Boys weekend!
It will be a while before I can even look for that one with the Supremes but I remember it well. Maybe around Christmas I'll be home and I will dig that one out for u.
Jim
LOTS of folks missing the old Y-103.9 these days ... you guys really did have a lot of freedom as to what you could play "off the list".
The main thing I remember about the Peter Benjaminson book was that I got a very negative vibe ... as if no real fact-checking was ever done.  I dug through the archives trying to find the review I did many moons ago ... but once again came up empty.  (I DID find the winner of a FH give-away where a reader won a copy of the book but the actual review itself is missing.  It would have been in May of 2008, which pre-dates the website.)
Enjoy the Miami weather, Jim ... and we'll talk to you when you get back!  (kk)
It's hotter than blazes here!
J.
 

50 Year Flashback - August 31st, 1965

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Depending on where you did your record shopping in Chicago back in 1965, you MIGHT find the Top Tunes Of Greater Chicago list displayed on the regiter counter next to the WLS Silver Dollar Survey.  (WCFL wouldn't switch over to a Top 40 format until a couple of months later, issuing their first weekly survey at the end of the year)

This was a GREAT chart, listing not only the Top 40 Hits of the day but also another twenty Up 'n' Coming titles (usually in alphabetical rather than as an extension of the countdown.)  You also got The Top 12 Albums (what a fun list THAT is this week with two titles by The Beatles, and one each by The Rolling Stones, The Dave Clark Five, Herman's Hermits, The Beach Boys, The Kinks, The Byrds and Sonny and Cher being shown) as well as The Top 12 R&B Tracks.

The regular countdown shows The Five Emprees (misspelled as Imprees) at #5 with their big local hit "Little Miss Sad".  (The group hailed from Benton Harbor, Michigan).  "Eve Of Destruction" by Barry McGuire and The Turtles' version of the Bob Dylan tune "It Ain't Me, Babe" both make huge leaps into The Top Ten this week ... and Dylan's there, too, at #6 with "Like A Rolling Stone".

Our FH Buddy Freddy Cannon jumps 19 places to #20 with his latest, "Action", title theme to the new weekday Dick Clark music program "Where The Action Is", starring Paul Revere and the Raiders, featuring Mark Lindsay, as its hosts.

I love their "Five Star Record To Watch", a big local hit here in Chicago for Neil Sedaka called "The World Through A Tear".















The '70's Pop Fest

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I will admit to being baffled throughout most of the '70's Pop Fest held at The Arcada Theatre last Friday Night (August 28th)    

For starters, two of bubblegum music's best known acts, The Ohio Express and The 1910 Fruitgum Company would be "book-ending" the show ... and all of their hits came from the '60's.    

The Ohio Express, helmed by Joey Levine on lead vocals, scored five National Top 40 Hits between 1967 and 1969 including "Beg, Borrow And Steal (#23, 1967);"Yummy Yummy Yummy" (#4, 1968);"Down At Lulu's" (#19, 1968), "Chewy Chewy" (#8, 1968) and "Mercy" (#26,1969.)   Joey has been long gone from the music scene, however, leaving Drummer Tim Corwin as the only original member of the band on stage that night ... but the rest of the group was rounded out by (according to their own hype): Guy Hoffman, Bass and Vocals; John Baker, Lead Guitar and Vocals, Jeff Burgess, Keyboards and Vocals, Warren Sawyer, Keyboards, Lead Guitar, and Vocals and, last but not least, Brad Herring on Drums.  The group opened with "Beg, Borrow And Steal", a track built around a "Louie-Louie" sounding riff, that we featured the other day in Forgotten Hits.  (The original release of this track was by a group called The Rare Breed in 1966, but the identical recording was credited to The Ohio Express a year later just before the group signed their bubblegum deal with Buddah Records.)  Overall, the group had a pleasant enough sound (although they never did one of MY favorites, "Down At Lulu's") ... instead the set was peppered with remakes and B-Sides as well as a recently recorded track released in Europe where the band is treated more favorably as opposed to here in The States where there doesn't seem to be ANY place for this music on today's musical landscape.  Seeing The Ohio Express do a faithful version of Spirit's "I Got A Line On You" was one of the highlights for me during their set ... and Corwin does a formidable job of handling the lead vocals today, preserving the original sound of the band with a little extra added "kick" here and there to keep them sounding very contemporary.

Tim Corwin of The Ohio Express ... 
I absolutely LOVE that jacket!!!

The Ohio Express in action
 
The 1910 Fruitgum Company clossd the show by performing some of their biggest hits ("Indian Giver",#5, 1969), "1, 2, 3 Red Light", #5, 1968, and "Simon Says", #4, 1968), while also ignoring oher legitimate known hits like "May I Take A Giant Step" (#63, 1968), "Goody Goody Gumdrops (#37, 1968), "Special Delivery" (#38, 1969) and "The Train" (#57, 1969), preferring instead to present "cover versions" of many of the other hits of the day.  (At one point I thought they were doing a Tribute To The Happy Together Tour" when they presented "Kicks","Midnight Confessions", "She'd Rather Be With Me" and "Happy Together" in rapid succession.  (Truth be told, I thought The 1910 Fruitgum Company performed "She'd Rather Be With Me" better than The Turtles did with their rushed, "can't wait to get off the stage or we might go over 13 minutes" arrangement presented at the Bolingbrook Show a few weeks ago.  I've know Frank Jeckell, original 1910 guitarist, for many years now through Forgotten Hits and have, at various time, also talked with original 1910 drummer Floyd Marcus (no longer with the group) and long-time vocalist Mick Mansueto, who handled a fair amount of the lead vocals Friday Night.  After the show Frank confided in me that this was the first time he had played in Chicago since 1968!!!  Hard to believe, but back then The 1910 Fruitgum Company was touring with some of the very biggest acts on the planet so a Chicago stop-over was bound to happen.  Once the hits stopped, so did the offers ... so I was especially pleased to see him make his return visit ... even if it was some 47 years later!!!  They performed a solid set of hits and covers.


Frank Jeckell ... and Mick Mansueto 
of The 1910 Fruitgum Company 

The middle set was perhaps the most confusing of all.  Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods were booked as the headliners of the show, yet were lumped together in the middle set with Looking Glass vocalist Elliot Lurie and Kyle Vincent, listed as "formerly of The Bay City Rollers" ... yet he was not an original member.  To help add to the confusion, Donaldson didn't sing ANY of his own hits at all ... Vincent took the leads on both "Who Do You Think You Are" and "Billy, Don't Be A Hero", both performed to near perfection on stage.  Vincent also did a couple of Bay City Rollers songs that he originally had absolutely NOTHING to do with ... "I Only Want To Be With You" (their rocked-up remake of the Dusty Springfield tune) and "Saturday Night", the break-through song for the band, which had the whole crowd up on their feet singing along and screaming for mpre.  In between we were treated to a bunch of other songs that seemingly had no relationship whatsoever to the three named artists currently on stage (although "The Heartbreak Kid" WAS a minor hit for Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods and "The Night Chicago Died" was written by the same folks who gave us "Billy Don't Be A Hero" and was, at the time, covered by Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods.)  Kyle (who looks a little bit like Andy Kim did back in the day) also covered Andy's big hit "Rock Me Gently".

 Bo Donaldson

Confused yet?  Well, we certainly were!!!  In fact, when Kyle Vincent sang the opening line to the Bo Donaldson hit "Who Do You Think You Are" ... "Who am I?" ... I couldn't help but wonder aloud the very same thing ... "Who the heck WAS this guy and why was he signing all the Bo Donaldson leads as well as The Bay City Rollers tunes?!?!?"
I quickly checked his website which bears the clever opening comment "You're either here because your'e a new fan reading up on my past to get some insight, a stalker trying to decipher a code that instructs you on what to do next you on what to do next, an old fan seeing if there’s anything new to be known or you're a journalist who doesn't rely on Wikipedia for your backgroud.  Good for you.  No matter what brought you here, welcome!"  

 Kyle Vincent

However, from there, he really doesn't tell you much! 

While there's plenty of name-dropping going on (Clive Davis, Barry Manilow, Kim Fowley and more) there is absolutely NO mention of The Bay City Rollers anywhere on his site.  Now I'll grant you this ...he's got a GREAT rock and roll voice and kept us thoroughly entertained throughout the show ... and he LOOKS like a '70's rocker (but hey, so did I back in the day ... 


... So, with very little help from Kyle himself, (and against my better judgment) I had no choice but to resort to a Wikipedia search just to see what came up.  
 
Once again, I couldn't find any direct ties to The Bay City Rollers ... but he HAS played with just about everybody involved in '70's and '80's rock.  The list of "who's who" is really quite amazing ... and contains Bryan Adams, Gerry Beckley of America, The Cowsills, Ron Dante, Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods, Amy Grant, The Guess Who, Robert Lamm of Chicago, Corey Hart, Barry Manilow, Ziggy Marley, Richard Marx,Sister Hazel, Rick Springfield, The Ventures, Dennis Tufano, Survivor's Jimi Jamison, 10,000 Maniacs, Donald Byrd and many, many more. So clearly this guy has been around in any variety of capacity working with some of the biggest names in the biz.  (In fact, you'll find that most of the "name" acts shown above provided background assistance in Kyle's own ventures. rather than the other way around ... which tells me he's very highly thought of within the industry ... and, like I said, is one of the best singer / performers we've seen in a long, long time.)  Maybe after he sees our review he will drop us a note and better fill us in on his very impressive background ... and tell us why HE was singing all of Bo Donaldson's hits instead of Bo doing them himself!!!    

Lastly, I would be completely remiss if I didn't single out Elliot Lurie of Looking Glass.  Elliot has been away from the scene for a little while ... but has not lost one iota of talent in the process.  Having written and sang two of our favorite hits from the 1970's, "Brandy" and "Jimmy Loves Mary-Anne" ... and possessing one of the most unique and distinctive voices in all of rock and roll (seriously, I can't think of another single person who sounds ANYTHING like him!), I couldn't help but wonder what he's been doing with himself these past 40-something years!  However there is absolutely no update information (or contact information) to be found on his website, allowing him (I guess) to continue to lead the life of mystery.)  I can only assure you that his vocal chops were well in force on Friday night. (Elliot - again, if you see this, please contact me so we can give our readers an update!)  Frannie talked to him after the show, complimented him on his set and told him how we had just  recently watched a video of Looking Glass performing "Brandy" and how his "hair was down to there ... and your shirt was open down to there ..." ... got a good laugh from Elliot who seemed to genuinely appreciate the warm welcome he received at The Arcada Theatre.

 Elliot Lurie

Admittedly, the crowd was sparce at best.  (I swear that in the past I've seen longer lines for the Men's Room than those occupying seats Friday Night at The Arcada Theatre for the '70's Pop Fest) ... but 'though small in number, they roared and sounded ten-fold larger every time a new hit was performed from the stage.  Host Scott MacKay of The River (one of Chicago's 47 Classic Rock Stations) went against type and admitted his own guilty pleasure of his love for this '70's Bubblegum Music ... and Scott's wife Suzie barely sat down the whole evening as she danced the night away to the pop sounds coming from the stage.  The folks that were there LOVED it and showed their joy and appreciation throughout the performance.  Most of the acts came out afterwards for a meet-and-greet in the lobby, hawking their wares for the fans, and we got to talk to quite a few of them after the show.  The one point that was clear in EVERYBODY'S mind ... audience and performers alike had a REAL good time reliving this music from all of our lives.  It was "feel good" music at its finest and I can't help but feel that adding a couple more Bubble Gum Royalty Acts to the line-up might not make it even better.  Our Forgotten Hits Buddies Ron Dante (The Archies) and Tommy Roe (the King of Bubble Gum with hits like "Shelia", "Hooray For Hazel" and "Dizzy") immediately come to mind ... and would put this thing over the top should they consider a return performance.  The crowd LOVED it ... and it looked like each and every performer felt the same way.  (kk)

 Me and Frank Jeckell,
cooling off outside after the show

Very special thanks to Luciano Bilotti for all the great photos.  (Tim Corwin shot from The Ohio Express website; kk 16 Magazine shot from The60sShop archives collection)

Jimmy Greenspoon

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A few months back, we ran a poll asking which Mark Bego rock and roll biographies we'd most like to see back in print.

Well, now comes word that this may soon be a reality!  Bego's book on Jimmy Greenspoon, keyboardist of Three Dog Night, titled "One Is The Loneliest Number", originally published in 1989, is one that meant a great deal to Mark personally ... and he is working on restoring this manuscript right now.

I'll let Mark Bego tell you all about it in his own words ...


Dear Kent and Forgotten Hits:

It always amazes me when there is some sort of convergence of events that happens in life, which makes it clear that there is some sort of rhyme and reason to what you are doing. 

At the moment I am in Tucson, Arizona, retyping the entire book I originally wrote with Jimmy Greenspoon of Three Dog Night back in 1989, "One Is the Loneliest Number."  In the middle of it all, last Saturday (August 22, 2015) who should come to Tucson for a concert but Three Dog Night!  Well, that I take as some sort of sign that my hunch was correct, and that I should be working once again on this book, and putting Jimmy Greenspoon's entertaining and amusing rock and roll life story in order for a new, updated reprint.

As I am sure you all know, Jimmy tragically lost his battle with cancer last March, and ever since then I have been deliberating on what to do, and how to do it, as far as this book is concerned.  In 1989, it was still six years before I bought a computer of my own.  However, for this book Jimmy rented a huge computer for us to use when we did the original version, and it was all stored on 5 1/2 inch floppy discs.  Pack rat that I am, last winter I found those discs in my garage!  However — much to my horror — they were completely blank!  So, several weeks ago I made the decision to start retying the entire book, and putting it for the first time in a proper and modern "Word" document.  What a tedious process!

I am sure that you are wondering why I am not scanning this into a computer program and doing it that way.  Well, to be perfectly honest, in the 26 years since I wrote this book with Jimmy, I had forgotten some of what I had written, and I type about as fast as I read.  Also, I am finding some details and punctuation was inconsistent the first time, so I am correcting those stylistic things.  And, on top of that, I located the original "full version" of the book, and I am able to add some of the highly amusing "never-before published" material back in the manuscript.  This will be the deluxe version, as my personal tribute to keyboard master Greenspoon.

For me, the most important aspect of this long typing process, is that for the hours that I sit at the keyboard, I can see, feel, and envision Jimmy sitting right next to me dictating these words to me just the way he did it the first time around. For me, for several hours each day, my dear friend — the wild & crazy Mr. Greenspoon — is alive once again through his words.

And now we come to the Three Dog Night concert I saw last Saturday night.  The band's "Suitable for Framing" album (1969) was one of the first ten LP's I ever purchased as a teenager, and I first saw them live in the 1970s at Michigan State University.  Since then I have seen them at least a dozen times, including one of Jimmy's last shows in Phoenix in 2014.

First of all, the concert was entirely sold-out, which instantly was a very encouraging sign.  Although I lamented the fact that Jimmy Greenspoon was no longer at the keyboards, I was really happy to see that Three Dog Night is sounding great, and still delivering the infectiously joyful music that first made them true rock stars back in 1968.  Danny Hutton and Cory Wells are still both in great voice, and their hits like "Mama Told Me Not to Come,""Old Fashioned Love Song,""One," and "Joy to the World" all come to life with all of their magical charm just the way they always did.  It was also great to hear and see that original Three Dog Night guitarist Michael Allsup is just as lively, enthusiastic, and in fine form as he has always been.

Although the rest of the band (originally a septet) is now comprised of three replacement players, they are all top-notch.  And, as for my missing buddy Jimmy:  I am happy to say that he is reverently and lovingly mentioned several times amidst Three Dog Night's current show.  When Danny mentioned from the stage "I know that Jimmy is here somewhere, causing some sort of mischief," I knew he was 100% correct.

And what is to become of this latest updated incarnation of the "One is the Loneliest Number" book that Jimmy and I wrote all those years ago?  Stay tuned, Kent and Forgotten Hits:  I have a scheme up my sleeve for its re-publication, and you will be amongst the first to know.

I can't tell you how much I miss my friend Jimmy and his fun-loving sense of humor.  However, in my mind, thanks to this book — and the new material I am adding to it — Jimmy Greenspoon's creative lives on!

Cheers,
Mark Bego

This is GREAT news, Mark!  I never got to read the book the first time around and can't wait to read it now.  And who knows, maybe Cory Wells, Danny Hutton and Chuck Negron may wish to contribute some brand new memories of their long-time friend and companion as an addendum to your work!  Please keep us posted!  (kk)

Got a bunch of extra money you don't quite know what to do with?

You can pick up original pressings of Mark's Jimmy Greenspoon biography on Amazon.com ... but it's gonna cost you!!!




KYLE VINCENT

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Got a GREAT email from Kyle Vincent after we ran our review of the '70's Pop Fest held at The Arcada Theatre last weekend.  Sounds like a really fun guy ... I wish I had the time to talk to him after the show.

In any event, here, in Kyle's own words, is an assessment of his career to date ... along with a couple of tracks you may not recognize ... but will likely fall in love with!

Hi! 

Thanks for the kind words. I thoroughly enjoyed the Arcada show. The audience was a blast to play for and with. 

I'm not really the mystery man you make me out to be, but then again, I kinda like being thought of like that. And sometimes I do feel a bit invisible in this industry, having been in it for so long, yet still being discovered. 

No, I wasn't an original member of the Bay City Rollers, but neither was Les, the guy who sang most of the hits. I believe I was the 17th member. Whatever was left of the Rollers called me in about 2006 and asked if I'd be interested in being their new singer. Being a huge fan of all those great songs, of course I said yes. I stayed with them for just a couple years. 
Honestly I was a bit hesitant to say I was a member of the Bay City Rollers because at that point there was only one member left, and he was also not an "original" member. I didn't want to mislead anyone. But my friend and former boss, Kim Fowley explained it this way: "Kyle, it's like the New York Yankees. Babe Ruth used to be a member, and now Derek Jeter is a member. You're Derek Jeter. The franchise goes on". I never have tried to imply or sell myself as an original member ... I'm just up there having fun singing some of my favorite songs. My job is to entertain and to bring people back to a time in their youth when life was simple and fun. It's 100% about the audience. 

As for Bo Donaldson &The Heywoods, Bo was never a singer in the band. He was the keyboardist. He, too, called me and asked if I would take over the vocals. Again, because I'm a sucker for melody and sweet pop songs, I said heck yeah. I don't always perform with them, only when I'm available. The majority of the time I'm playing shows as a solo singer-songwriter. I've released about 13 albums ... and you STILL don't know who I am! Isn't this business great?! Aggggg!

My solo career has been a roller coaster ride. I've been signed to six major record deals over three decades. I've got to assume I hold some sort of record for the most deals with the least success! I had a Top 20 single on some charts (Billboard Hot AC, Radio & Records Adult, Cashbox Adult) ... in fact the song began in Chicago and did quite well there, but on the pop charts that single died a painful death "bubbling under" at #101. I've kind of become the defacto go-to guy for 70s acts that need a front man. And I'm totally cool with that. I've been a Roller and I've been a Heywood. I'm waiting for the Sylistics to call. Maybe they can change their name to the Kylistics! haha. As long as I love the songs, I'm there. And to me there was never a better time for melodic three-minute classics than the late 60s / early 70s. 

Thanks for the write-up.

Best,
Derek,
oops, I mean, Kyle    

Well, he certainly put on an entertaining show when we saw him!  GREAT vocals ... great energy ... and really drew the audience into his show ... whether he was singing "Bo" songs ... or "Rollers" songs ... or "Rock Me Gently" by Andy Kim.

Here's Kyle's "bubbling under" hit from 1997, "Wake Me Up (When The World's Worth Waking Up For)" as well as his version of one of my all-time favorites!

Thanks for writing in, Kyle ... and please feel free to drop by ANY time and share some of your musical insight with our readers!  (kk)

 







The Friday Flash!

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We'll be taking the long holiday weekend off ... but have a BOATLOAD of comments to share with you today!  (Heck, this might be enough reading to keep you busy all weekend!)  

Back in the early "email only" days of Forgotten Hits, it wasn't at all uncommon to come up with an abundance of mail for our Comments Pages that was simply too large to run in one segment.

I've always felt that if readers took the time to write, we should present a forum whenever possible to allow their comments to be heard ... but sometimes it just gets completely out of control and it's impossible to feature everything.

Further scrutiny also showed that many of these letters lacked what I can only describe as "mass, cross-appeal" ... so at some point in time we started a new series called "Leftovers" ... designed for the die-hard Forgottten Hits fans at large who simply felt that they just had to read EVERYTHING no matter how "inside" or off the beaten path it may seem to be.
Well, it's happened again ... much of what you'll find on the site today would have made our Leftovers Page ten years ago ... mail's been piling up for awhile now (and I'm STILL at least ten days behind!!!)
So today, in addition to some newer comments regarding some of our recent articles, you'll also find a clearing of the decks, if you will, to try and get our mail "current" again.
It's not for everybody ... we'll freely admit that ... so you may end up doing some skimming this week ... but it's there if you want it.  Hopefully after this large assault we'll be in a better position to stay as current as possible.

Read on!!!

Kyle Vincent / Elliot Lurie  

I took a different track to find out about Kyle's history.  I researched The Rollers' history to find where he fit in.  That was a dead-end trail of sorrow and woe, where no one got the money, and no one is happy about it.  Well ... somebody got the money.  I have my own theories after reading.  Anyway, Kyle, you still eluded me.  He is a fascinating and talented performer who adds to this collage of entertainers well, so you DO want to place him on your historical time-line accurately.  My last resort was a friend of mine, who keeps reminding me that The Bay City Rollers toured shortly before we met, and being such a big Rollers' fan, she will forever hold it against me that I wasn't around to see the concert with her.  Always funny to hear, "(You Jerk), They toured before I met you and my other friends didn't want to go."  So, I casually mentioned the name after my "Feelin' Groovy" concert and review and her eyes were alight as she responded with, "Oh yes!  He was with Bay City on their last tour.  The one I couldn't go see because I hadn't met you and (name of second friend) yet."  SORRY?????  We met around 2007.    

Maybe calling compilation tours "Feelin' Groovy Concert" is the best way to go ... just acknowledge the feelings ... and don't date them.  

Shelley


Kyle put on a great show, as did the others in the '70's Pop Fest line-up.  The problem I have is when they bill an artist as "formerly of" and you find out (as in Kyle's case ... and in his own words) that he was "the 17th Roller" ... the group just wasn't around long enough in the spotlight for that to matter ... the whole premise is very misleading ... and it's clearly a billing tactic to draw in unsuspecting fans ... THAT'S what I have a problem with.  (And believe me, we see it all the time.  There are enough legitimate "formerly of's" out there who have to bill themselves this way because they've lost all rights to their former band's namesake.  And we've seen plenty of acts come through Chicago boasting things like "former lead singer of Journey" or "former lead singer of Boston" only to find out that this guys spent six months with the band as their fifth lead singer and had absolutely NO ties to the original members at all.  (Kyle mentioned this, too, when stating that at the time he was in The Rollers there were NO original members ... just people who had come along and hung around long enough to have some identity attachment.)  As such,  I find it commendable that Kyle doesn't even mention his association with The Bay City Rollers on his own website ... that he's put together a three decade career and released numerous albums under his own name.  I think a more fair and accurate billing would be something like:  "Don't miss the '70's Pop Fest, featuring the music of great artists like Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods, The Bay City Rollers, Looking Glass, The Ohio Express and The 1910 Fruitgum Company and many more of your late '60's / early '70's favorites" ... because that, in a nutshell is what you're REALLY getting up on that stage.  

And I have to admit that I was shocked to learn that Bo Donaldson never sang lead in Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods.  (Maybe they were named that way simply because he had the coolest show-biz name?!?!  Or maybe he's the one who organized the group way back when.  For the record, the group's lead singer's name was Mike Gibbons.)  Again, we've seen this before ... The Dave Clark Five (whose whole sound was based around the incredible vocals of Mike Smith) ... Elvin Bishop (whose vocals were really handled by Mickey Thomas on their biggest hit, without so much as a "featuring" on the record label credit) ... and a few others.  (kk)  

 

It was especially cool to hear from Elliot Lurie, too, after our concert review ran.  Hopefully he'll stay in touch with Forgotten Hits and share some of his "fly on the wall" memories with our readers.

 

Hey Kent - 
Thanks for the nice review! 
I'm new to your site and love what you're doing.  
Forgotten Hits?  Everything I know about guitar licks I stole from Curtis Mayfield.  How about his composition / production "Mama Didn't Lie" by Jan Bradley? Check it out. Best, 
Elliot Lurie
Hi Elliot!  Great to hear from you!
"Mama Didn't Lie" was a #13 Hit back in 1963 ... yet you NEVER hear it on the radio anymore.  Let's fix that today in Forgotten Hits!  (kk)


>>>Lastly, I would be completely remiss if I didn't single out Elliot Lurie of Looking Glass. Elliot has been away from the scene for a little while ... but has not lost one iota of talent in the process.  Having written and sang two of our favorite hits from the 1970's, "Brandy" and "Jimmy Loves Mary-Anne" ... and possessing one of the most unique and distinctive voices in all of rock and roll (seriously, I can't think of another single person who sounds ANYTHING like him!), I couldn't help but wonder what he's been doing with himself these past 40-something years!  However there is absolutely no update information (or contact information) to be found on his website, allowing him (I guess) to continue to lead the life of mystery.  I can only assure you that his vocal chops were well in force on Friday night. (Elliot - again, if you see this, please contact me so we can give our readers an update!)  Frannie talked to him after the show, complimented him on his set and told him how we had just  recently watched a video of Looking Glass performing "Brandy" and how his "hair was down to there ... and your shirt was open down to there ..." ... got a good laugh from Elliot who seemed to genuinely appreciate the warm welcome he received at The Arcada Theatre.  (kk)    

I recently saw the Looking Glass You Tube video and noticed Elliot's shirt was buttoned this time. lol  Ahh ... the good ole' days of the early 70's. You are right about how great Elliot's voice is.  It's distinguishable from most others.  And very underrated. I am glad to see  he is back on the scene after 40 years. (I guess that he has been living his life.)  By the way, the original drummer from Looking Glass, Jeff, and I graduated from the same high school together in New Jersey. We were both into music. lol. It's good to see that he is part of rock history by being in a very successful band. I love the "Looking Glass."  As a semi-retired "teeny bopper" it's fun to remember.    

Blossmwrld   

Elliot Lurie is the real deal ... he wrote and sang Looking Glass' two biggest hits ... but despite a #1 Record that still gets played several time a day 43 years later, his name isn't well known in music circles because Looking Glass was one of those nameless, faceless bands who hit it big and then disappeared.  (In concert he mentioned that he was able to avoid One Hit Wonder-dome when "Jimmy Loves Mary-Anne" cracked The Top 40.  It did a little more than that ... reaching #22 in Record World but only hitting #31 and #33 in Cash Box and Billboard respectively.  It was a #5 smash here in Chicago ... and is another PERFECT example of a "Forgotten Hit" ... nobody on the radio plays it anymore ... it's been out of circulation for YEARS ... and yet you recognize it the moment you hear it.  Fortunately, we get to hear it again here in Chicago these days thanks to Me-TV-FM ... and it'll also pop up on Bob Stroud's Rock And Roll Roots radio program from time to time.  GREAT track ... and Elliot did a FINE job of performing it last weekend at The Arcada.  (kk)


Hi Kent, 
Saw the recent references to Elliot Lurie, who, of course, led Looking Glass to those big early 70s’ hits, “Brandy” and “Jimmy Love Mary-Anne”. Elliot went on to make a self-titled solo album in 1975, which included a track issued as a 45, “Disco (Where You Want to Go)”.  A good sound, especially with the sax and a reminder of how disco music sounded before the whole Casablanca / Studio 54 / Donna Summer thing got under way. It was much lower key, with discs such as George McCrae’s “Rock Your Baby” and William DeVaughn’s “Be Thankful For What You Got” carrying the genre. 
Segueing into the 80s and “Jimmy Loves Mary-Anne” was revived by Josie Cotton, the lady who gave us “He Could Be The One” and who appeared in the prom scene in the Nicolas Cage film, “Valley Girl” in 1983. 
Best wishes,  
Mike Edwards





Speaking of the Arcada ... and other area-sponsored shows   

Here's Ron Onesti's take on Lou Christie's appearance at Addison's Italian Fest ...  (we've been on a hot streak lately ... Forgotten Hits reviews of Lou Christie, Kyle Vincent and Elliot Lurie have inspired all three artists to write in ... here's hoping they'll continue to check back from time to time ... and help spread the word as to what we're trying to do here in our efforts to keep all this great music alive!) 
http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20150828/insights 
/150829085/


Some of the Local Guys Are Still Making Headlines With Their New Releases!
How interesting to find that there would seem to be a battle of Cryan Shames releases now!  After being long out of print on Sundazed, the Now Sounds label reissued the first two RED albums earlier this year to nice success.  They were mono, as you know.  Now, it seems the success of these has caused Sundazed to reissue these stereo issues they originally issued a few years ago.  They are now available on their website again in the exact same issue.  What I find strange is that the "Sugar & Spice" album had lots of mono on the stereo issue and NO ONE reissued MY favorite of the three, "Synthesis"!!!
Now, when is the vinyl coming out on that new heavy stock vinyl?  When do the Shames get some money from their recordings again???  STILL, great that these are selling 50 years later.  The Shames will be remembered long after we are gone.  That's what I call a "Sony Legacy."  Perfect time for a Tom Doody biography.  James Fairs, too!  JC Hooke, too! 
Sundazed STEREO issues now available:
Now Sounds MONO issues now available thru parent label, Cherry Red:
Clark Besch

In addition to these Cryan' Shames releases, Cary Mansfield's Varese Vintage label will be relelasing "The Buckinghams: The Complete Hit Singles", with liner notes composed by the above-mentioned Clark Besch.  ALL of the Columbia (and USA) tracks are here including their biggest Top 40 Hits ("Kind Of A Drag", "Don't You Care", "Mercy, Mercy, Mercy", "Hey Baby, They're Playing Our Song", "Susan" and "Back In Love Again" along with earlier USA Tracks like "I'll Go Crazy", "I Call Your Name", "I've Been Wrong", "Lawdy Miss Clawdy" and "Summertime" (many of which did very well on our local charts here in Chicago) ... along with latter-day tracks like "Where Did You Come From", "This Is How Much I Love You", "It's A Beautiful Day" and "I Got A Feelin'", by which time the hit-making machine had stopped.
Not only did Clark write the liner notes for this hot new release but he ALSO wrote liners TWICE the length as those that made the official release ... and we'll be running THOSE notes EXCLUSIVELY in Forgotten Hits in the days to come.
But first, be sure to pick up YOUR copy of this hot new release.  (Cary even sent us one to give away to a lucky Forgotten Hits who can best describe what the music of The Buckinghams meant to them growing up in the '60's.)
So get your entries in now ... head on over to the Varese Vintage website to order your own copy of this collectible disk ... and then stay tuned to Forgotten Hits to read the unedited, unabridged liner notes EXACTLY the way Clark first wrote them.  (Who knows ... we might even feature a comment or two from Carl and Dennis!!!)  Stay tuned!

The Wrecking Crew
Carol Kaye is right about Studio Musicians all being Independent Contractors because my Dad, Edgar Redmond, was one of them playing saxophone. Also how is it that Fabulous Arrangers and Musicians like Ernie Freeman, Gene Page, Harold Battiste, and H.B. Barnum aren't listed as part
of this so-called Wrecking Crew? Also Billy Preston who played with everybody (Gospel, R 'n' B, Pop, Soul, Jazz, Rock, etc.) and who is considered the Fifth Beatle and played on Shindig isn't mentioned as part of the Wrecking Crew. And with all due respect to Phil Spector and his Wall of Sound Recordings, there is never a mention of Sam Cooke and 50-75 of the Finest Musicians of the time (early to mid 60's) being contracted to play music on his recording sessions. Sam Cooke surpasses Phil Spector in amount of Top Hits in the early 60's with Sam having 30 to Phil's 25.

Yes, Sam was a great artist and singer, but he was also the first artist to have his own Record Labels, Publishing Companies, Management Company, and ownership of his copyrights before he got killed and things went astray. The Bible says the Truth shall set us free so I hope I have given you readers your freedom because I speak the Truth.
Michael Redmond
I think the basis of "regulars" who made up The Wrecking Crew (not called that at the time) were determined (primarily anyway) by Hal Blaine (who seems to have been the "leader of the pack" if you will) and Denny Tedesco, Tommy Tedesco's son, who put together the documentary.  If you read Ken Sharp's EXCELLENT book "Sound Explosion", you'll find many other musicians and artists mentioned that you cite above.  (kk)


And, Speaking Of The Wrecking Crew ... and New Releases ... 
The soundtrack CD to "The Wrecking Crew" film is FINALLY being released this week ... it's a 4-CD set of some of the biggest hits created by this superstar group of studio musicians, along with selected dialog and commentary from many of the players.
This one has been a LONG time coming (due to licensing arrangements) but is WELL worth the investment ... music you've loved your whole life, presented in a way to always keep near you.
More details here:

And, in addition to being available for purchase on DVD or BluRay, the film is still playing in selected theaters across the country ... here's a current list ... please contact your local theater for show times ...
9/25/15 Tunkhannock, PA: Dietrich Theatre
9/30/15 Loveland, CO: Rialto Theater
10/1/15 Melbourne, Australia:
10/15/15 Benton AR:
Benton Event Center
11/7/15 Edom, TX: The Old Firehouse
11/9/15 Batavia, IL: Randall 16
11/9/15 Oswego, IL: Kendall 10
11/9/15 Peoria, IL: Willow Knolls 14
11/9/15 Savoy, IL: Savoy 16
11/9/15 Brownsburg, IN: Pavilion Cinemas 8
11/9/15 Lafayette, IN: Eastside 10
11/9/15 Noblesville, IN: Hamilton 16 IMAX
11/9/15 Portage, IN: Portage 16
11/9/15 W. Lafayette, IN: Wabash Landing
11/9/15 Ann Arbor, MI: Quality 16
11/9/15 Bay City, MI: Bay City 8
11/9/15 Canton Township, MI: Canton Cinema 7
11/9/15 Grand Haven, MI: Grand Haven 9
11/9/15 Holland, MI: Holland 7
11/9/15 Jackson, MI: Jackson 10
11/9/15 Kalamazoo, MI: Kalamazoo 10
11/9/15 Saginaw, MI: Quality 10
11/9/15 Columbia, MO: Forum 8
11/9/15 Jefferson City, MO: Capital 8
12/8/15 Annapolis Royal, NS: TIFF Film Circuit

Just like he did with the weekly Billboard Charts, Joel Whitburn is now making available ALL of the Cash Box Charts from the 1960's and 1970's! 
These are actual reproductions of every Top 100 List published during those two decades ... the 1970's edition is available now for immediate shipment and the 1960's book will begin shipping in November. 
Both are more "must have" editions for the serious music and chart collector.  More details on the Record Research Website:  http://recordresearch.com/


Correction
Last week when we fielded a question about Jim Shea, former Morning Man at Y103.9, we reported that he was now attending Medical School at The University of Miami.  (Jim said he had just arrived in Miami for Medical School so I presumed that's where he was going to school.)
Turns out I mis-spoke ... Jim is actually enrolled in Barry University IN Miami ... and he sent me this little "All Access" blurb as he departed the Milwaukee airwaves ...

Jim Shea Exits WKTI / Milwaukee For A Career In Medicine 
August 31, 2015 at 4:04 AM (PT)

JimSheaheadshot.jpg 

Miami Bound!  

Broadcaster JIM SHEA has decided to retire the headphones and begin a new chapter in his life.  SHEA told ALL ACCESS, "I'm leaving part-time swing at (E.W. SCRIPPS) Country WKTI / MILWAUKEE and relocating to MIAMI in order to attend medical school at BARRY UNIVERSITY." 

In addition to MILWAUKEE, SHEA has cracked the mic or programmed in CHICAGO; CLEVELAND; COLUMBUS; HARRISBURG, PA; CHARLESTON, WV; and EVANSVILLE, IN in a career that spanned some 35 years.  He's also on the team at BENZTOWN as commercial copywriter.


re:  This And That:
The other day we ran the brand new video for Darlene Love's new Bruce Springsteen-produced CD.  Darlene will be performing her Christmas Show at The Genesee Theatre in Waukegan on December 16th.  More ticket information here:  http://www.geneseetheatre.com/
And on October 4th you can catch Hippiefest, starring The Family Stone, Rick Derringer, Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels and Joey Molland's Badfinger.
Sly Stone showed up at a Family Stone concert in Red Bank, NJ ... a rare and unexpected appearance where he joined the band for one song on stage.  (Makes me want to catch this show even more!!!)  Stone is notorious for his Chicagoland appearances back in the day ... equally famous for inciting riots as well as numerous "no shows", leaving thousands of disappointed fans in his wake.  Be nice if he'd make an extended experience here in October to make it up to all those fans who stuck with him through all these years!!!  (kk)  

Hey Kent,  
I found a video of Jim Peterik sitting in with the band, Chase. I've never seen it before now. He recorded two songs with them on their third album, "Pure Music". This one is "Love is on the Way". I prefer his other song, "Run Back to Mama", but this live, primitive, video is shot a little better I think. It's fun to watch the band again, but sad too, as four of the members, including Bill Chase, were killed in a plane crash, just a few months later.
- John LaPuzza
Actually, we've featured "Run Back To Mama" several times before in Forgotten Hits ... I think it's a GREAT track that should have received some recognition when it was first released.  (Chase should NOT have been a "one hit wonder" with great material like this also available!)  And, quite honestly, you rarely hear "Get It On" much anymore either.  (#19, 1971).  For the record, "Run Back To Mama" did "bubble under" in Record World Magazine only, peaking at #124 in 1974 ... after a TEN WEEK run on the charts!  How does a record "bubble under" for ten weeks and never make The Top 100?  That'd be like Pete Rosee's kid playing in the minors for 29 years or something!!!   (kk)

We've been telling you about The Zombies' reunion to tour, performing their entire "Odessey And Oracle" album along with all of their other best known, greatest hits.  Well, now comes word that they will also be performing (and recording) some NEW music as well!  (In fact, their brand new album, "Still Got That Hunger", drops on October 9th!) 
Check out this Rolling Stone link, submitted by FH Reader Tom Cuddy ... http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/hear-the-zombies-tackle-mortality-on-bluesy-moving-on-20150902   

LISTEN TO THIS PIECE OF ROCK & ROLL HISTORY: 
58-years ago this night: CHARLIE GRACIE, Philly's first R&R star, was in the middle of a 10-week British tour -- the first SOLO U.S. rocker to do so!
Listen to this track to hear screaming fans react as Charlie breaks into Tutti Fruitti: AUGUST 26th, 1957 at the STOCKTON GLOBE THEATER: Enjoy!  
*Charlie will tour Britain this November. Schedule will soon be posted.
Charlie Gracie, Jr.


 
Kent ...
Scott Shannon just announced that between 20,000 and 25,000 showed up for the free Joan Jett concert on Saturday.
Frank B.
SANTA FE NEW MEXICO, AUGUST 27, PRE SHOW
WE DID A GREAT FUNDRAISER FOR YOUTH SHELTERS AND AT RISK YOUTH ...
PEOPLE LOVED THE SHOW ... AND WE LOVED THE CAUSE.
RICK LEVY
L TO R: LEE BROVITZ, RICK LEVY, TOMMY ROE, 
MIKE CAMPBELL, MIKE LIDDY

Thanks for your recent piece on our Beatles salute.  That's probably better than I could have done ... and I'll add my info when I return. But who called it Danbury  HILLS Forever?? Lol.
Cheers,
Charles F. Rosenay!!!
Liverpool Productions and International Tours & Events website:www.ToursAndEvents.com 
email:liverpooltours@aol.com
That would be me!  (lol)  It's called running out the door first thing Saturday Morning to make a 240 round trip drive to visit our daughter at college ... but still trying to rush out a quick link so people would know to read the article!  (lol)  Of course it was Danbury Fields Forever (not Hills) ... my bad ... but, by all acounts, a pretty fantastic day of Beatles music!  (kk) 

From FH Reader Tom Cuddy ...


   Sheena: 2015
 
From Chicagoland Radio and Media ...
The helmet that Chicago radio legend Steve Dahl wore during the famous (infamous?) Disco Demolition baseball promotion in July, 1979, is being enshrined. Dahl is donating the helmet to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY, where it will soon be placed on display. The Hall of Fame requested the item to commemorate the most famous baseball attendance stunt of all time. This is the same helmet worn on the cover of Dahl's top-selling "Do You Think I'm Disco" single. Dahl, who is currently heard weekday afternoons on WLS-AM, sent his helmet off to the Hall of Fame this week.




Could it be true?  A Spice Girls reunion with ALL of the original members?
That's what we're hearing.  Stay tuned for more details!  (kk) 

We also received this very in-depth piece on the passing of Bob Johnston from Harvey Kubernik which includes pieces of interviews he did in 2009 and 2013 regarding Bob's involvement in the careers of Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash and Leonard Cohen ...  

I had these archive interviews on the inspirational and immortal Bob Johnston.  If you are acknowledging his physical departure there's some insightful comments from him you may display.  
Best, 
Harvey Kubernik 
Record producer Bob Johnston on Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash / Johnny Cash on Bob Dylan
By Harvey Kubernik, c 2009 
Bob Johnston on Leonard Cohen, c 2013 
Record producer Bob Johnston breathtaking audio resume includes Johnny Cash’s “Folsom Prison” and “San Quentin” live LP’s, Simon & Garfunkel’s “Bookends,” several Willie Nelson records and the first few classic albums of Leonard Cohen, studio activities with Patti Page, Moby Grape and Joe Ely, and culture-altering Bob Dylan studio efforts, “Highway 61 Revisited,” “Blonde On Blonde,” “John Wesley Harding,” “Nashville Skyline,” “Self Portrait”, and “New Morning.”   
June 17th marks the 40th anniversary of the original Columbia Records release of “Nashville Skyline.”  
Bob Johnston was born in 1932 in Hillsboro, Texas. Johnston held a staff song writing position at Elvis Presley’s Hill & Range Music, and then had peripatetic stints talent scouting for Kapp and arranging for Dot Record labels, before joining Columbia Records in 1965. Decades later he produced Mike Scott.  “Bob Johnston is in the list of the greats. Absolutely,” volunteers drummer Jim Keltner” who worked on the Scott project. Bob Johnston appears in the Martin Scorsese-directed “No Direction Home” Bob Dylan” DVD.  
Now based in Austin, Texas, Johnston recalls his landmark production endeavors and collaboration with Bob Dylan on “Highway 61,” “Blonde On Blonde,” “John Wesley Harding” and “Nashville Skyline” as well as his studio and television work with Johnny Cash. 
Johnston was initially introduced to Dylan in 1965 when he was called in to replace producer Tom Wilson to complete Dylan’s “Highway 61 Revisited” album in New York City. “I was working with Dylan in New York and I flew in Charlie McCoy from Nashville, introduced him to Dylan, and the first thing we cut was a version of ‘Desolation Row,’ with Dylan on acoustic, Charlie on electric, and Harvey Brooks on bass.   
“I was standing by the sound board and I said to Dylan ‘Listen man, you ought to come to Nashville sometime,’” Johnston recalls. “I got a fix up down there with no clocks and the musicians are fuckin’ great.’ ‘Hmmm.’ He’d never answer you, just go ‘hmmm’ like Jack Benny. So I finished ‘Highway 61’ and then Dylan called me about six months later and he said, ‘an, I got a bunch of songs. What do you think about going to Nashville?’ ‘That’s what I was talkin’ about!’ In 1966 we went down there for ‘Blonde On Blonde’ and the first thing was beautiful. He said, ‘Well, I got an idea…’. He stayed out in the studio 10 or 12 hours. He never left it. He’d eat candy bars and drink milk shakes and all, and nobody does that much,” Johnston ponders. “I sent the musicians away and told them to do anything you want to and be in phone contact. Don’t go home… you can be in the studio down here if you need some beds or something. About 2:00 in the morning Dylan came out of the studio and said, ‘I got a song I think. Is anybody left here?’ First thing we did was ‘Sad Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands.’
"I told everybody if they quit playing they were gone. It didn’t matter because I could overdub anybody but Dylan. But if you quit with him you’ll never hear that song again,” Johnston relates. “And he’d go to the count and play something else. So they came out and got all around. And Dylan said, ‘it goes like this. C, D. G.’ And then he went over the thing and they said, ‘Man, we haven’t heard this thing.’ ‘I said that’s right. The first one who misses just walk out of the room. Don’t stop.’ And he went out there and started counting off, and that’s another thing, too, nobody ever counted off for Bob Dylan. Every other artist in the world that I’ve been around has a drummer or somebody else counting. He went 1, 2, with that foot and it was gone. When we got through he said ‘let’s hear it back.’ And he came in the studio and played back ‘Sad Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands.’ 15, 16 minutes. And that was the first thing that we did for ‘Blonde On Blonde.’ And from then on it just went up and up and couldn’t go up any higher and higher. I think that’s one of the best tracks ever cut along with ‘Desolation Row.’  
“Dylan and I were notorious for using first takes,” Johnston reveals. “I don’t see any sense in doing it over and over.  They knew what I wanted them to play not what I gave them. That’s why they were there. When I started with Dylan he said, ‘my voice is too loud.’ Good enough. So I turned it down. Then I’d turn it up. ‘Man, I can’t hear myself,’ and had that voice out there. Finally we got to the place where he said, ‘I can’t hear myself.’ ‘Cause I’d brought it so low. So I told him I’d take care of it and never asked him about it anymore and turned everything up and had that voice out there.”  
Fast-forward to 1967, after the notorious Dylan motorcycle accident in July 1966 that among other things, sidelined Dylan (at least in the public eye) for a better part of a year. Bob Johnston met up with Dylan again at a Ramada Inn in Nashville, Tennessee before working on “John Wesley Harding” together. “He played me some songs and asked, ‘what do you think about a bass, drum and guitar?’ ‘I think it would be fuckin’ brilliant if you had a steel guitar.’ ‘You know anybody?’ ‘Yea. Pete Drake.’ He was workin’ with Chet (Atkins), so I got somebody to take his place and brought him over,” Johnston ruminates. “Pete said, ‘Can I play some rock ‘n’ roll?’ And I told him, ‘That’s what you’re here for.’ Charlie McCoy played a lot of instruments on that album. He played, 4, 5 or 20 instruments on every record.   
“When I produced ‘Blonde On Blonde’ and ‘John Wesley Harding,’ they all knew what I wanted. (Drummer) Kenny Buttrey was a genius by being as good as he was and by me fuckin’ with everybody. I used to fuck around to Kenny and I’d say, ‘Your God damn drum is dragging, and you’re bringing everybody else down.’ And he’d get pissed off. “My drum isn’t dragging!’ He’d be mumbling to himself and everybody else would be laughing,” Johnston chuckles. “Then he’d say ‘can I play anything else?’   
“I would place glass around Dylan for recording,” Johnston remembers. “He had a different vocal sound. I didn’t make his different vocal sound. He always had different sounds on. I never wanted to be (Phil) Spector… and while the rest of the world was doing an album as big as ‘Blonde On Blonde,’ which everybody was, the more musicians they could get, the better it was. We went in with four people…in the middle of a psychedelic world!”   
On December 27, 1967, Columbia Records released the Bob Johnston-produced Bob Dylan “John Wesley Harding” long player. In January of 1968 it was the most tracked LP on countless FM radio stations in America and all over the world.   
Two tracks on “JWH” were a preview of the upcoming  “Nashville Skyline” The Sun Records-inspired “Down Along The Cove” and “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight.”   
At the start of  "To Be Alone With You" on “Nashville Skyline,” Bob Dylan famously asks "Is it rolling, Bob?" referring to producer Johnston.  
“’Nashville Skyline.’ That’s fuckin; great. Like sessions with Cash, I found the players, ‘if you quit you are outta here.’ They knew what I wanted them to play not what I gave them. That’s why they were there.   
“I’ll tell you something else I did with Dylan, and recording Dylan and Cash,” Bob Johnston discloses. “Everybody else (at the time) was using one microphone. Which means you have to sacrifice something. If you’re gonna have a band, you can’t have the band playin’ full tilt. If you’ve got him in the middle you can’t understand everything with different people (engineers) in there raising the guitar up, raising the drum up, and shit like that. What I always did was that I had three microphones because he was always jerking his head around, and I put the microphone on the left, center and right and it didn’t matter where in the fuckin’ room he went.   
“And then,” he continues,” I’d mix and start on the left and go all the way over on the right. So I’d usually have the piano on the outside left, without any echo. And then I’d put the echo on the right side. And then I’d have one of the guitars on the right and put the echo on the left…and then I’d match it all alone and brought up everything even so they could fight it out. And then that’s the way the band was. They didn’t have to raise this and lower this, and 15 people sitting around doin’ all that shit. The band was there and he was full tilt. Then you could go any place in the room and understand him. And I never heard another word from him about anything. What I did was put a bunch of microphones all over the room and up on the ceiling. I would use echo when everything got through and I could do that as much as I wanted. I wanted it to sound better than anything else sounded ever, and I wanted it to be where everybody could hear it. And I don’t know what Dylan would have been if he stayed in New York with those people, and been mixed like that. And I know he would have never done that shit like he did in Nashville,” states Johnston.   
“I always had 4 or 8 speakers all over the room and I had ‘em going. The louder I played it the better it sounded to me. This is the way I really did it. As a songwriter, I wrote songs, too. Dylan changed the world. Every song he did I loved. I was a Dylan freak and I knew he was changing the world. I knew he was changing the society as we knew it. And I knew Paul (Simon) was too,” concludes Johnston.   
In 1969 after the recording sessions for “Nashville Skyline” were completed as well as a Cash and Dylan studio date that yielded a “Girl From The North Country” duet that was subsequently incorporated into “Nashville Skyline” LP.    
“I had Cash in the Columbia Music Row studio and thought it would be nice to get Dylan in there, too and I didn’t say anything to them. Cash was in the studio and Dylan came in. ‘What are you doing here?’ ‘Gonna record.’ ‘Well, I’m recording too.’  So, they invited me to dinner, but I said ‘no thanks.’ And when they returned I had a ‘Café’ set up outside with microphones and their guitars, and they came in, looked at the lights, sorta smiled at each other. June was there. We did like 18 tracks.”  
Cash penned the poetic liner notes to Dylan’s "Nashville Skyline" back cover album jacket.   
Johnny Cash and Bob Dylan were tight. In 1975 I interviewed Cash in Anaheim, California.  
"I became aware of Bob Dylan when the 'Freewheelin'' album came out in 1963. I thought he was one of the best country singers I had ever heard. I always felt a lot in common with him. I knew a lot about him before we had ever met. I knew he had heard and listened to country music. I heard a lot of inflections from country artists I was familiar with.  
"I was in Las Vegas in '63 and '64 and wrote him a letter telling him how much I liked his work. I got a letter back and we developed a correspondence." A year later Cash met his label stable-mate. "We finally met at Newport in 1965. It was like we were two old friends. There was none of this standing back, trying to figure each other out.  
"He's unique and original. I keep lookin' around as we pass the middle of the 70s and I don't see anybody come close to Bob Dylan. I respect him. "Dylan is a few years younger than I am but we share a bond that hasn't diminished. I get inspiration from him,” Johnny told me at the time.   
It was in June 1967 when Columbia Records staff producer Bob Johnston replaced Don Law at the Nashville based company producing Cash. A sonic and cultural architect visionary, Johnston’s studio acumen and teaming with Cash in the 1968 and ’69 time period resulted in the bold and riveting artifacts ”Johnny Cash at San Quentin” that followed up the earlier “Johnny Cash At Folsom Prison.”   
“When I took over Cash he didn’t hit the country charts,” Johnston reinforces. “ Like I said on the back of the ‘Folsom Prison’ album liner notes, no one for 8 years would let him go there to record live until he got me, and I said, ‘let’s do it’ I picked up the phone and called Folsom and San Quentin,” he volunteers. “The reason the ‘Folsom’ album was made first is because the Folsom warden answered first, simple as that. I got the warden, Duffy, and I handed Johnny the telephone and left. When we did ‘Folsom’ there was a guy who was going to introduce Johnny on stage in front of the cons and everyone standing up. I said ‘Bullshit!’ And told Johnny to go walk out there now! They are not even sitting down good. Walk out there and jerk your head around and say, ‘Hello. I’m Johnny Cash’ and it don’t matter what the fuck you record. And he said ‘Get outta my God damn way!’ And he didn’t usually didn’t cuss. But he pushed people away went out there and the God damn place became unglued!  
"When we got through I helped Cash get the television show. Cash called me a little bit later, and said, “Listen. I got one thing. Will you get Dylan? If I had Dylan on my show it would be a big success.  And if I don’t it will be a fuckin’ failure.’ And he said, “Will you get him?” “And I said, no.” “You won’t?” “No,” “You won’t” Why not? ”But I’ll ask him.” But I can’t get anybody. I don’t want to get anybody. That’s the kind of truth I had with all of those people. He said, “will you ask” “Yea!” So I was in Ft. Worth Texas, which was my hone town, and called Dylan. “And, I said, ‘Man, Cash just called me and he’s got a TV show that we’ve been working on and if he’s got you it will be a success and if he doesn’t it will be a fuckin’ failure. That’s what he told me.’ And, Dylan said, “well, man, I’d like to…” And I thought that’s the end of that, he’s so busy. And he said, “I’ve got nothing to wear.” I said “I’m in Ft. Worth Texas, let me get you a cowboy suit.” “yea!” “What size do you wear and what color?” “I don’t know.” I said, don’t fuckin’ worry about it I’ll take care if it.” I got him a pin stripped white one that was too long came over his wrist, and a white one that was too short.” That’s how it started.”  
On the first TV show, Cash and Dylan performed 3 songs from “Nashville Skyline.”   
“The sound jumped off the screen on the Cash TV series because I never told anybody that wasn’t the truth. Everything I said and did was for the artist,” now states Bob Johnston. “I never gave a fuck what the company thought. One of my goals was to make it sound like they were in the room with me. But the thing I wanted was the truth. And that’s what Cash got. And that’s what Dylan got. At the Ryman Auditorium tapings for the Cash show I was always real nice to everybody and had two engineers from Columbia (Records) in Nashville that I told Cash we had to have with them so they didn’t fuck up for us. Johnny didn’t fight for anything. ‘This is the way it’s gonna be’. I had those people take care of everything and anything that was bad I would move it, and anything that wasn’t I’d re-record it on the kind of microphone I’d want and put it on there anyway,” explains Johnston.  ---- From the Harvey Kubernik Leonard Cohen book "Everybody Knows," published in 2014.    
Johnston bounced between both coasts, handling A&R duties for labels like Kapp Records, stepping up with arrangement duties for the prestigious Dot Records.  By 1964, he was a protégé of John Hammond at Columbia, which led to a run of Dylan productions, beginning with Highway 61 Revisited, which would enshrine his own name as well.  
Never one for formality, Johnston treated his artists with the wariness of a rattlesnake wrangler, giving them all the space they needed to find their creative core. Johnston let his charges make all the creative decisions… until he decided they shouldn’t.  It rarely came to that.  Building trust, that wide-open space beneath the Smoky Mountain Mountains, was the key to the highway and Cohen responded in kind. 
Bob Johnston: Now Leonard had the Buckskin Boys, and my grandmother Mamie Jo Adams co-wrote ‘When Irish Eyes Are Smiling.’ My mother Diane wrote ‘Miles and Miles of Texas’ that won a Grammy and she wrote songs for Gene Autry. And I grew up with that shit. I’m in the Rockabilly Hall of Fame with Elvis Presley.   
“When Leonard first came to town he was in an old person’s hotel and stayed about the first week. And then me and (songwriter) Joy (Byers) my wife, leased acres from Boudleaux Bryant and his people and it was a little house by a creek. And then Leonard looked at this house and went all through it, and saw the 1,500 acres and he said, ‘One day I‘ll have a house like that and I’ll be able to stay and write when I want to write.’ And I replied, ‘why don’t you just begin now?’ And I gave him the key and he moved in.  
“When I first went down to Nashville I took all the fuckin’ clocks out in the Columbia studio and I tore those rooms down and put the chords underneath the floor and the room was as big as a football field. And we made a Ping-Pong room. Had a pool table and had everything.   
“I’ll tell you something else I did recording Dylan, Cash and Cohen. Everybody else (at the time) was using one microphone.  What I did was put a bunch of microphones all over the room and up on the ceiling. I would use all those echo when everything got through and I could do that as much as I wanted. I wanted it to sound better than anything else sounded ever, and I wanted it to be where everybody could hear it. And that’s the way that we did it. I always had 4 or 8 speakers all over the room and I had ‘em going. The louder I played it the better it sounded to me.  
I never wanted to be Phil Spector. As far as recording or playback, I like to blast shit loud. Damn it! If I don’t feel it in my chest I can’t tell if I have it.  
“I had the engineer Neil Wilburn, did the Cash Folsom Prison live album with him. And he was a genius behind all that shit. I had a great thing with anybody who was a genius.  
“I put together the studio band for Leonard. I hired all those guys who were doing the demos from the South. Charlie McCoy (harmonica and guitar), Charlie Daniels, (bass, fiddle, acoustic guitar) who I knew from 1959. Ron Cornelius (acoustic and electric guitar), Elkin “Bubba Fowler (bass, banjo, acoustic guitar) and I played keyboards. I did a record with Ron Cornelius’s group (West) in 1967. 
Charlie Daniels was a good ol’ boy from North Carolina, a mean fiddler who could bust out a toe-tappin’ bluegrass lick or break your heart with the sustain of a lonesome E minor chord.  He kicked around a bunch of road dog rock ‘n’ rollers, crossing paths with Bob Johnston, who invited him to Nashville.  Anxious to get off the Greyhound, he settled down by the Grand Ol’ Opry and a steady diet of well-paying studio dates.  He’s there with Dylan on Nashville Skyline, with Marty Robbins and later, with Ringo on Beaucoups of Blues.  But nothing proved quite as challenging of squaring his sound with the assonant warbling of the man from Montreal. 
Charlie Daniels: Leonard came to Nashville in September of 1968, and lived locally in a cabin. I actually picked up Leonard Cohen at the airport when he arrived in Nashville with his friend Henry (Zemel) from Montreal. Johnston was booked in a studio. I had long hair and a mustache. I didn’t know who Leonard Cohen was. I knew he was a recording artist and comin’ to town and that we were gonna do some sessions with him. I didn’t know what he did. I knew he had a song called ‘Suzanne.’   
“You don’t know what to expect when you go to meet somebody for the first time that is a totally different kind of music than anything you’ve ever been exposed to. You don’t know what kind of personality they have or what they’re gonna be like. But it was a very pleasant surprise that Leonard Cohen was as down to earth and nice as he could be. He spoke a different way than everybody else around there did. But he had a great sense of communicating with people.  
“I will never forget that when Leonard came to Nashville he lived out in the country for a while. And there was a guy who lived out there, an old cowboy called Kid Marley. I mean people who came from totally opposite ends of the spectrum. It was Leonard Cohen and Kid Marley. But they just hit it off and got to be friends. Leonard was just that kind of guy.  
“One thing that needs to be said about Bob Johnston and bringing people to town like Dylan and Leonard Cohen. There was skepticism about Bob coming to Nashville because he was taking the place of a legendary producer, Don Law. Who was an institution in town. Here’s this guy Johnston from New York, who had been doing Simon & Garfunkel, Dylan, and now Leonard Cohen, who were not really thought of as being country. But the first thing Bob did when he came to town was to do a number one song with Marty Robbins. He had gained credibility.  
Bob Johnston: Leonard and I walked in the Columbia Studio A. It had a bench there. A little stool. He said, ‘I want to play my song.’ And I said, ‘we’re going to get some hamburgers and beer.’ And he said, ‘I want to play my song.’ I said, ‘go ahead and play it and turn the button on there.’ ‘No. I want you around.’ And I said, ‘I want to get some beer.’   
“So we walked over across the street to Crystal Burgers, he came, had a couple of hamburgers and beer and came back. ‘What do you want me to do now?’ I said, ‘Why don’t you get your guitar and tune it?’ And he looked at me, so I had his guitar tuned, and he got on the stool. And I said, ‘play anything you want to.’ OK. Roll tape. And Leonard played the song ‘The Partisan.’ And he got through it and asked to hear it. ‘Yea.’ Played it back to him. He looked at me and said, ‘God damn. Is that what I’m supposed to sound like?’ And I said, ‘forever.’ And walked off. And there it was.   
“The only thing I told everybody was to keep playing. If you stop playing you might as well pick up your brief case and go on out the door. Don’t plan on comin’ back. We did about ten studio sessions.  
“I always ask the artist ‘what do you want to do?’ You get better performances when you make the artist comfortable. Dylan, Cash, Cohen were just wonderful people and they should be treated as such.   
What attracted me to Cohen and songs like ‘Bird on the Wire?’ What attracts you to Leonardo Di Vinci. Or the painters. Leonard was the best I’d ever heard. And Dylan was the best I’d ever heard. And (Paul) Simon was the best I’d ever heard. And Cash was the best I’d ever heard. And all those fuckin’ people were the best I’d ever heard.  
Sidebar 
Leonard Cohen: I liked the work Johnston did with Dylan and we became good friends. Without his support I don't think I'd ever gain the courage to go and perform. He played harmonica, guitar and organ on tours with me. He's a great friend and a great support. We worked hard on the albums we did together, but I wasn't totally happy. Overall I couldn't find the tone I wanted. There were some nice things, though.    
Columbia Records, meanwhile, was itching to get a return on its investment – which meant touring, a fact of pop star life that rankled at even this most inveterate of travelers.   Cohen turned to Bob Johnston to arrange a band, manage the tour and provide a comfort zone from which he could keep the terrors of stage fright at bay.  
Bob Johnston: I put his 1970 band together for him and told him I’d get him the best musicians in the world. And he said, ‘Bob. I don’t want the best musicians in the world. I want friends of yours.’ I said, ‘Good enough.’ I played organ and piano. For a while I acted as Leonard’s manager after he asked me in Paris.  

Harvey also tells us about a new book of photos our readers may be interested in ...

KK:   
Here's a literary music and photo book I think your readers would enjoy.  
Best,  
HK 



 
Independent Publisher Book Awards 2015 
Harvey Kubernik, Kenneth Kubernik 
Bronze Medal in Photography 
for Guy Webster Big Shots book

 
Independent Book Publishers Association 
Benjamin Franklin 2015 Gold Winner 
in the category of Art & Photography to 
Harvey Kubernik, Kenneth Kubernik for 
Guy Webster  Big Shots book

 
Ken Kubernik and Harvey Kubernick 
photo by Guy Webster 2014

The Rolling Stones by Guy Webster 1965   




Congratulations to Joe Smith, who received a star on The Hollywood Walk Of Fame (on my birthday no less!)  Check out THIS guy's resume!!! (kk)

MUSIC EXECUTIVE JOE SMITHTO BE HONORED WITH STAR ON THE HOLLYWOOD WALK OF FAME

 
WHO:   Honoree: Joe Smith
Emcee: Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, President/CEO Leron Gubler
Guest speakers:  Jackson Browne and Bonnie Raitt
WHAT:  Dedication of the 2,558th star on the Walk of Fame in the category of Recording
WHERE:  1750 N. Vine Street in front of Capitol Records
WHEN:  Thursday, August 27, 2015 at 11:30 a.m. PDT
Event will be live-streamed exclusively  on www.walkoffame.com    

COMMENTS:
The Hollywood Chamber of Commerce is proud to announce that music executive Joe Smith will be honored with the 2,558th star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Thursday, August 27, 2015 at 11:30 a.m. PDT. The star in the category of Recording will be dedicated in front of the historic Capitol Records Building at 1750 N. Vine Street. Helping emcee and Hollywood Chamber President/CEO Leron Gubler to unveil the star will be Jackson Browne and Bonnie Raitt.
Over the course of his illustrious career, Joe Smith holds the distinction of being the only person to have headed three major record companies.


 Joe Smith with Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead, 
Phil Everly of the Everly Brothers and Rod Stewart

A native of Chelsea, Massachusetts, Joe Smith was President of his Chelsea High School class. After serving with the U.S. Army Infantry in the Far East, he received his BA in English and Political Science from Yale University.
Smith worked as a sportscaster and disc jockey in Virginia and Pennsylvania before moving to Boston where he became a top-rated and pioneering Rock ‘n’ Roll DJ, and appeared in the motion picture “Jamboree.”
In 1961, Smith moved to California and entered the music industry as National Promotion Manager for Warner Bros. Records. He was named Promotion Executive of the Year four times by The Gavin Report, an industry trade publication. Smith was named President of the Warner Bros. Records in 1972.
During his years at Warner Bros, he signed and/or worked with such artists as Peter, Paul & Mary, Rod Stewart, James Taylor, Alan Sherman, The Grateful Dead, Don Rickles, Van Morrison, Bonnie Raitt, Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks, Black Sabbath, Deep Purple, Petula Clark, The Allman Brothers Band, The Doobie Brothers, George Benson, Al Jarreau, Seals & Crofts to name a few. He also worked closely with many of the company’s Reprise Records artists including Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Jimi Hendrix, Jethro Tull, Trini López, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell and Randy Newman.
In 1975, Smith became Chairman of Elektra/Asylum Records, a division of Warner Communications. For the eight years he was there, Smith worked with The Eagles, Linda Ronstadt, Jackson Browne, Queen, The Cars, Carly Simon, Judy Collins,  Joni Mitchell, Grover Washington Jr., Mötley Crüe, X, and Hank Williams Jr., among others.
In 1983, he was named President and CEO of Home Sports Entertainment, a division of Warner Cable. Following this, he became the first full-time President of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. During this time, he appeared in motion pictures “FM” and “One Trick Pony.”
In 1985, Smith achieved the herculean task of interviewing over 230 artists, producers, managers and executives which constituted his book “Off the Record” that would became a strong seller in Italy, England, Japan and the USA. The audio interviews on which the book is based were donated to the American people and comprise the “The Joe Smith Collection” at the Library of Congress.
In 1987, Smith became President and CEO of Capitol-EMl Music which included the Blue Note and Angel labels. During his seven year tenure, the company registered record profits from such artists as Garth Brooks, Tina Turner, Bonnie Raitt, MC Hammer, Bob Seger, David Bowie, Poison, Megadeth and others.
Upon his retirement from Capitol/EMI at the end of 1993, Smith assumed Executive Producer responsibilities to the World Cup Soccer tournament, where he was hired as executive producer of entertainment for World Cup USA in 1994, the first time the world’s soccer championship was held in the United States. The tournament was crowned with a Dodger Stadium appearance by The Three Tenors that Smith facilitated.
In 2001, Smith was elected to the New England Rock ‘n’ Roll Hall of Fame, the Doo Wop Hall of Fame, and received the Boston Music Lifetime award.  Just last year he was the recipient of Billboard Magazine’s inaugural Clive Davis Visionary Award,
Smith has been a highly visible executive and spokesman for the music industry in Washington and overseas. He has led the fight for copyright protection and against piracy, testifying before several Congressional committees. He served as Vice President of the Country Music Association, President of the Record Industry for Community Relations and a board member of the Recording Industry Association of America and the Black Music Association.
Smith has been a guest speaker or toastmaster at almost every music event over the past 40 years. He was the first American to keynote the London-based Music Week Awards.
Smith has been the recipient of a multitude of awards from organizations such as the City of Hope, B’nai Brith, NARAS and others, and was granted an honorary Doctorate of Music from Berklee College of Music in Boston, where he served as a Commencement Speaker. He has served as an officer or director of the City of Hope, Cedars-Sinai Hospital, TJ Martell foundation, Variety Club and the Neil Bogart Memorial Lab. He is a Trustee at the California Institute of the Arts, Yale School of Music, the Basketball Hall of Fame, Magic Johnson Foundation, Rhythm and Blues Foundation and the Museum of Science and Industry.
 
NIGHTS AND DAYS ARE FOR ROCKIN’ AT THE PONDEROSA STOMP:  MUSIC HISTORY CONFERENCE SET FOR OCT 1 + 2 

The Ponderosa Stomp, the New Orleans music festival that features two solid nights of performances by the seldom seen and heard pioneers of midcentury rock ‘n’ roll, also offers a full slate of music history symposia during daylight hours. This well-rounded approach provides counterpoint to the typically raucous, high-energy sets that take place the nights of Oct. 2-3 at the Rock ‘N’ Bowl™ in Uptown New Orleans.
The twelfth edition of the Ponderosa Stomp Festival kicks off on Thursday, Oct. 1, with a series of talks set for the Stomp’s host hotel, the AC Hotel by Marriott, also the site of the Stomp’s Record Show. While evening performances by the likes of Freddy “Boom Boom” Cannon, Mable John, Brenda Holloway, Willie Hightower, P.F. Sloan, Irma Thomas, Barbara, Lynn, Roy Head, and many, many others fill both Friday and Saturday nights with house-rockin’ music (from 6:30 p.m. until 3 a.m.) the Music History Conference offers insights into how this extraordinary phenomenon came to be — from those who actually made that music history and those who have long chronicled it. 

Thursday’s slate includes a conversation called “Hook and Sling” with Scram Records (Eddie Bo, Walter “Wolfman” Washington, Benny Spellman) founder Al “Crawfish King” Scramuzza and WWOZ DJ Neil Pellegrin. That’s followed by a talk by rockabilly guitar great Al Hendrix titled “It Came From Bakersfield,” moderated by “American Routes” radio-show host Nick Spitzer. Nextis “When Linda Gail Met Cindy Lou,” a discussion of the Louisiana-bred swamp-pop subgenre with practitioners Rod Bernard and Gene Terry that will be moderated by the expert who coined the term, author John Broven.

Another highlight of Thursday’s conference is titled “That’s Cool, That’s Trash,” a talk between L.A. folk-rock pioneer P.F. Sloan, composer of “Eve of Destruction” and “Secret Agent Man,” and WFMU’s Todd Abramson.  Muscle Shoals soul man Willie Hightower will be interviewed by music archeologist and blogger Red Kelly in a program titled “Walk A Mile In My Shoes,” d’apres Hightower’s biggest hit. Chicago blues harmonica and guitar great Billy Boy Arnold will reflect upon his career with Dr. Jason Hanley, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s education director, in a discussion called “Wish You Would.”

The legacy of the late New Orleans composer/producer Harold Battiste will be celebrated in a program titled “Story of a Jazz Man.” Thursday’s last talk is entitled “Rockin’ Across the Rio Grande” and includes Texas rockers Royce Porter and Jim Oertling; Mike Hurtt moderates.
Friday’s program touches on topics ranging from Memphis R&B, Sun Records’ rockabilly explosion, Motown’s gospel connection, and San Antonio’s wide-ranging contributions to rock and soul. 

Stax and Hi Rhythm drummer Howard Grimes, who has backed soul greats including Al Green, Ann Peebles, and Rufus Thomas, will chat with author Preston Lauterbach for a talk entitled “Tales of Beale Street & The Chitlin’ Circuit.” Another Memphis-themed discussion, “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Going On,” a conversation between Sun Records drummer J.M. Van Eaton and writer Robert Gordon, follows.

Motown divas Mable John and Brenda Holloway will be the focus of a talk with NPR’s Ann Powers entitled “From Motown To God’s Salvation.” Author and filmmaker (Sir Doug & The Genuine Texas Cosmic Groove) Joe Nick Patoski will discuss the life and times of Doug Sahm with Augie Meyers (Sir Douglas Quintet and the Texas Tornados) in a discussion titled “Hey Ke Pa So.” 

The music history comes to a close on Friday afternoon with an encounter featuring San Antonio Chicano soul greats Rudy T. Gonzales, Little Henry, Rudy Palacios, Chente Montes, and Manuel “Bones” Aragon titled “Talk About West Side Soul.” Ed Ward (NPR’s “Fresh Air,” Rock of Ages: The Rolling Stone History of Rock & Roll) moderates.  
 
For more information aboutThe Ponderosa Stomp’s Music History Conference please visit:   www.ponderosastomp.com/music-conference_2015.php


To my Oldies friends and fans,
"Hushabye Little Guitar" -  a love song to my guitar  -  was released in 1960 on Guaranteed Records. Unfortunately it never charted ... but here's an article from a British magazine from way-back-when:  
"It was 1960 and the scene was the local youth club monthly dance in Southend on Sea, Essex, England.  The disc jockey announced that the evening was drawing to an end and it was time for a dance to hold your partner close.  The regulars smiled knowingly as they knew this spot as “bum-grabbing time’’.  Soon the hall was filled with couples tightly gripping each other as they staggeringly navigated their way around the floor.  The music being played was Paul Evans’ “Hushabye Little Guitar”, a local cult favorite and still a personal choice to this very day."



Paul Evans


Our FH Buddy Fred Glickstein of The Flock sent us these vintage Flock clips to share.  (For those of you wondering "Who The Flock Is The Flock?" enjoy these tracks and see if you remember) ...
A bit of ROCK History
ENJOY!!!
Some of the Columbia stuff –  1969 – 1970
These are from Flock’s 1975 Mercury album “”Inside Out” – Each link has 2 songs, so when one song ends, a second song will begin.
this next song starts very soft – give it a chance to get louder
Recently Released Flock CD:  Heaven Bound - The Lost Album:
ALL FLOCK MUSIC AVAILABLE ON AMAZOM.COM
Fred

And check out this cool poster Fred sent me from The Bath Festival, 1970 ... imagine seeing THIS line-up of artists all on the same stage!
 

Drum Icon Carmine Appice and 60's Hitmaker Dean Parrish To Release New Digital Only EP “Northern Soul - I'm On My Way”
Los Angeles - Legendary drummer Carmine Appice and New York 60's hitmaker, vocalist Dean Parrish have reunited after 50 years to record a new 7 song EP of 60's soul music, commonly known as Northern Soul music. Aptly titled “Northern Soul - I'm On My Way”, the EP will be released on iTunes in August 2015. The duo first met when in the early 60's they played opposite of Jimi Hendrix, known at the time as Jimmy James. The band, called The BEEETS, played Stax, Motown and Altantic 60's soul. Carmine eventually went on to have major success with the likes of the Vanilla Fudge, Cactus, Beck, Bogert & Appice, Rod Stewart and countless other artists, while Dean pursued a solo career and had a number of hits in the UK and US. He did several Murry The K tours and performed on the Dick Clark show and other well know TV programs at the time such as Zachary Channel 11 NYC, and the Clay Cole show. Dean has performed on the same bill as Mitch Ryder, The Capitals and Lou Christie. He has recorded and toured with the likes of Jorge Santana, Paul Weller, Lord Large and the legendary Bob Marley. Dean even recorded 2 Jams with Jimi Hendrix & Eddie Kramer at Juggy  Murray's  studio NYC 1969 with the band the Rosicrucians aka Steeplechase. In the 2000's Dean was featured in a wedding scene as the Mcee on the hit show the Sopranos.
Says Carmine, “While Dean was doing those Murry the K shows and having hit singles. I was having my career with Vanilla Fudge having hit albums at around the same time....There was always a connection with me and Dean. I hooked him up with my Vanilla Fudge manager Phil Basile, and in turn Phil got two album deals for Dean with band members who were also friends of mine and dean's from 60s....it was after that that Dean cut 'I'm On My Way', which became a big hit ...but over the years me and Dean stayed in contact.”
Then in the early 2000s, Carmine and Dean reconnected again through a mutual friend Randy Pratt, harpist for Cactus and bassist for The Lizards (who have a new CD released) and Rickity. The duo began writing and recording at Randy's studio in New York, which was the start of the “Northern Soul” release. Carmine and Dean had songs they wrote and recorded in the 60's and rehashed them into what's being released today....so this EP was destined to be finished. It features re-recorded versions of the big hit “I'm On My Way”, a karaoke version, a classic mix of the song as it was in 1970's, and a modern version along with new RnB classics such as “Love's Whatcha Cooking Babe”, “Fever” and “Lonely”, all really cool old school RnB, with an old school vibe but recorded with today's sonic sound.
Says Dean, “Singing and playing guitar on this EP with Carmine was a labor of love, a feeling of togetherness that just comes with Northern Soul Music. This movement is still is very much alive today more than ever with a passion a kind of music that takes hold of you.”



Says Carmine, “Some of my favorite music was the 60's RnB and the songs on this EP with Dean singing are exactly that, 60's RNB or today known as Northern Soul. Back in the early 1960's before Vanilla Fudge, I played with Dean in a 7 piece RnB group. Dean was always great at singing this music and I and glad to being playing that music with Dean again. I enjoyed putting this music together with him!”
To purchase Carmine Appice & Dean Parrish - “Northern Soul - I'm On My Way”:
The EP is available on iTunes and from all online Digital outlets
Official websites:
Carmine Appice
Dean Parrish
  Logo

WAYNE NEWTON --
THE HUNGRY YEARS 
THAT PHILLY SOUND is proud to present Mr. Las Vegas, "Wayne Newton -- The Hungry Years." Recorded in 1976, with a real pop sound, this is a rare CD and not available anywhere else.

The CD is presented by songwriter/record producer, John Madara, through That Philly Sound, which is dedicated to the music that came out of Philadelphia during the 50's and 60's.  He also wrote and produced with partner Dave White such timeless classics as AT THE HOP (Danny & The Juniors), ROCK AND ROLL IS HERE TO STAY (Danny & The Juniors, written by Dave White and Produced by John Madara), THE FLY (Chubby Checker),YOU DON'T OWN ME (Lesley Gore, written by Madara & White and produced by Quincy Jones) and 123 (Len Barry, who also co-wrote the song with Madara & White).  These and countless other hit records by Madara & White helped to make up "The Sound of Philadelphia."  In October of 2013, Madara & White were inducted into the Philadelphia Walk of Fame by The Philadelphia Music Alliance.

Order now!  Only $14.95. Buy One Today!



Wayne Newton -- The Hungry Years

Please go to THAT PHILLY SOUND to purchase other rare Philly http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001iKKEJsvWRaWbfHdTbZMqCgNQIGLSIKzDwu0ZDsNcoJEmI8Y-DKtDAMCM3nQm3r_Ffa89WsSV7GgfJJcjHUqaN2hXLIi20d6pZUvtVjH2M49dhMHKRvRUspTPSqoq-IeE1I8yIUzfujsJU6IvZwBW14WMKT79QVPRQFqNJiwN9fKceJf8DW7X7g==&c=BAZ01_nBx9MzSBaEsJwUOGaQb8y55he2QMRPmAuQ0ecfH9OnNLWt1w==&ch=MsZWw0n1EysqHxwCWET01GCV6abJ_egkGh_lgjfVu3R9d_4ucnqFiw==CDs, and learn more about the artists and people behind the scenes.

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All songs have been digitally restored and digitally mastered.

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THAT PHILLY SOUND -- The #1 site for Philly music!


Roy Orbison's MGM Records Years Get Royal Treatment With Box Set and Unreleased Album Exclusive (submitted by Tom Cuddy from Billboard Magazine)
First a belated happy birthday. The song that immediately came to my mind was the Tuneweaver's song out of 1957 HAPPY HAPPY BIRTHDAY BABY. I can't remember offhand, but are you the big 6-0? I had a crazy idea of you going back, say through the sixties, and post every song that was #60 for that week according to Billboard Magazine. Ray alluded to you being 39. Through the years my mother and her sisters, my aunts, told everyone they were 39 and holding. I can't tell you how many times they held.
Kent, everyday before I leave the house I walk outside for thirty minutes just for a little exercise. A lot of the time while walking, I think of a song I haven't heard in years and will start singing it to myself. You mentioned in your paragraph about Tony Burrows just this past week, and I don't know why, I was reminded of GIMME DAT DING by the Pipkins. "That's right, that's right, I'm sad and blue, cause I can't do the boogaloo" ... or words to that effect.
You asked your readers if anyone of them has any copies of the Centuries' record LONELY GIRL. Kent, I am going to go out on a limb and say that no one on your reading list has a copy. However, I will say that possibly one reader might have a copy but that reader probably lived in or around OKC at that time. And if they are like me, they will not want to part with it.You also mentioned the passing of actress Yvonne Craig who played Batgirl on television. When I heard that news last week, again since I hadn't heard the record in years, I got out Neal Hefti's version of BATMAN  and played it, as well as the Marketts.
Finally, just for my curiosity, I wonder what the status is of Sonny Geraci and the benefit concert that was given for him last year. I believe you said they were still having some sort of problems tallying the money and giving it to Geraci.
Again, happy birthday and many many more. Now that's original, isn't it?
Larry Neal
"Gimme Dat Ding" by The Pipkins is one of those novelty favorites of mine ... would LOVE to see Tony Burrows live in concert ... he was involved with SO many great hits in the early '70's.
I asked Dennis Tufano for an update on Sonny Geraci and the big Streetsboro fund-raising concert.  As soon as I hear back, I'll pass the info along.  (kk)



Hi Kent, 
Found a couple of Silver Dollar Surveys that I thought you’d might like to use.   
One, dated 09/01/1962, is for this day 53 years ago. What a fantastic selection of music. Such a cross section – pop, country, folk, r&b, instrumentals, British (2 pre-Beatles), Danish – so many genres covered.   
Also after a quick scan, five of these Top-40 titles came back to the charts later – and in a big way. “Sherry”, “The Loco-motion” (twice!), “Breaking Up Is Hard To Do”, “Do You Love Me” and Beechwood 4-5789”   
Another great listing for 12/08/1962. On both charts, it’s fascinating to note local hits that did not do so well nationally. On this chart, for example – Glen Campbell with “Kentucky Means Paradise” and the Revlons with “Boy Trouble”.   
Best wishes, 
Mike Edwards

 

One of the coolest things about running our weekly surveys is seeing how some records that barely made a dent on the national charts were a big deal on the local scene of any given city.  All the more interesting because back then our whole musical world was determined by what our local Top 40 radio station played ... we were kids and didn't know the first thing about Billboard and Cash Box ... if it was on The WLS Silver Dollar Survey, that's all that mattered to us ... most of us discovered the previously untapped wealth of great music never made available to us at the time several years later was we dove deeper into our hobby.  WLS was a BIG deal back then ... one of the top stations in the country and, with an incredibly strong signal, heard in many other states from coast to coast.  We've told the story several times how somebody listening in Nebraska or Kentucky might hear a song from the WLS Silver Dollar Survey played and run out to their local record store to buy it the next day, only to find out that the record wasn't even available because THEIR local Top 40 radio station wasn't playing it!  
Always fun to revisit the charts.  Thanks, Mike!  (kk)   

And, speaking of the charts ...    

Kent, 
I noticed on today's survey that in the far right hand column (and this was the normal case on any survey), not only was the record label listed but the record number as well. This seems to me to be a lot of extra work for the radio station, but maybe not. The two records you briefly mentioned by Neil Sedaka and the Five Emprees did not make our survey, even though I have copies of them. Listing the top 12 albums for three musical genres, rock and roll, rhythm and blues, and country, I don't believe I have ever seen before.

Maybe a lot of radio stations did that back then. Fifty years ago today, our local survey had a listing of 50 records with a PIC-HIT listed at the bottom as well as a PIC-ALBUM of the week. They were BLOWIN' IN THE WIND by Steve Alaimo and ALL I REALLY WANT TO DO by Cher, respectively. 
One final thing ... on the back of our survey every week was a picture of a recording artist or group currently with a hit record out. On the back of our survey 50 years ago today was none other than Freddy Cannon promoting his tune, ACTION. 
One final final item is that in the UP'N'COMING section, I always did like the Sunrays I LIVE FOR THE SUN and just the other day I started to think of the Barbarians ARE YOU A BOY OR ARE YOU A GIRL. 
Larry   
The Top Tunes Of Greater Chicagoland was one of the most extensive and comprehensive surveys ever issued ... not only the week's Top 40 Hits but often as many as twenty other "up-and-comers", R&B Charts, British Charts, C&W Charts, Album Charts, etc.  Pretty amazing for its time.  Because these weren't tied to a particular radio station in town, they probably better reflected the actual sales in stores where they were distributed.  They're pretty hard to come by these days ... but (with the exception of just one week) we have a complete collection for their entire length of run (approximately mid-1956 thru early 1966). 
Most people associate The Sunrays with their hit "I Live For The Sun" but here in Chicago their song "Andrea" also got a fair amount of airplay ... and that one is MY favorite.  Here it is again for the benefit of any of you out there who may not be familiar with this tune.  (The Sunrays, of course, is the group The Beach Boys' Dad Murry Wilson went out and produced after his own sons threw him out of the studio! lol)  kk




Hello to you, KK, whoever you are!
Literally just stumbled on your website today and have been glued there for quite a while!
I, too, grew up in Chicago and cannot understand why WLS and WCFL didn't play more of the great garage bands you have listed there.  Sometimes I do shows that are nothing BUT 60's garage bands.  (Hey, I used to be a garage band musician and still am when asked!)
You mentioned The Kingsmen - Dennis Mitchell lives not too far from me and has a band that is a really good "Bar Band." Nice to know some garage band legends are still out there!
You might like my Monday night show - it's Indies and Oldies.  Dunno where you are but it's online every Monday night at 11 PM Eastern/10 PM Central.  Just click here to listen: www.bumps-radio.co.uk
Thanks so much for a truly great website!
Onward,
DJ Toby Chicago   
DJ TOBY CHICAGO 
ROCKIN' THE INTERNET 
ON BUMPS RADIO! 
USA/CANADA
MON. & WED. 11 PM EASTERN
  UK/EUROPE/ETC.
TUE. & THUR. 0400 HRS UTC
www.bumps-radio.co.uk
 

I think WLS and WCFL played the majority of the garage bands listed in our FH Readers Poll ... plus they gave a MAJOR boost to local talent like The New Colony Six and The Shadows Of Knight (both definitely of the "garage band genre there in the early years) as well as the more "polished" sounds of The Buckinghams, The Cryan' Shames and others.  

Our readers are VERY partial to those garage band sounds ... so you may enjoy tuning in to Toby's show. 

Meanwhile, here's that recapped list of exactly how you guys voted when we took our Garage Bands Poll a few years ago ...  http://forgottenhits.com/your_top_50_all-time_favorite_garage_bands 

OldiesMusic.com has just published this year's edition of The Labor Day 500.  You can check it out here:  http://www.oldiesmusic.com/500-15.pdf 

 
 
Buddy Holly was born September 7th and all the Chicago oldies stations recognize the singer-songwriter’s impact on rock and roll.  But you probably won’t hear his music on 87.7, WLS-FM, K-Hits or The Drive.  This Sunday from 12 noon to 4 pm, Mike Baker And The Forgotten 45s will feature the hits of “the chirping crickets” and Buddy Holly on 88.1 WLTL-FM.
 
 
Actually you DO hear Buddy's music quite a bit on 87.7 and at least Bob Stroud's program on The Drive ... whether it be his original version of these tunes or the more popular remake versions recorded by SO many artists over the years.  (Me-TV-FM seems to be especially fond of "Everyday" ... which they play nearly "everyday" ... by either Buddy or James Taylor.)  In fact, the station STILL plays the heck out of JT ... to the point that (since radio stations rarely use their call letters anymore) we've come up with some new, more identifying names for many of Chicago's radio stations ... James Taylor FM (87.7), Steve Miller FM (94.7), John Mellencamp FM (103.5), Taylor Swift FM (100.3), Led Zeppelin FM (97.9), AC/DC FM (97.1), etc.  At least now you've got "truth in advertising" because that's REALLY what you're going to hear nearly every time you tune in!  (kk) 

 

 

50 Year Flashback - September 7, 1965

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KIMN in Denver, Colorado, was showing a big comeback for The Kingsmen's record, too ... once again we find "Louie Louie" at the top of this week's chart.

Local band The Moon Rakers can also be found in The Top Ten with their latest "You'll Come Back" ... and Sonny and Cher are represented in some fashion three times on this week's survey ... "I Got You Babe" is at #8, Sonny's solo hit "Laugh At Me" is right behind it at #9 and "Baby Don't Go" is one of the week's biggest movers, climbing from #42 to #16.  (Ironically the Kathy Kirby version of "The Way Of Love" sits at #27 this week.  Cher would re-record this tune in 1973 and have a Top Ten hit with her remake!)

Check out The Rolling Stones' two-sided hit at #23 ... both are LP cuts unavailable for purchase in record stores.

And you can tell Barry McGuire's got a hit record on his hands ... "Eve Of Destruction" holds at #2 with a parody / answer record "Dawn Of Creation" by The Spokesmen is this week's 5-Star Pick Hit Of The Week.  (The Spokesmen included our FH Buddy John Madara, now trying to cash in on the folk / protest era with his latest record!)

















Tuesday This And That

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Kent ...  
Ron Smith's Labor Day 500 ... 
http://www.oldiesmusic.com/500-15.pdf  
My first pick checked in at # 11.  
Frank B.  
Yep, we ran a sneak peek of the list on Friday  ... I sent it to a few radio folks on the list suggesting that just maybe perhaps THESE were the songs most folks wanted to hear on the radio ... and the only response I got said "We play most of these".  
Ron mentioned to me that the number of Elvis titles were down (probably because radio only recognizes three or four of his 200 hits these days ... even Billboard Magazine has eliminated 30+ legitimate hits with their new "Hot 100" mentality.)  Meanwhile, Ron also said that the number of Beach Boys tracks was UP this year (possibly because of the success of the new Brian Wilson piopic, Brian's new solo album, and extensive touring by both Brian and his band and the Mike Love / Bruce Johnston version of The Beach Boys).  Meanwhile, "Hey Jude" seems to have permanently placed itself in the #1 position ... this is its TENTH consecutive year of coming in at #1!  
I really haven't had time to fully scrutinize the list yet, but I'm willing to bet that there are AT LEAST 50 GREAT choices on here that would make EXCELLENT adds to ANY radio play list ... which would be immediately noticed (and appreciated) by their listeners.  Unfortunately I'm not sure that ANYBODY in radio programming is mentally capable of seeing outside the box anymore.  Radio has been programmed with blinders on for SO long now, that  it seems as though any and all sense of creativity has been thrown by the wayside.  They've REALLY dumbed it down.  And think about it for a second ... how hard is it to program these days anyway?  As a general rule, every station in town just says "Well, this is easy ... I'll just play the exact same songs that THEY'RE playing ... it must be working right?  Otherwise everybody wouldn't be doing it!!!" 
That's why stations like Me-TV-FM and Rewound Radio provide such HUGE breath of fresh air ... both stations have been stepping WAY outside the box by daring to remember ... and then PLAY ... the music we all grew up with, without any reservations or apologies.  And listeners are noticing and responding.  Me-TV-FM reminds its listeners "It's All Memorable Music" ... which Rewound Radio takes the approach of "It Doesn't Matter How Old It Is ... It's How GOOD It Is".  We commend BOTH stations for doing their part in making radio interesting and exciting again.  With a little more "appointment radio" programming, they can lock their audiences up even further by providing "can't miss" features ... in which we regard I really believe we can help.  (For the record, I've been kicking around a variety of different ideas with each of them ... and am still hopeful that we can finalize something soon that would allow Forgotten Hits to continue OUR crusade to keep this music alive by "partnering" with radio stations who can "bring it to the people" on a regular basis ... so stay tuned for more details on all of that!)  
We've been saying it for fifteen years now ... put it out there and your audience will embrace it ... and good word of mouth will brings others to your station as well.  Listeners are tired of being insulted by programmers who honestly believe that programming any more than 200-300 is beyond the listeners' comprehension level.  It's a demeaning and insulting attitude to take with the very people you are most dependant on in order to survive.  It may have taken fifteen years to get here ... but the radio revolution is FINALLY on!!!  (kk)  

Speaking of holiday weekend radio, WLS-FM borrowed a page from The Drive's successful playbook and featured an A to Z weekend ... only WLS played 'em down A to Z by ARTIST rather than song title. This gave them several opportunities to work their way through (in their words) their "extensive playlist" ... which typically during the week seems to include about 200 - 300 songs.  
However, this weekend they dug deep and featured songs and artists you NEVER hear on the station.  (One set included John Denver, long "banned" from our local airwaves until Me-TV-FM resurrected his music with Chicago listeners, preceded by "Israelites" by Desmond Dekker and the Aces, a song the station probably hasn't played since 1969!)  
Maybe somebody over at WLS is listening (???)  Several weeks ago after the long-overdue ouster of Jan Jeffries, we suggested that the station embrace its incredible legacy and play the hits THEY helped to create back in the '60's and '70's.  (Again, a little "friendly competition" from Me-TV-FM couldn't hurt either, right?)  Right now they're simply playing the exact same music as at least four or five other stations in town ... step outside the box and reclaim your rightful spot on the dial!  Kudos to a valiant effort this weekend ... now let's keep it going! (kk)   

EXAMPLES:  This weekend we heard SO many songs and artists that aren't part of their normal, day-to-day "Classic Hits" play list ... so it's no coincidence that they're expanding their horizon a little bit.  During random tune-in's I heard songs I'm sure the station hasn't played in DECADES by the likes of Rocky Burnett, Shalamar, Silver Convention, the aforementioned John Denver and Desmond Dekker and the Aces, Chris Rea, Suzi Quatro, Pacific Gas and Electric, Mouth and MacNeal, Malo and Chuck Mangione ... this is NOT your normal WLS-FM diet by ANY stretch of the imagination ... which is VERY encouraging news for those of us who grew up with the station ... and remember what it USED to be ... back in the days when it was an industry LEADER rather than simply a follower playing the exact same song mix as every other radio station in town.  (kk) 



When they hit the "U's" on Sunday Night they even played USA For Africa's "We Are The World".  Despite what a HUGE hit that record was , you virtually NEVER hear it on the radio ... yet, if you're like me, you can picture each and every vocalist take their turn from the original video.  How interesting to have TWO radio stations in town play the unexpected this long weekend!  (kk)



Kent ...  
Elvis Is Back!  
According to Billboard Magaine, Elvis earns his 53rd Ttop 40 album on the Billboard Top 200 as the new compilation "Elvis Forever" debuts at #11.  
The set is sold exclusively through the U.S. Postal Service, and is Presley's highest charting album since 2003, when "Elvis: 2nd to None" peaked at #3.  
The new album was released in conjunction with the promotion of Presley's new commemorative stamp.  
Among all acts with the most Top 40 charting albums, Presley remains in second place behind Frank Sinatra, with 57.  
Frank B.  
Well, I bought it ... along with a few blocks of the collectible stamps (packaged neatly to look like an old 45 record sleeve).  I'll probably use some of them but then put a couple of sheets away as collectors' items.  (I did the same thing with the first edition of the Elvis stamp many years ago ... but hid them so well I'll be darned if I can find them today!!!  lol)  
It's amazing how many times RCA/BMG has gotten me to buy the exact same Elvis music I already own ... but a collectible package like this was just too good to pass up.  (There was a time when I would have bought a dozen copies and then put them away for resale years later, still sealed and never opened ... but I don't know if I'll live long enough to see these ever hit their collectors' market value!)  Still, the CD sounds great ... but they missed a GREAT opportunity, as you pointed out a few weeks ago, Frank. Yes, "Return To Sender" is on there ... but what about "US Male"???  I believe they could have used you on their creative team for this one!  (kk)  


Hi Kent,   
I got to see the Happy Together Tour this past Monday, August 31.  
I thought I'd give my thoughts.  
First the good:  I thought that for the price $21 a ticket (plus the cost of state fair admission tickets) here in MN it was a steal. The audience loved the show and sang along to everything, which shows just how big a roll music played in our lives in the 60's and 70's. Kudos for the production folks that keep this show moving along so that there were no long gaps between acts.  
Now on to the acts themselves ...  
I think by now most people know the songs done by the individual acts in the show so I won't bother with that. The Grass Roots did a great job carrying on the Roots' legacy despite the fact that none of them are originals. The Cowsills were my favorite ... lots of fun on stage, they did all their songs well and didn't sound like they were reciting from a script as some of the other performers did. They came out and visited with the audience after the whole show was over and they couldn't have been nicer people. I got to tell Susan that I had a huge crush on her when I was 10. Come to think of it, I still do.  
The Buckinghams were good, but even if you're OK as performers and have songs as good as theirs, you should be fine.  
The Association weren't as bad as I expected, given some of the reviews, but they were up and down. It seemed as though a couple of the guys weren't in the best of health, but when they hit the harmonies quite often it all came together. Other times not so much. They did seem like they were really enjoying themselves.  
On to Mark Lindsay. Definitely a seasoned performer. He was great with the audience, but vocally he seemed to be phoning it in. He seemed to still have a good range, but just never seemed to go for anything that would even stretch his abilities even a little.  
I actually went to the show to see him and the Cowsills and I was disappointed in the Lindsay set since back in the day he was such a kick butt singer. I know he's older and didn't expect him to sound like he did in 1966, but just seemed like he was ready to be done with the tour when he was singing.  
Lastly, The Turtles (Flo and Eddie). I've never seen them before, but I expected them to be a bit on the wackie side, and they were. I don't think they hold their tunes in as high esteem as we do. Too bad. They really had some great pop tunes. They really rush through the songs. It would be nice to have them do them with a bit more attention to detail. My final thoughts ... (yes there's more!)  
The band as a whole did a great job of harmonies and backing people up. It would be nice if they really went back to the original recordings and made more of an attempt to capture those original sounds.  (That's more of an opinion than a criticism.)  It also would be nice if they had real horns on those songs that had them instead of the not so great horn patch on a keyboard.  
They could just have charts and hire horn players in each town to keep the cost down. Particularly on the Buckinghams tunes it would be helpful. The Grass Roots tunes would have benefited by live horns as well.  
Lastly the sound man wasn't very on top of things when I saw them. Seems to me that by the end of the tour he should have it down. Many times the backing vocals weren't loud enough, and other times they were louder than the lead vocal. That being said, he could have had an off night. Again, for $21 it was still a steal. I hope that Flo and Eddie take it seriously and don't just think of it as a money machine, if in fact it is.  
Bill  
Well, the tour is officially over ... overall good reviews from everybody that we heard of, with many of the same complaints ... no Grass Roots original members, faulty harmonies from The Association, too short a song set by ALL of the artists (but The Turtles in particular as headliners), The Cowsills (and in many cases, Mark Lindsay) regularly stole the show, and The Turtles' set was far too short and played strictly for laughs rather than making any attempt to give us the feel-good essence of the music.   
I'm sure next year's line-up will be announced shortly (and I don't really expect any major shake-ups despite numerous suggestions of artists from our readers).  Hey, it's still an AWFUL lot of hits for your money ... every one of these records provided the soundtrack to our lives ... so for that we can and should be grateful.  Maybe next year ALL of the artists should consider how much this music truly means to their fans ... and then when those fans shell out that money to come hear all of their favorites again, provide a show with a bit more enthusiasm and appreciation.  Thanks to the fans, ALL of these guys have been able to enjoy 50-year careers, doing what they love doing best.  And, if you're only going to get 15-20 per set, make it a KILLER set, challenging the next artist to "beat this!" every time you go on stage.  I guarantee you it'll raise the energy level on BOTH sides of the stage.  
That's my two cents for Happy Together, 2015.  Carl Giammarese emailed me last week that while the tour was LOADS of fun and he's sad that it's over, he really can't wait to come home and enjoy a little rest and relaxation, too, before heading out on the road again with the full line-up of The Buckinghams.  GREAT time for this new "Complete Singles" CD to come out from Varese Vintage ... fans should be pumped to add all these chart hits to their collection!  (kk)     

WOWZA!  I have perused, know what I want to go back and read first, and then return to re-read and finish on today's Friday Flash!  If you do NOT post anything new before Tuesday, I can do this ... 
Shelley    

This week's Friday Flash was loaded with so much good stuff that there was something for everyone!   
Thanks for all you to keep this thing alive and thriving!
David Lewis   



You can preorder this disk here:    
http://www.amazon.com/Carl-Wilson-2015-Iconoclassic-Remaster-Wilson/dp/B014JC1A7Q/ref=sr_1_1?s=music&ie=UTF8&qid=1441119405&sr=1-1&keywords=carl+wilson   

Unrequested Anecdotes, Chapter 23 
"Happy" was cut in in France in '71 during the "Exile On Main Street" sessions.  The basic track is Keith on guitar, bass and vocals, producer Jimmy Miller on drums and Bobby Keys on baritone sax.  It was supposed to be a demo, but the feel was so good they simply sweetened the track with Mick Taylor on slide guitar and Mick Jagger on harmony vocals.  It's the only Rolling Stones Top 40 hit with Keith on lead vocals.   
Live performance is from the film, "Ladies & Gentlemen-- the Rolling Stones."  This is just so damn good:  
https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=SRthe%20rolling%20stones%20happy&t=156&v=VSyNUAzPofI  
Here's Keith in a great extended interview plugging his book a few years back -- dispells all the drunken, loutish images from his heroin / Jack days.  Even then, when I interviewed him in '78 ("Some Girls"), he was funny and sharp.  Going into that interview was one of the few times that I was really intimidated ahead of time -- didn't know what to expect.  But he couldn't have been nicer to me.    
I told him about the Knack who were really hot in L.A. at the time, playing the Starwood a few nights later.  I was at the show.  Someone came up behind me and put his hand on my shoulder and it was Keith.  "Thanks for the tip, mate.  They're still mucking out their stall a bit, but they do a good set."  He went backstage and talked to the band which, frontman Doug Fieger told me later, just floored them.  One can only imagine what a Keith visit and endorsement must have meant to them. 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oT-ArKNdtKY  
A world without Keith someday is hard to imagine. 
Scott Paton   

Take a Four and a Half Minute Break and  Check This Out! The Eight Track Museum  
CB (which also stands for "Cartridge Boy!")  
PS: You know, I never had an eight track tape cartridge nor player?!  I skipped right over that media right to the Cassette Tape! 
Chuck Buell 
Likewise ... 
I hated the way 8-tracks switched channels right in the middle of a song ... 
Couldn't believe ANYBODY found that acceptable!!! 
Yet all my friends had them and didn't seem to be bothered by this at all.  
Cassettes were the ONLY way to go for me for a long, long time ... especially since I could now make my own to listen to in the car.  
kk     

Oldies rule in Milwaukee   
Hi Kent, 
It seems that oldies radio is flexing it’ muscles in Milwaukee. Oldies 95.7 (renamed WRIT a few years ago in honor of the great AM station of the 60’s) was once again number 1 in Milwaukee radio for the second quarter in a row. AND, Scott Shannon’s True Oldies Channel is now on AM 1290 and FM 100.3 in the Milwaukee area. This is a great addition to Milwaukee radio. 
Bob Verbos  
New Berlin, WI 
PS - To the recently raised question “Whatever happened to Sheena Easton?”, she still tours on a limited basis. Sheena is still in good voice and is still a looker. I last saw her a couple years ago at the local casino theater and she put on a great show, featuring many of her hits. Sheena is also very skilled at playful, humorous banter with the audience, and likes to make reference to her hot, sexy image of the 1980’s. Her website lists her upcoming gigs. 
One of which just happens to be at The Arcada Theatre on November 6th.  (She played at the Gay Pride Festival here a few years ago and sounded great ... but with half a million people there, you could barely get near the stage to catch a glimpse.  However, I always found her music somewhat appealing, especially when compared to much of the other '80's techno stuff.)  kk    

On October 23, 2015, Eagle Rock Entertainment Will Release LYNYRD SKYNYRD (Pronouced 'Lĕh-'nérd 'Skin-'nérd) & Second Helping – Live From Jacksonville At The Florida Theatre  
~ On DVD, Blu-ray, and Digital Formats ~ Available as DVD + 2 CD exclusively at Walmart ~



New York, NY (September 2, 2015)— On October 23 2015, Eagle Rock Entertainment will issue the simultaneous release of Lynyrd Skynyrd’s Pronounced 'Lĕh-'nérd 'Skin'nérd & Second Helping – Live From Jacksonville At The Florida Theatre on DVD, Blu-ray, and Digital Formats. This will also be released as DVD+2CD set exclusively at Walmart. [MSRP $14.98 DVD, $19.88 DVD+2CD, $19.98 Blu-ray]. 
Recorded this year, this release captures the legendary Lynyrd Skynyrd performing their first two studio albums, Pronounced'Lĕh-'nérd 'Skin-'nérd and Second Helping, live in their entirety for the first time, at two specially staged concerts at the Florida Theatre in their hometown of Jacksonville, Florida.  
Pronounced 'Lĕh-'nérd 'Skin-'nérd was released in 1973 and includes “I Ain’t The One,” “Gimme Three Steps,” “Tuesday’s Gone,” and the seminal “Free Bird.” Second Helping was released the following year and includes “Workin’ For MCA,” “Swamp Music,” “Call Me The Breeze,” and the classic southern rock anthem “Sweet Home Alabama.” 
The shows captured on Pronounced 'Lĕh-'nérd 'Skin-'nérd & Second Helping – Live From Jacksonville At The Florida Theatre represent a special occasion for both Lynyrd Skynyrd and their fans, as the band performed tracks they’d never or rarely played live before along with classic songs that are an essential part of any Lynyrd Skynyrd live show. 
With the Bonus Features offering a special created behind-the-scenes with Lynyrd Skynyrd section, this release offers nearly two hours of peerless musical entertainment.  

For a sneak peak, check out “Gimme Three Steps”:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OcDT-0XkUCc&feature=youtu.be   

Band line-up:   Lynyrd Skynyrd  
Gary Rossington - Guitar 
Johnny Van Zant - Lead Vocals 
Rickey Medlocke - Guitar 
Michael Cartellone - Drums 
Mark Matejka - Guitar 
Peter Keys - Keyboards 
Johnny Colt - Bass Guitar  

HONKETTES  
Dale Krantz Rossington - Background Vocals 
Carol Chase - Background Vocals  

ADDITIONAL MUSICIANS  
Jim Horn - Alto Sax 
Paul Jackson - Trumpet 
Myles Moore - Baritone Sax 
Nick Campbell - Percussion 
Steve ‘Boxcar’ Traum – Harmonica   

TRACK LISTING  
1) I Ain’t The One  
2) Tuesday’s Gone 

3) Gimme Three Steps  
4) Simple Man 
5) Things Goin’ On 
6) Mississippi Kid  
7) Poison Whiskey  
8) Free Bird   
9) Sweet Home Alabama*  
10) I Need You  
11) Don’t Ask Me No Questions   
12) Workin’ For MCA   
13) The Ballad Of Curtis Loew   
14) Swamp Music   
15) Needle And The Spoon   
16) Call Me The Breeze 
* Track One of CD2 format  

Catch LYNYRD SKYNYRD on tour this fall:  
September 11 and 12– Lincoln City, OR – Chinook Winds Casino 
September 15 – Saratoga, CA – The Mountain Winery September 17 – Jackson, CA – Jackson Rancheria Casino & Hotel 
September 18 – Pomona, CA – La County Fairgrounds September 19 – Tucson, AZ – Anselmo Valencia Amphitheater September 20 – Scottsdale, AZ – Talking Stick Resort & Casino 
September 25 – Lewisville, TX – 2015 Western Days September 26 – Houston, TX – Sam Houston Race Park October 1 – Seviersville, TN – Smokes Stadium 
October 2 – Nashville, TN – Ascend Amphitheater 
October 3 – Muncie, IN – Emens Auditorium 
October 4 – Louisville, KY – Louder Than Life Music Festival November 7 – Montgomery, AL – Alabama National Fair December 5 – Mescalero, NM – Inn Of The Mountain Gods Casino






ORIGINAL FILLMORE POSTER ARTIST COMMISSIONED BY LIVE NATION TO CREATE AN EXCLUSIVE SOUVENIR POSTER COMMEMORATING SOLD-OUT OPENING NIGHT OF THE NEW PHILADELPHIA FILLMORE STARRING HALL & OATES 

http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=22732581&msgid=2300679&act=YIYQ&c=125369&destination=http://randexpr.com/clients.php?id=68

Original Fillmore Auditorium poster artist Bonnie MacLean, shown here in her suburban Philadelphia home studio with a first-run poster she created in the ‘60s for a concert with Vanilla Fudge and Blue Cheer, has been commissioned by Live Nation to create an exclusive souvenir poster featuring Hall & Oates to commemorate their Opening Night performance Oct. 1.

Photo credit: Randex Communication

Keepsake 1960s Inspired Poster Art Created by Philadelphia’s Bonnie MacLean, Former Wife of Legendary Concert Impresario Bill Graham,
to be Presented toAll Concertgoers in Attendance  
Oct. 1   


PHILADELPHIA (Sept. 2, 2015) — The spectacular Philadelphia Fillmore, hailed as the “best live rock music venue in the United States,” has formed a uniquely special bond to the iconic legacy of the original Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco after discovering an extraordinary link to the past in its own back yard. And the results will be unveiled on opening night as a treasured keepsake for everyone in attendance. To commemorate the sold-out Grand Opening concert Oct. 1 starring Hall & Oates, Live Nation has commissioned 1960s Fillmore poster artist Bonnie MacLean, a Philadelphia native and the onetime wife of legendary concert impresario and Fillmore Auditorium founder Bill Graham, to design a distinctive souvenir poster which will be handed out free to ticket-holders that evening.   “We are thrilled and privileged that Bonnie has come on board to exclusively lend her singular authenticity to the Fillmore Philadelphia,” said Michael Grozier, Sr. Vice President, House of Blues Entertainment. “We’ve gone to tremendous lengths to write a new chapter to Philadelphia’s proud musical heritage by honoring the legendary traditions of Fillmore music halls around the country, and we can’t wait to see what she creates not only for us, but also for the 2,500 patrons who will pack the house on Opening Night.”  
MacLean was among the driving forces behind the rise of the San Francisco rock music scene of the late '60s, with the success of the Fillmore Auditorium due in no small part to her groundbreaking posters promoting the venue's concert attractions. She moved back to the East Coast in 1972 and settled in rural Bucks County, PA, where she has been living ever since, painting nudes, landscapes and still lives in her converted barn studio. She remains best-known for her series of historical hand-drawn rock posters, among the most sought-after collectible poster art in rock. Some of MacLean’s posters sell today for as much as $10,000. 
“I’m quite pleased to be recognized by Live Nation as the person I was 50 years ago,” said MacLean. “The Fillmore Philadelphia will spread the joy of what used to be the most wonderful music venue around. Philadelphia, being a musical city, will enjoy it and appreciate it.” 
The Fillmore Auditorium, which first opened in San Francisco in 1965, is one of this country’s landmark performing stages. That Fillmore was the focal point of the psychedelic music scene during the 1960s and ‘70s, helping to launch the careers of iconic rock acts such as the Grateful Dead, Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, Santana, The Doors, The Allman Brothers Band, and many, many others which helped it grow into the legend it is today. 
MacLean, already married to Graham at the time, helped her then-husband launch the Fillmore Auditorium by joining the staff to collect tickets, pass out handbills, and count receipts. Her initial contribution as an artist was simply drawling lists of band lineups on the coming attractions board at the top of the stairs, before she eventually stepped in to create more than 30 posters for shows featuring the likes of the Jefferson Airplane, Pink Floyd, Cream, the Yardbirds, and numerous others.  
The opening of The Philly Fillmore marks the seventh Fillmore now open in the U.S., and the latest addition to a legendary group of music venues that traces its lineage to rock history’s golden era. The newestFillmore is a major component in the continued revitalization of iconic Fishtown and is rising at one of the city’s historic addresses, the legendary Ajax Metal Factory. The building, at the intersection of Frankford Avenue and Richmond Street, is being transformed from a pounding WWI munitions machine constructed over 100 years ago into a beautiful, pounding music machine of a different sort, 2015 style, with a distinct Philly flair.  
More on the Philadelphia Fillmore at
www.thefillmorephilly.com  

Kent,  
Monday's posting of the Rolling Stones' tune reminded me that I haven't heard Don Covay's version from a year earlier in years ... thanks for reminding me to play his version this morning.  
Also in this weekend's FH, mention was made of Roy Orbison's MGM recordings in a boxed set. I noticed his RIDE AWAY came in at #22 on KIMN's survey. 
Hope you had a great Labor Day weekend. 
Larry Neal  
"Ride Away" probably hasn't been played on the radio in 50 years ... it simply wasn't that big or well-known a hit (#25 in Billboard) ... yet now you hear it nearly every single day as part of a Geico commercial.  Again, who would have EVER thought to resurrect THIS one for a current-day ad campaign???  (kk)






If you're a big "Ray Donovan" fan like we are, you are going to TOTALLY enjoy this new clip that Frannie found ...

Jeff Lynne - Live In Hyde Park DVD Concert Review

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Two word review:   

Fucking Incredible!!!

Sorry, but no matter how many times I've tried to rephrase it, I just HAVE to go with that ...

Because I must have said it out loud at least 24 times during the viewing of this brand new release (available this Friday, September 11th, on DVD and BluRay disc through Eagle Rock Entertainment.)

It had been about 28 years since Jeff Lynne last performed before a live audience ... and over 50,000 fans showed up in London's Hyde Park last year on September 14th to mark his triumphant return to the stage.

Despite the long hiatus, I am pleased to report that Lynne is in absolutely top form for this show.  (A couple of years ago, he went into the studio to re-record a number of ELO's hits that he thought he could do better today than when he first waxed them back in the '70's and early '80's ... usually a scary move in an artist's career ... but Jeff proves in this concert setting that he can still do it all ... his music sounds as good as you've ever heard it ... all the more impressive and amazing considering his long lay-off from the performing stage.)

We've seen a lot of concerts in our day, both live and on disc ... and this one absolutely HAS to rank amongst the greatest of all time.  (Included in this batch would have to be the absolute perfect reproduction of their studio sound presented live on stage by The Eagles ... three INCREDIBLE performances put on by The Alan Parsons Live Project the past two years at The Arcada Theatre right here in St. Charles ... Elvis live at The Chicago Stadium in 1972, where you could feel the pure electricity shoot through the audience the moment he took the stage ... the first Wings Over America show, also held at The Chicago Stadium, in 1976 ... the love and respect The Wondermints have shown the music of Brian Wilson ... and one-of-a-kind filmed events like Woodstock, The Concert For Bangla Desh. The Bee Gees "One Night Only" at the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas, The Beach Boys' 50th Anniversary Concert and any one of the Simon and Garfunkel's reunion concerts ... goosebump inducing moments throughout as some of the greatest artists in rock and roll history have proven why they have earned the right to be ranked among the highest echelon of the elite.)

Eagle Rock has done an EXCEPTIONAL job of capturing this one time event held last September in London's Hyde Park as part of their "Festival In A Day" ... beautifully filmed, showing off the illuminated stage with all its rotating psychedelic back-drops in all its colorful glory, awesome close-ups of Lynne and the band as they work their way through a collection of fifteen ELO (and one Traveling Wilburys) classics ... and crystal clear sound throughout of pure start-to-finish pop perfection.  (OK, there are a couple of sour notes during the break on "Turn To Stone" ... but we'll forgive those in a heartbeat due to the absolute perfection in which everything else was rendered on that incredible evening, September 14th, 2014.) Fucking incredible!   

Lynne's long-time ELO partner in crime, keyboardist Richard Tandy (42 years and counting) was on hand, clearly having the time of his life up there on stage, performing these songs again, along with The BBC Concert Orchestra, who were nothing short of amazing to watch.  (You just know these folks had the music charts plopped in front of them and, as highly skilled classical musicians, were able to play the notes on the page exactly as written ... but they, too, had to realize that they were taking part in a history-making moment when they heard the building sounds around them, complimenting each and every nuance as they effortlessly switched from bowing to plucking to sweeping in perfect unison, accentuating all of the fine little details that make the music of Jeff Lynne and The Electric Light Orchestra so powerful, overwhelming and unique.)  A more perfect mix of rock and classical music may have never taken place. 

This entire  ensemble was augmented by solo violinist Chereene Allen, who featured some AMAZING solo passages (and for whom Frannie now admits to possessing a powerful "girl crush" ... she described the concert as "goosebumps on top of goosebumps") ... and it was truly a moving and exciting, emotional experience from start to finish.  (We've already watched it three times!!!)

The hit list?  Nearly all of the biggies are here ... "All Over The World" (from Xanadu), "Evil Woman", "Ma-Ma-Ma Belle", "Showdown", "Livin' Thing", "Strange Magic", "10538 Overture" (ELO's first UK Hit), "Can't Get It Out Of My Head", "Sweet Talkin' Woman" (perfection), "Turn To Stone", "Steppin' Out", "Handle With Care" (The Traveling Wilburys hit, of which Lynne was a member), "Don't Bring Me Down", "Rock And Roll Is King", "Telephone Line" and "Mr. Blue Sky", the ultimate show-stopping closer.  If forced to list some surprising omissions, they'd have to be "Do Ya" (a hit twice, first for The Move and then for ELO) and "Roll Over Beethoven" (the song that launched the band here in America and defined their unique blend of rock and classical music ... how on EARTH have these guys been overlooked by The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame?!?!?) ... and, for selfish reasons, a couple of personal favorites, "Calling America" and "Four Little Diamonds".

And, as if capturing this incredible concert and making it available to the public wasn't enough, the disc also includes an interview with Jeff Lynne about his music (and what it was like taking to the stage again after all this time) as well as the top-notch BBC Documentary "Mr. Blue Sky: The Story Of Jeff Lynne and ELO", which I have been searching for ever since I first saw it broadcast on Palladium over a year ago ... ALL packaged together on one remarkable disc ... fucking incredible!

Again, the BlueRay / DVD disc officially hits the streets THIS FRIDAY, September 11th ... you'd do well to preorder it NOW ... and start preparing yourselves immediately to be blown away by this remarkable concert.

There was talk of Jeff taking his show on the road, including a tour of America ... but, as of yet, I can't find any show dates listed.  (This would have to be a VERY expensive concert to take on the road ... so much so that it may never actually happen ... so do yourself a favor and grab this DVD / BluRay Disc NOW so you can enjoy the concert experience at London's Hyde Park from last year.)

I promise you, you won't be disappointed.


Fucking Incredible! 

kk
Kent Kotal
Forgotten Hits

The Friday Flash

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re:  Here We Come ... Again:
Rhino is releasing the complete Monkees television series again ... on BluRay this time around ... all 58 episodes plus their theatrical release "Head" (with never-before-seen outtakes), their television special "33 1/3 Revolutions Per Monkee", bonus commentaries from all four original members of the group and original Kellogg's commercials aired during the show's original broadcast. 
It's all being done in celebration of the 50th Anniversary of the original casting call issued on September 8th, 1965 ... and Rhino promises all kinds of new, bonus surprises throughout their 50th anniversary year.
The BluRay edition will be released in January with a limited pressing of 10,000 copies.  (kk)
 
And, speaking of 50 Year Anniversaries ...
 
#50:   
Hey KK!
This is the Vibeman!
The 50th Anniversary of Davie Allan The Arrows is at least for us a time to know that the things we enjoyed of yesterday are still here among us today. There still is the celebration of keeping the dream alive and finding some joy in a form of music not everyone has embraced. Will they? We may never know. Will we? Better get it while the gettins' good!
 

 
re:  Eye Of The Tiger:   
Lots of fuss these past few days about Kim Davis playing Survivor's "Eye Of The Tiger" at her "release rally". Songwriters Jim Peterik and Frankie Sullivan were quick to point out that they did NOT authorize use of their song for this purpose ... nor does her stance (on refusing to issue gay marriage licenses) in any way reflect their views ... 
I have not authorized the use of Eye of the Tiger for use by Kim Davis and my publisher will issue a C&D. This does not reflect my views. 
-- Jim Peterik
Crain Chicago Business gave the event headline coverage on Wednesday ... and it was picked up by virtually every other kind of media, too, once the song's cowriters issued statements.  (Man, you just can't BUY publicity like this ... and this story was delivered free on a silver platter!)
"Eye of the Tiger" is meant to be motivational, but Survivor doesn't want its song to motivate anti-gay sentiments.    
Kim Davis, the Kentucky county clerk who has been the center of media attention after refusing to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples in Rowan County, played the song yesterday at a rally alongside Mike Huckabee, and Survivor is not happy about it. Davis was jailed for her failure to issue the licenses and appeared at the rally in Grayson, Ky., following her release. 
"I was very surprised and dismayed at the misuse of the song I co-wrote with Frankie Sullivan for 'Rocky lll,'" he said. "The song has motivated thousands through the years to reach beyond their limits. Its use for the release of Kim Davis does not support my views or my politics. I have contacted my publishers to make sure this usage is stopped immediately." 
Jim Peterik, founder of the Chicago band and co-writer of the song made famous by "Rocky III," said in a statement to Billboard magazine that the band did not grant Davis the right to use the song at the rally.
Cowriter Frankie Sullivan made a similar statement on his Facebook Page ... 
NO! We did not grant Kim Davis any rights to use "My Tune -The Eye Of The Tiger." I would not grant her the rights to use Charmin! 
C'mom Mike, you are not The Donald but you can do better than that - 
See Ya really SoooooooonnnnnnN!!!!!! ...
Frankie Sullivan
 
re:  Eight Tracks:
>>>You know, I never had an eight track tape cartridge nor player?!  I skipped right over that media right to the Cassette Tape!  (Chuck Buell)
>>>Likewise ... I hated the way 8-tracks switched channels right in the middle of a song ... couldn't believe ANYBODY found that acceptable!!!  Yet all my friends had them and didn't seem to be bothered by this at all.  Cassettes were the ONLY way to go for me for a long, long time ... especially since I could now make my own to listen to in the car.  (kk)
Because Kent, they were the first way we could bring our favorites into the car with us ... pure and simple.  A battery run turn-table on a bumpy road?  Not going to work.  And we didn't accept the negatives of these 8 tracks for long, as cassettes came right behind.  The stereo system I bought in the mid 70's (and is still working) had all 4 possibilities:  turn-table, radio (AM/FM), 8-track and cassette.
Shelley
 
re:  This And That: 
Kent ...
9/11/1945 =  Happy Birthday Dennis Tufano.
Don't know what I'd do without Ron Smith's book "Eight Days A Week."
Frank B.
P.S. - 9/13/1944 = Happy Birthday Peter Cetera.
 
Speaking of Dennis Tufano, "The Buckinghams: The Complete Hit Singles" is available today.  We told you last week that we'd be running the complete, unedited, unabridged version of the disc's liner notes on October 1st ... and also that we had a copy to give away to a lucky Forgotten Hits Reader ... so if you'd like YOUR shot at a free copy, please drop us a line and let us know.  Simply put "Buckinghams CD" in your subject line and we'll enter your name in the drawing.
 
Here's one FH Reader who won't be entering for his chance to win a copy ...  
 
Music4Me says:
This is good or bad news, depending on your point of view: The new Buckinghams Complete Hit Singles (release date 9/11/15) on Varese Sarabande will be all stereo despite the actual singles in many cases being in mono. Carl Giammarese, the group's guitarist / lead singer, has voiced his disappointment with the stereo single mixes, saying they sounded watered down and lacked the punch of the original 45's. He has stated that he has offered to be involved in the mixing / mastering to get the sound right but has never been given the opportunity. Word is also that Varese requested mono versions of a number of songs from CBS / Sony but were only given stereo versions to work with. Another chance to get it right goes by the wayside.
Personally, from what I heard of the stereo remixes, the mono versions should be better, unless you narrow the stereo versions, but I'm not sure digital alteration can't save the stereo versions. Not that I'd buy them ... Varese is okay, but you'll find a vinyl ripping CD tune now and then.  I don't think Carl was there when the music was recorded. As far as I can tell, others (studio musicians) played the music. I'm sure Sony will handle all audio work; this is typical.
You can tell some Columbia hits were remixed, like The Cyrkle ... their Turn Down Day includes a drum piece that was dismissed (when mixing) from the hit. Whoops! :)
Embarrassing moments on CD? A Rhino - Dick Bartley release (DJ I admired) had a (debut) stereo version of "You're The One" by We Five, but missing some overdubbing, but what someone set free in public domain was more complete stereo.
Best,
John
I'm guessing you mean either "You're The One" by The Vogues or "You Were On My Mind" by We Five in your above statement ... not sure which, but both of those at least make sense ... "You're The One" by We Five does not.
As for the new Buckinghams CD, I've listened to it and it sounds pretty good to me.  It's a short set (just 15 tracks), but all the hits (and non-hit single releases) are here.
If I have an objection to anything it's the fact that they used the "radio edit" for "Susan", with the "offensive" (to the band, anyway) psychedelic interlude deleted.  For me, this doesn't work within the context of "The Complete Hit Singles" banner because this version was never released as a single ... you couldn't buy it that way nor do I recall ever hear it being played that way (in its edited form) at the time.  (In fact, I didn't hear the "radio edit" until probably twenty years later ... but apparently some radio stations WERE playing it at the time, despite the fact that it wasn't available commercially.)  I would have preferred that they released the REAL single (as advertised) and, if they truly felt it necessary to showcase the edited version, included that as a bonus track instead.  (Just my opinion ... at least this way the disc lives up to its title.)
I asked Cary Mansfield of Varese Vintage and Clark Besch, who helped to assemble the new collection (as well as write the liner notes) about this decision but never heard back from either of them on this topic.  (kk)
 
And, speaking of some of our Chicagoland Local Heroes ...
 
This Sunday, September 13th, our FH Buddy Dean Milano will be hosting a fund-raising event honoring Mitch Aliotta of Aliotta, Haynes and Jeremiah, who passed away a couple of months ago. 
On Sunday,September 13th, c’mon down to WIRE for a party in honor of Mitch Aliotta, who passed away recently. 
He left behind a lot of medical expenses and his friends are getting a benefit together to help with the costs. 
I’ll be stage managing the event and I’ll also perform a special song. The event starts at 6:00, I’ll be on at 10:30 and the address in Berwyn is 6815 W. Roosevelt Road. 
We’ll see ya there!
Dean
 
 
 
More on this from Chicagoland Radio and Media ...
 
A benefit concert is taking place this weekend to help out the family of the late Chicago born musician Mitch Aliotta. The concert will feature numerous acts with some very special guest appearances. Emceeing the whole event will be WDRV-FM / 97.1 The Drive overnight DJ Greg Easterling.
Mitch Aliotta is best known as the bass player and founder of the Chicago area band Aliotta Haynes Jeremiah, famed for their iconic hit "Lake Shore Drive." Prior to his time in that group, he played with Rotary Connection, which featured Minnie Riperton on lead vocals. Aliotta passed away on July 21st at the age of 71 due to complications from diabetes and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Unfortunately, Aliotta's passing left his family with a large amount of debt. His brother and some friends have put together a benefit show to help Aliotta's immediate family out with the final expenses.
Called "The Party for Mitch Aliotta," the concert will feature at least five bands: Omega 3 (which includes Mitch's brother Ted Aliotta), Maggie Aliotta & The Mighty Fines (Mitch's daughter), Doubleplay, Rough Draft, and Kurt Michaels' Continuum (KMC) featuring Alain Quinn.
Among the special guests expected to participate are Jimy Sohns of The Shadows of Knight and Ray Graffia of The New Colony Six.
WDRV-FM's overnight voice Greg Easterling will serve as the emcee for the entire evening. Also appearing will be another Chicago radio veteran, WERV-FM / 95.9 The River's afternoon host Mitch Michaels.
"The Party for Mitch Aliotta" will take place this Sunday, September 13th at Wire, located at 6815 W. Roosevelt Road in Berwyn. (Mitch Aliotta grew up in Berwyn.) Tickets to attend this special event are only $15, which can be purchased in advance at this link
HERE. Ticket proceeds will go toward helping Mitch Aliotta's family.
For those unable to attend but who wish to help out, a GoFundMe page has been set up for the Mitch Aliotta Memorial Fund. That page can be found
HERE.
 
On October 30, Eagle Rock Entertainment and Zappa's Honker Home Video will issue the never-before-released Frank Zappa’s Roxy: The Movie on DVD & Blu-Ray with an exclusive Soundtrack included. 
A Frank Zappa show goes way beyond a mere concert – it is an experience … a flight of improvisation, musicianship, and cerebral cynicism.  An unparalleled Composer and Guitarist, Zappa redefined rock n roll paradigms by introducing  into the mix his favorite influences from classical music, jazz, blues, doo-wop, traditional and non-traditional music.  And he did so with unparalleled humor and audacity.  But it was the music itself that influened generations of musicians and, quite frankly, blew minds.  Roxy: The Movie, filmed over three nights in December, 1973, at the Roxy Theatre in Hollywood, CA, is a powerful display of this experience, and reveals what made him such a pioneering musical revolutionary. 
Right from the top of the program, the film exudes the essence of Zappa, as we only see a dark room with a single light, and we hear him commiserating with the audience, as he stalls for time because of technical snafus that would ultimately force the film into hibernation for decades (make that eras in musical terms) while advancement in technology aligned allowing the Zappa Family Trust to bring this project to a patient and deserving audience.  The curtain goes up and the magic unravels to reveal “Cosmic Debris” and we are up and away with one of the most enduring band line-ups under Frank Zappa's leadership.
“Frank broke all sound barriers in Music and pushed musical event horizons to educate and entertain his audiences so they could experience real possibilities on a contemporary music stage – all without taking himself seriously.  He always said he had “something for everyone from 8 to 13.”  Being a mom I can tell you, that is when your imagination is wide open and some of those ideas stay fixed and expandable in time and space forever,” says Gail Zappa.
"I'm beyond thrilled that Roxy The Movie is finally going to be available. It took a herculean effort to bring it to life. So much love, time, energy and attention to detail went into its resurrection. This movie rocks so hard, I think both old and new fans will agree,” says Ahmet Zappa. “Enjoy!"
Written, directed, conducted & performed by Frank Zappa, as well as originally  produced by him, all these 40 years later Gail Zappa, Ahmet Zappa, and Jeff Stein, bring you now Roxy: The Movie.  Starring Zappa, The Mothers, and the Music and the Musicianship.  The film contains some of Zappa's most challenging instrumentals, expertly executed by himself (lead guitar, vocals),  George Duke(keyboards, synthesizer, vocals), Bruce Fowler (trombone), Napoleon Murphy Brock (flute, tenor saxophone, vocals), Tom Fowler (bass guitar), Ralph Humphrey (drums), Chester Thompson (drums), and Ruth Underwood (percussion).
Released just in time for Frank Zappa's favorite holiday, Halloween.  Roxy: The Movie is a stunning homage to one of unpopular music's most fearless musicians.
Click here to view trailer: https://youtu.be/YPIwdlnoKyA
 
To my friends and fans in South Florida -- or those who may be in South Florida next month:
I've been invited to be October's featured act at THE ACOUSTIC UNDERGROUND CONCERT SERIES
As some of you may know, The A.U.C.S. is the longest-running acoustic concert series in Florida and I'm honored to have been asked.
What's more, it's being held at one of my favorite Florida venues: The Luna Star.
It's the first Saturday of the month.
Here are the details:
Your attendance is mandatory.
Also notice that I'll be doing Micheal Stock's FOLK AND ACOUSTIC radio program on the Sunday before the show (Sept. 27). You can here it online by going to WLRN.org and clicking "Listen Live."
 
From your favorite commercials piece ... #37 - 7-Up ...
If you're interested, I remember the rest of the lyrics to that 7 Up jingle.
After "it's the light shining over the dark" it goes --
"And in this time of over complication there's Un ... there's Un. If what you want is simplification come Un, come Un ... Un for all, all for Un, 7 Up the Un Cola.
Alan  
 
Kent ...
A new Johnny Cash Documentary will air on the anniversary of his death (9/12)http://tasteofcountry.com/johnny-cash-american-rebel/Frank B.
That would be tomorrow, airing on CMT.  Check your local listings.  (kk)
 
Hi Kent,
I loved your post of Roy Orbison’s “Ride Away.”
A couple of days ago, I saw another odd use of an oldie in a commercial: Amazon Prime is using Lee Marvin’s “Wand’rin’ Star.” When was the last time anyone heard that one?!
- Charlie
Perhaps never!  (lol)  You've gotta wonder about the creative minds behind the sources for some of this inspiration.  The Roy Orbison tune WAS a hit ... Top 20 in fact ... but over the past 50 years only so many songs by so many artists continue to exist ... the rest are put out to pasture, many forevermore.  Resurrecting this one was a REAL surprise ... but the Lee Marvin tune?  How many people are even going to know what that is?  Kind of like the Roger Miller / Robin Hood ditty that proved to be so popular a few months back!  (kk)
 
Kent ...
Maybe one of your reader's can answer my questions.
Every time I go to Larry's Pub I play the Jukebox.
Every time I play the Jukebox I play "In The Still Of The Night" by The Five Satins.
A couple of weeks ago I found that the song was removed from the Jukebox.
They tell me that the Jukebox company lost the rights to this song.
I think they made enough money just from my plays to want to keep the song in the Jukebox.
Another time I'm at Larry's Pub and, since I was wearing my "GoodFellas" T-Shirt, I thought it would be clever of me to play the soundtrack from the "GoodFellas" movie.
I attempt to do that. I'm able to play 11 of the 12 songs. For some unknown reason "Sincerely" by the Moonglows isn't there and I'm wondering why?
Frank B.
Wow, this one's going to have to be answered by someone far more savvy than me! (lol)  I didn't know you could lose "jukebox rights" ... or that if an entire album was offered as a choice and listed 12 songs, it would play anything less than that.  Anybody out there have any thoughts or ideas on this one?  (kk)
 
Some new thoughts on the "evolution of radio" ...
 
Here's an article forwarded by our friend Larry White, who will be returning to Buffalo in the near future.  I expect we all agree with Dick Taylor's thoughts.

Yesterday We Told You ...

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>>>9/11/1945 =  Happy Birthday Dennis Tufano  (Frank B.)

>>>"The Buckinghams: The Complete Hit Singles" is available today.  We told you last week that we'd be running the complete, unedited, unabridged version of the disc's liner notes on October 1st ... and also that we had a copy to give away to a lucky Forgotten Hits Reader ... so if you'd like YOUR shot at a free copy, please drop us a line and let us know.  Simply put "Buckinghams CD" in your subject line and we'll enter your name in the drawing.  (kk)

TODAY WE'RE TELLING YOU ...   

Kent ...
9/11/1945 =  Happy Birthday Dennis Tufano.
Here's my favorite Buckingham's Hit.
Mercy Mercy Mercy can Dennis Tufano sing this song!
Frank B.




Response to our Buckinghams free CD give-away has been good ... we'll take entries through Sunday and then pick a winner next week.  More details above.  (kk)
 
>>>On October 30, Eagle Rock Entertainment and Zappa's Honker Home Video will issue the never-before-released Frank Zappa’s Roxy: The Movie on DVD & Blu-Ray with an exclusive Soundtrack included.  
 
TODAY WE'RE TELLING YOU ...
 
You can view a brand new trailer for this film here ...   
 
>>>A new Johnny Cash Documentary will air on the anniversary of his death (9/12)  Frank B
 
TODAY WE'RE TELLING YOU ...
 
That's tonight on CMT ... check your local listings.
Meanwhile, after viewing this program, Rolling Stone Magazine came up with a list of Ten Things You Didn't Know About Johnny Cash ... 
 
If you haven't already seen it, scroll back to Wednesday's post to read our review of the EXCELLENT Jeff Lynne Live Hyde Park Concert DVDThis is one you'll want to add to your collection.  (kk)
 
TODAY WE'RE TELLING YOU ...
 
Looks like Jeff Lynne is planning a comeback in a very big way.  News of a new record deal and brand new album release (now billed as Jeff Lynne's ELO) hit his webpage this week ...
 
 
Lynne has also produced the new Bryan Adams album ... and the first video from that set was released this week as well ...
 
 

Mitch Aliotta

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Tonight is the party for Mitch Aliotta of Aliotta, Haynes and Jeremiah (and formerly of The Rotary Connection, featuring Minnie Ripperton), being held at WIRE in Berwyn, IL.  Aliotta passed away a couple of months ago ... and the "party" is being billed as an all-star jam, remembrance and fund raiser to help Mitch's family with medical bills, debt and other expenses. 

Ray Graffia, Jr., founding member and front man of The New Colony Six asked me to please point out that, despite a report from Chicagoland Radio And Media (which was also published here in Forgotten Hits), he is unable to appear at the tribute this evening (and had informed the powers that be in regards to this event of this back on August 20th of this fact.)  As such, he asked me to please print a retraction, along with his regrets and condolences to the family, as he didn't want fans who showed up at the venue to be disappointed by his not being there to participate, thinking he was simply a "no show" for the concert.

However, I should point out that WIRE will still be rockin' tonight as numerous bands and local deejays WILL be coming out to remember one of our Local Heroes ... so fans of the groups Aliotta, Haynes and Jeremiah and The Rotary Connection ARE encouraged to stop by as ticket proceeds ($15) will go to Mitch's family to help offset medical expenses ... so not only is it all for a good cause, but it's also a life celebration.  (Bandmate John Jeremiah passed away in 2011, leaving only Skip Haynes, who wrote their best-know hit "Lake Shore Drive" as the last surviving member.)   

Tickets can be purchased in advance at this link HERE (or at the door) for $15.  For those unable to attend but who wish to help out, a GoFundMe page has been set up for the Mitch Aliotta Memorial Fund. That page can be found HERE(kk)

*****

I only met Mitch Aliotta a couple of times.  He was dating (and then later living with) one of my best friends from high school ... and, thanks to the local success of "Lake Shore Drive", the band was at the peak of their hot streak at the time.  Thanks to this connection, we were once afforded the opportunity to open for Aliotta, Haynes and Jeremiah at an appearance here in Chicago.  (For the life of me, I can't remember the name of the venue ... but it was some type of "coffee house" setting, very popular at that time, in probably 1973 or 1974.)

Beth, my classmate, was one of those "best friends" girl friends who was a big part of my life back then.  (We even had one of those goofy high school pacts that if neither one of us were married by the age of 30, we'd just marry each other ... simply so that we could say that we were!)

Fortunately, it never came to that ... and in reality we dated exactly ONE time (naively figuring that since we were such good friends, why WOULDN'T it work?)  I'm sure that today we would both agree that it was a complete disaster, although I think we can also look back and smile.  (I took her to see the movie "Woodstock" in 1970 ... halfway through the film ... and after about 30 seconds of making out in the theater ... we both burst out laughing, saying that this was just too weird and never going to work.  Fortunately we were able to stay close friends for a few years after that until real life got in the way and, as even the best of friends so often do, went our separate ways.  While I've never left the area, she moved around a bit ... but we did have a chance to visit again at a high school reunion a few years back, as well as by email after Mitch passed away in July.)

By my count, Mitch definitely broke her heart several more times than he melted it, and because she was important to me, it hurt me to see her treated this way ... so my personal feelings for Mitch are tainted ... although there's no denying the fact that his band left us with one of the ultimate Classic Rock Tracks.  By ALL counts, it was for the best when they finally split ... and hey, today she can still talk about the time she dated a genuine rock star!

Bandmate Skip Haynes, who wrote the song "Lake Shore Drive", has participated with Forgotten Hits several times in the past ... he even gave us the "exclusive" story behind their hit several years back (which, I see by Googling this morning, has been picked up by several other media sources as well.)  You can read the complete (and ORIGINAL) version of the story here:
http://forgottenhits60s.blogspot.com/2012/01/story-behind-lake-shore-drive-part-one.html
http://forgottenhits60s.blogspot.com/2012/01/story-behind-lake-shore-drive-part-two.html

As well as listen to the VERY special, one-of-a-kind Forgotten Hits version of their tune here ...



"Lake Shore Drive" proved to be a VERY popular FM track.  The band often explained that, while written specifically about Chicago's famous piece of concrete that runs along Lake Michigan, they found out that SEVERAL cities across the USA have a Lake Shore Drive ... so folks around the country were also able to relate to the song. Incredibly it never officially charted nationally ... or here in Chicagoland either for that matter, despite the fact that it was (and still is) a radio staple here in Chi-Town.

Like Ray Graffia, Jr., I am unable to attend tonight's festivities ... but our hearts goes out to all of Mitch's family, friends and fans as they gather in his honor this evening.  (Ironically, thanks to a prearranged event, I'm having breakfast with Ray ... along with "The History Of Rock And Roll" creator Gary Theroux, who's in town for a wedding, later this morning ... and I've got a hunch "Lake Shore Drive" and Aliotta, Haynes and Jeremiah will probably be one of the topics of discussion!)  If any of our readers ARE able to attend, we'd love a full report to run as a follow-up piece next week. 

50 Year Flashback - September 14th, 1965

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This KFXM Chart from this week in 1965 shows The Beatles on top of the heap with their latest, "Help" (the title track from their brand new motion picture ... in color this time!) coupled with the record' B-Side "I'm Down", a scorching rocker by Paul McCartney, written as a show-stopper final tune for this year's tour, much in the same vein as the previous closer, "Long Tall Sally", Paul's version of the Little Richard classic.

Surprisingly, "Help" / "I'm Down" didn't chart as a two-sided hit nationally.  While "Help" topped all three national trades, the best "I'm Down" could muster was a "Bubbling Under" position of #101 in Billboard.  (It didn't even get that high in the other trades ... #106 in Record World ... and only #126 for a week in Cash Box.)

Big climbers this week include  "Liar Liar" by The Castaways (#4, up from #10 the previous week), "Heart Full Of Soul by The Yardbirds (up nine places to #8), "Mohair Sam" by then rocker Charlie Rich (which climbs from #22 to #12), "Hang On Sloopy" by The McCoys (now at #13 after spending a week at #24 the week before), "Catch Us If You Can" by The Dave Clark Five (another movie song, up ten places from #25 to #15), "Everyone's Gone To The Moon" by Jonathan King (which jumps from #31 all the way to #18), "Treat Her Right" by Roy Head, the week's biggest mover, jumping from #37 to #20, a leap of 17 places!, and "You're The One" by The Vogues, a remake of a Petula Clark album track, that climbs from #34 to #26 this week.

I like how the chart shows you last year's Top Ten Hits on this date as well as Great Britain's Top 12 Tracks.  (Notice that Sonny and Cher hold down the #1 Spot in The UK, ahead of The Beatles and The Stones!)










Notice that the backside of this week's KFXM's Survey shows three of their jocks changing the marquee at The Arlington Theater.  "Help!" is the hot new feature at the movies this week (and it looks like another British Import, "Ferry 'Cross The Mersey" featuring Gerry and the Pacemakers" is being shown as the second half of a double feature!)

We found some "unaltered" early mixes of some "Help!" album tracks and wanted to share a few of these with you today as well.  These are "pre final mix" renditions to some of the new soundtrack ... so we're featuring one each by John, Paul, George and Ringo!








Tuesday This And That

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Congratulations to Ed Kocjan of Channahon, IL, who won a copy of the brand new Buckinghams CD "The Complete Hit Singles"!
Ed tells us ...
Thanks, Kent!
I enjoy reading your website every day. 
Thank YOU, Ed ... it's our pleasure ... glad you're enjoying Forgotten Hits.
Special thanks again to Cary Mansfield of Varese Vintage and Clark Besch (who wrote the liner notes for this hot new release) for donating a copy for our Forgotten Hits give-away.  (kk)    

Good morning, Kent.
I start my day daily by reading your forgotten hits blog. Always learn something new.
Have a great weekend.
Santiago Paradoa
Miami, Florida 
   


The first thing I do every day is open Forgotten Hits and read it from top to bottom.
Gary Theroux       

BARRY MANILOW, BARBRA STREISAND, SAM COOKE AMONG 2016 HALL OF FAME NOMINEES - 
Rod Stewart, Neil Sedaka, Petula Clark also first time candidates  
On-line voting to begin September 16   
Barry Manilow, Barbra Streisand and Sam Cooke are among the nominees for 2016 induction into America’s Pop Music Hall of Fame.
They join 11 other first-time candidates, as well as 11 returning acts to comprise the 25 artists on the ballot. Nominees are selected by a national panel of musicians, disc jockeys and journalists based on the artists’ breadth and depth of pop hits, as well as influence.
Through on-line voting, the public will choose 10 inductees; the national selection committee will add up to five other “Legacy” inductees.
New nominees, in addition to Manilow, Streisand and Cooke, are the Association, Lou Christie, Petula Clark, Fats Domino, Tommy James & the Shondells, the Lettermen, the Rascals, Paul Revere & the Raiders, Neil Sedaka, Rod Stewart and the Temptations,
The eleven returning nominees are Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass, the Dave Clark Five, Dion & the Belmonts, Bob Dylan, the Four Tops, Connie Francis, the Grass Roots, the Jackson Five, Smokey & the Miracles, Three Dog Night and Dionne Warwick.
Artists must have placed a hit on the Billboard charts between 1945 and 1975 to qualify
Voting is currently under way at americaspopmusichalloffame.org and will continue through October 31. Inductees will be announced in December.
America’s Pop Music Hall of Fame was formed in 2011 to honor artists and other contributors to pop music. It is based in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, home of Perry Como, Bobby Vinton and the Four Coins, who together placed nearly 200 songs on America’s pop charts.
Plans are continuing for construction of a four-story, hall of fame structure that includes a large performance center, as well as wings for both permanent and rotating collections and memorabilia.
In a ceremony March 15, 2013, with Johnny Tillotson as master of ceremonies, the original inductees into America’s Pop Music Hall of Fame were announced. They were the Beach Boys, the Beatles, Johnny Cash, Ray Charles, Nat King Cole, Perry Como, Bobby Darin, Neil Diamond, Brenda Lee, Johnny Mathis, Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, Bobby Vinton and Stevie Wonder.
The 2014 inductees were the Bee Gees, Tony Bennett, Carpenters, Chicago, Buddy Holly, Elton John, Carole King, Dean Martin, the Monkees, Roy Orbison, Patti Page, the Platters, Simon & Garfunkel and the Supremes. The Monkees were formally inducted during a standing-room only presentation at the Monkees Convention in East Rutherford, N.J. on March 17, 2014.
This year’s inductees were Paul Anka, Glen Campbell, Chubby Checker, the Eagles, the Everly Brothers, the Four Seasons, Tom Jones, Paul McCartney, Rick Nelson, Les Paul & Mary Ford. the Righteous Brothers, Linda Ronstadt, Johnny Tillotson, and Andy Williams.
In Brief
2016 Nominees:
Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass, The Association, Lou Christie, the Dave Clark Five, Petula Clark, Sam Cooke, Dion and the Belmonts, Fats Domino, Bob Dylan, the Four Tops, Connie Francis, the Grass Roots, the Jackson Five, Tommy James and the Shondells, the Lettermen, Barry Manilow, the Rascals, Paul Revere and the Raiders, Neil Sedaka, Smokey and the Miracles, Rod Stewart, Barbra Streisand, the Temptations, Three Dog Night and Dionne Warwick
Public Voting:
americaspopmusichalloffame.org through October 31.
Inductees Announced:
December 28, 2015
Another interesting mix of candidates to be sure.  Check out the website to see The Monkees being inducted ... Micky, Peter and Mike are all on hand to receive their awards!  (kk)   

By now I'm guessing most of you have seen the latest Looney Toons video of David Cassidy's recent appearance on a British talk show.
Honestly, I think they WERE trying to "rubbish him" to a certain extent.  And it was pretty clear that he had a bad audio connection from the outset.  But once again you get to see another DC flipout!  (kk)


Goodbye to Gary Richrath of REO Speedwagon who passed away earlier this week of an undisclosed ailment.  I've lost count of the times I was him perform with REO ... for a good long stretch, they were the "go to" opening act for virtually every big name that passed through town.
LOVE your work, Gary ... we'll miss you.  (kk)    

Jimi Hendrix ExperienceFreedom: Atlanta Pop Festival - No. 63 — Jimi Hendrix scores his 46th entry on the Billboard 200 albums chart as Freedom: Atlanta Pop Festival starts at No. 63. The live set shifted 8,000 equivalent album units in the week ending Sept. 3, according to Nielsen Music (nearly 7,000 were pure album sales). 
The Experience Hendrix / Legacy Recordings release celebrates the guitar god’s July 4, 1970 concert at the Second Atlanta International Pop Festival, where he played to an estimated 300,000 - 400,000 people -- the largest audience he ever played to in the U.S. (according to Legacy). An accompanying documentary film about the show, Jimi Hendrix: Electric Church, premiered Sept. 4 on Showtime. (A retail version of the movie will be released on Oct. 30.) 
Hendrix has been rather prolific on the Billboard 200 in the last few years, thanks to Experience Hendrix’s licensing partnership with Legacy, which began in 2009. Some of the most notable fruits of their relationship include two top 10 albums of previously unreleased studio recordings: Valleys of Neptune (No. 4 debut and peak in 2010) and People, Hell and Angels (No. 2 in 2013)
Bob Merlis / M.F.H 

If you can't make the whole convention, you might consider driving there for just the day on either this Thursday / Friday / or Saturday. 
I had so much fun last year. I can't wait. 
Maybe we can meet there. 
DJ Stu Weiss 

Celebrities confirmed for September 2015!
View this email in your browser

MY THREE SONS
CAST REUNION

 The September show is shaping up to be our largest ever!
More celebrities signing autographs! More vendors!

September 17 - 19, 2015
Mark your calendar and ask your boss off for work!




Barry Livingston, Stanley Livingston and Tina Cole will be reunited for the entire weekend -- a MY THREE SONS cast reunion!

 

www.MidAtlanticNostalgiaConvention.com
Hunt Valley Wyndham, Maryland

TEMPEST STORM

One of the things that makes the Mid-Atlantic Nostalgia Convention unique is the variety of celebrities. We don't always offer movie and TV celebs.
Tempest Storm will be among our most treasured because when you think of 1940s and 1950s burlesque, you think of Lili St. Cyr, Gypsy Rose Lee, and Tempest Storm.

Quiet simply, a legend.

 
MARTINE BESWICK

Two-time Bond girl and Hammer horror star, Martine auditioned for DR. NO (1961) and lost out. But she succeeded in securing the role of a fiery gypsy girl, Zora, in FROM RUSSIA, WITH LOVE (1962) where she engaged in the famous catfight scene. Then she was hired to play  Paula Caplan in another Bond film, THUNDERBALL (1964). Martine went on to appear in ONE MILLION YEARS B.C. (1966) opposite Raquel Welch, with whom she also engaged in a catfight. 

 
CAROLINE MUNRO

Bond girl in THE SPY WHO LOVED ME (1977), it should have been retitled "The Spy Who Killed Her" when Roger Moore blew up the helicopter she was flying.
She was eye candy in THE GOLDEN VOYAGE OF SINBAD (1973) and fell victim to Christopher Lee in DRACULA A.D. (1972). And her list of accomplishments, just like Martine Beswick, is too long to mention them all.
The Hammer horror actress has lots of stories to share but here's a link to a quick YouTube link where she was reunited with Roger Moore and they chatted about the Bond film!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zM971US1owY
Copyright © 2015 MANC Convention, All rights reserved.
Out of MY driving range ... but maybe some of our readers can attend.  Sounds like a fun event!  Thanks, Stu!  (kk)

Thursday This And That

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Can't wait to see Burton Cummings at The Arcada Theatre this Friday Night ...
He's sold out all three times he's played there ...
ALWAYS a great show (and Burton tells me the band is tighter than ever because they've been playing so much.)  Just a few seats left so you'd better act quickly if you want to catch this rock and roll legend live in concert.
Other upcoming shows at The Arcada:
Poco and Firefall - next Friday (9/25)
Ronnie Milsap - Sunday, 9/27
Neil Sedaka, October 4th
Los Lonely Boys, October 10th
Night Ranger, October 13th
Leon Russell, October 16th
Dave Mason, October 20th
Kansas, October 22nd and 23rd
Mickey Gilley, October 25th
Blood, Sweat and Tears, October 30th
Tanya Tucker, November 1st
Sheena Easton, November 6th
Johnny Rivers, November 14th
Christopher Cross, November 21st
America, November 28th
JUST ADDED:  Todd Rundgren, December 1st (now THERE'S somebody you don't often get a chance to see!!!)  Caught him with Ringo Starr a few years back and he was awesome!
Michael McDonald, December 5th  (Christmas Show)
The Lettermen, December 6th  (Christmas Show)
Felix Cavaliere, December 11th  (Christmas Show)
Ronnie Spector, December 13th  (Christmas Show)
The Ides Of March, December 18th  (Christmas Show) 
By the way, we're trying to put together a special holiday Forgotten Hits Get-Together for this show ... email me if you'd like to attend!  (More details to come)
Visit The Arcada Theatre Online Box Office here for more ticket information:
 
And, speaking of Ringo Starr, don'tcha wish you had the money to buy some of THIS stuff?!?!?
 
How's this for a charity auction?  Ringo is auctioning off 800 items he has had for ages. 
Imagine owning the actual drum set he used for the Beatlemania period of 1963 / 1964 to record "She Loves You,""Can't Buy Me Love" and other hits.  It was also used by Paul on his first solo album, so he was sitting at this set when he recorded every instrument used on his great song "Maybe, I'm Amazed."  And, it was the set used in the movie "A Hard Day's Night."  They say it will bring $300,000 - 500,000.  I think it will probably bring a million.
Each of their famous "White Albums" had a number on the front cover.  The lower the number, the earlier it was made ... thus, low numbers are worth more money.  This 1968 album had songs like "Birthday" and "Back in the USSR".  Mine is numbered over 1 million, which is still considered to be a low number from the 60's.  Ringo is selling NUMBER ONE!  I can't imagine he has had the FIRST copy all these years. 
Lots of cool stuff.  He found old photos never published and will have a book out next month of those.  Pretty neat stuff!
Clark Besch
This undated photo provided by Julien's Auctions shows Beatle Ringo Starr's first 1963 Ludwig Oyster black pearl three-piece drum kit    one of the items up for bid.
 
Lots of Micky Dolenz / Monkees news here ...
I've been saying it for years now ... he's gotta be the Hardest Working Man In Show Business!!!  (kk)
 
Congratulations again to this year's nominees for The America Pop Music Hall Of Fame ...
Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass, The Association, Lou Christie, the Dave Clark Five, Petula Clark, Sam Cooke, Dion and the Belmonts, Fats Domino, Bob Dylan, the Four Tops, Connie Francis, the Grass Roots, the Jackson Five, Tommy James and the Shondells, the Lettermen, Barry Manilow, the Rascals, Paul Revere and the Raiders, Neil Sedaka, Smokey and the Miracles, Rod Stewart, Barbra Streisand, the Temptations, Three Dog Night and Dionne Warwick
That's quite a list ... Herb Alpert, Tommy James, The Lettermen, Felix Cavaliere of The Rascals, Neil Sedaka, The Temptations and Three Dog Night all have shows coming up here locally between now and the end of the year ... and The Association, Lou Christie and The Grass Roots were all just here recently. 
This is QUITE a list!  Best of luck to all the candidates!  (kk)
 
Thanks kk!
Tommy Scheckel / Paul Revere and the Raiders
 
Thanks so much for your kind words and your vote ... always appreciate you mentioning me on your blog.
Heading out to CA to perform with Frankie Avalon and Bobby Rydell this weekend.
Thanks again for the support.
Lou Christie
 
FH Reader Chet Coppock isn't so sure one of these candidates really belongs in "The Pop Music Hall Of Fame" ... 
 
kk, 
I've been busy as hell working on a new project ... I will begin blogging again soon.
Meanwhile, does Rod Stewart, the vintage Rod Stewart, qualify as a pop star? 
When I think of Stewart I think of the flamboyant British bull who gave us the unforgettable "Every Picture Tells a Story" album back in '71. I might even grit my teeth and think of Stewart vamping his way thru "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy?"   
Is that pop star material? 
Perhaps, in this era where there is really no real form of definitive pop or rock music, maybe hot Rod does qualify for the Pop Music Hall of Fame.  
Where oh where is our next great form of rock 'n roll? Somewhere, some place, some kid is messing around with chords that will introduce us to rock's next great phase.  Hey, acts like Pearl Jam and U2 now qualify as Rolling Stones-style oldies acts. 
Sadly, rock 'n roll as we know it and love it has been irrelevant for 20 years. Tell me anything rock has
produced over the past two decades that mad your pulse race as it did back in the 60's, 70's and 80's.  
Chuck once sang Hail Hail Rock 'n Roll. Sadly, that seems to have become a funeral dirge. Thank the good lord we have Ron Onesti keeping the oldies alive and well at the Arcada.
Chet Coppock  
Author: Buffone - Monster of the Midway
The very definition of what today passes as rock and roll has been SO altered over the years.  We've mentioned before how an artist like John Cougar Mellencamp and a song like "Hurts So Good" ONLY played on the rock stations when it first came out ... but today is middle-of-the-road faire all day long, along with AC/DC's "You Shook Me All Night Long" and other former "hard rocker" tunes.
Rod Stewart?  I was never much of a fan (maybe it was the panty hose) ... and certainly not of his disco phase hit "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy" ... but I do like the idea of a Pop Music Hall of Fame ... and the diversity of the artists previously inducted and now up for nomination.  For me NOTHING will ever beat a good pop song ... it just makes you feel good ... and I don't care if it's some well-crafted classic by The Beatles or The Beach Boys ... a mid-'60's gem by The Turtles, Tommy James and the Shondells or Paul Revere and the Raiders ... or something as recent as "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go" by Wham ... NOTHING tops feel good rock and roll.  (kk)   
 
Hey Kent,  
I wanted to comment on the Johnny Cash Documentary, in particular "10 Things We Learned From 'American Rebel'" for which your blog provided a link. 
Check out #9, where it reads "One of the inmates in attendance (during the making of Cash's Grammy-winning 1969 At San Quentin LP) was 21-year-old Merle Haggard.  Really!!?? The fact is if Haggard was there at all, he was more like 42, give or take. He was born in April of 1937. As interested as I was in 'American Rebel' at the outset, I now have to wonder what other glaring inaccuracies there may be within it.  
Also, many of the things "... Learned From 'American Rebel'", can also be learned from the movie "Walk the Line.", which was at theaters ten years ago!   
Let me conclude with a "Cash fact" I picked up years ago when he was interviewed on NPR's "Fresh Air". 
In composing the song "I Walk the Line", Johnny Cash got the line, "I keep my eyes wide open all the time.", by paraphrasing what he had read in a Dale Carnegie book advising salesmen to, "Keep your eyes wide open all the time." Cash was huge fan of sales books, at least in the early days.  
Bill Fortune
Although it's already aired several times, I've yet to see the new Johnny Cash documentary ... but absolutely want to do so.  (Maybe it's On Demand???)
But I totally agree with you ... once you find a point played up as "fact" that is so COMPLETELY and obviously wrong, it's pretty hard to accept anything else you're being told that you may not be as familiar with as the whole truth, the absolute truth, and nothing but the truth.
Still I plan on checking it out.  (My Mom was a HUGE Johnny Cash fan.  One year when I was a teenager our family drove down to Murphysboro, Tennessee, to see his house ... and my Mom stole a rock out of Johnny Cash's driveway ... which she then proudly displayed on the mantel of our fireplace for many years to come!)  kk
 
Check it out ...  
 
After the huge success of the original theatrical release (along with one of the biggest selling CD's of last year), Disney is now making an animated version of Guardians of the Galaxy ...
Which means a whole new album of great '70's music is being released as a soundtrack.
Cash in when you can, I guess ...
Just proves what I've been saying here for the past fifteen years ...
Great music is great music ... as long as you give people a chance to hear it!
 
"Love And Mercy", the Brian Wilson biopic we gave mixed reviews to earlier this year, is now available on home video in both the DVD and BluRay format ... and yes, we DID order a copy.  (Like I said, I know I'll end up watching this again someday ... and probably SEVERAL times at that.)  Also on its way to me is the Glen Campbell documentary, "I'll Be Me".
For more on BOTH of these great artists, be sure to check out the story and link below ...
 
 
From Tom Cuddy ...
 
GLEN CAMPBELL: He's Lost the Ability to Communicate    
He's in late-stage Alzheimer's and living at home with his wife
Glen Campbell has been moved from a healthcare facility and is now living at home with his wife, Kim 
She says that Glen is in late stage six of Alzheimer's -- with stage seven being the most severe.   Glen Campbell's wife Kim gives an update on his condition ...
"He's lost the ability to communicate verbally. He really doesn't understand anything anyone ever says to him. He can still say short phrases like, 'I love you,' and 'Where have you been?' I've been married to him for 33 years, so I just intuitively know what he needs." 
Kim adds that, like many Alzheimer's patients, he can be combative at times and has even unintentionally given her a black eye.
 
Tom also sent us a link to this interview with our FH Buddy  Lee Loughnane of Chicago, talking about the future of this iconic band ... 
 
re:  David Cassidy:
I am confused by both sides in this conversation.  I acknowledge David's issues, the feedback coming through his audio and the search of news people for a story ... BUT ... WHOSE songs were they asking him about?  That part was so set-up to provide failure if nothing else was.
Shelley
The poor connection was obvious before the very first words were uttered (scroll down to view if you haven't already seen it.)  David was clearly agitated by their questions and, I think, rightfully so.  These "journalists" seemed to have an agenda to play up his bankruptcy filing and focused on very little else.
However I'm probably MORE surprised by the fact that Cassidy was so in-your-face about the fact that he went through this filing to basically screw his wife of 28 years out of half her rightful share of their assets ... yet nobody is talking about THIS part of the conversation.
Without question, David Cassidy has had some SERIOUS issues these past few decades.  Clearly an alcoholic (which we've addressed several times in this column ... and David freely admits ... and HAS admitted to in his published biographies, attributing much of it to his family's history, while also acknowledging his fear that he didn't pass this disease on to his own son, now 23), he seems to have emotionally overreacted to the questions by these British reporters, causing many to speculate that he was drunk during the interview.
It's pretty much the way he's appeared most of the times I've seen him over the past 30 years.  (An appearance at The Arcada Theatre earlier this year was embarrassing, disturbing and out of control.  Honestly, I have no need or reason to ever go see him again ... and am surprised that he has any fanbase left.)
As for the songs you're asking about, every one of those was a HUGE David Cassidy solo hit in England during and after The Partridge Family era.  "Daydreamer" went to #1 in 1973, "How Can I Be Sure" to #1 in 1972, "Could It Be Forever" to #2 in 1972 and "Cherish" was a US Hit as well (#3, 1971).  All were part of the question "Which of your hit songs best describes your mood today?" ... actually a pretty good question (and perhaps the most intelligent one asked by this British pair of reporters.)
Cassidy's career last much longer in Britain than it did in The States ... and he could probably easily sell out numerous venues over there if he chose to do so.  However David ALSO admits that on his last tour of England, he made about $600 ... so hardly worth it in the scheme of things!  (kk)
 
First, I'd like to say that I really enjoy your blog.  I came across it about two weeks ago.  
Second, I don't believe that the British TV show did anything to Mr. Cassidy.  I was at his infamous performance at the South Point casino in Las Vegas on July 1, 2012.  He was drunk then and from his actions since then, he hasn't changed.  In case you didn't hear about that performance here is a link.
I didn't walk out because I enjoy a trainwreck as much as the next guy ... LOL
Again, good job on your blog
Gil McAuliff
Bolingbrook, IL
We've seen David drunk and belligerent on more than one occasion live on stage, verbally abusing both this band and the audience members ... it doesn't make for a very entertaining show.
While I wasn't much of a fan at the time (hey, it just wasn't cool for a 16 or 17 year old guy to be a David Cassidy fan back then ... and I resented being told that I sorta looked like him), I came to respect what he went through as a teen idol at the time ... and found his survival of that era quite fascinating and interesting.  (I HIGHLY recommend his book
"C'mon Get Happy - Fear and Loathing on The Partridge Family Bus".  It is a VERY entertaining read ... which I just did again for I believe the fourth time ... recently.
 

Top 10 On This Date ... In 1968

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Here's the way Billboard Magazine ranked 'em on September 18, 1968 ... 

10.  Hey Jude - The Beatles  
First week in The Hot 100 and already a Top Ten Hit!  Two weeks later it would top the chart ... (Jeannie C. Riley's "Harper Valley PTA" delayed that journey by a week) ... where it would stay for the next nine consecutive weeks, easily becoming the biggest hit of the year.  Clearly still a popular track ... it topped Ron Smith's OldiesMusic.com Labor Day 500 for the 7th time ... out of 14 charts ... a couple of weeks ago ... and remains the biggest hit of The Beatles' career

 9. Hello, I Love You - The Doors
A catchy tune by Morrison and Company that topped The Billboard Chart for a couple of weeks in early August

 8. Hush - Deep Purple  
These hard rockers took a Billy Joe Royal pop hit, fuzzed it up and scored a Top Five Hit.  It would remain their biggest chart success until 1973 when "Smoke On The Water" went all the way to #2



 7. You're All I Need To Get By - Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell  
One of eleven hits by this Motown duo.  Two years later, Tammi would be gone.  By the end of 1968, you'd find Marvin Gaye on top of the charts with the biggest hit of his career, "I Heard It Through The Grapevine".

 6. The House That Jack Built - Aretha Franklin
Back in the day when Billboard used to chart both sides of the same single separately, this side made The Top Ten in September of '68.  It actually out-performed its flipside, "I Say A Little Prayer", yet THAT'S the one you hear on the radio all these years later.  "The House That Jack Built"???  Not so much.




 5. 1, 2, 3 Red Light - The 1910 Fruitgum Company
We got a chance to visit with Frank Jeckell of The 1910 Fruitgum Company a couple of weeks ago when the group performed here in Chicago at The Arcada Theatre.  1968 was a very big year for bubblegum music ... and this one of the biggest hits of that genre.




 4. Born To Be Wild - Steppenwolf
A Summer Anthem ... and, without a doubt, one of the most popular and longest lasting hits of the '60's.  Counter-culture back in the day ... but good old rock and roll some 47 years later.

 3. Light My Fire - Jose Feliciano
We already caught The Doors at #9 with their latest, "Hello, I Love You".  Here, Jose Feliciano takes a completely different spin on The Doors' first chart-topping hit "Light My Fire".  You rarely hear THIS one anymore either.




 2. Harper Valley P.T.A. - Jeannie C. Riley
It would top the chart the following week.  This "novelty" hit made a quick run up the charts and remains one of those mystery One Hit Wonders all these years later.

 1. People Got To Be Free - The Rascals
No longer "Young", Felix Cavaliere and Company took a political stand with this one ... and it held down Billboard's #1 Spot for five straight weeks.



Here in Chicago on the recently renamed WLS Hit Parade, "Hey Jude" was already #1 (leaping from #20 the week before.)  Incredibly, it would only stay at #1 for a week, replaced a week later by "Fire" by The Crazy World Of Arthur Brown", who had a three week run at the top of the chart.    

In at #2 were The Beach Boys with "Do It Again", a bit of a "comeback" record for The Boys Of Summer.



The Ohio Express held down the #3 spot with "Down At Lulu's", a song we featured a few weeks back in Forgotten Hits.  (Toldja bubblegum was big in '68!)    

The Crazy World Of Arthur Brown were at #4 with the aforementioned "Fire", followed by The Who at #5 with "Magic Bus", The Beatles again at #6 with "Revolution", the flipside to "Hey Jude", the Don Fardon version of "Indian Reservation" at #7 (Paul Revere and the Raiders would top the chart with their version of this track three years later), the Aretha flipside "I Say A Little Prayer" holding down the #8 spot, "Hush" by Deep Purple at #9 and "My  Special Angel" by The Vogues at #10.



Biggest premier this wee on the Chicagoland Chart?  "Shapes Of Things To Come" by Max Frost and the Troopers, the VERY FIRST Forgotten Hit ever featured, over the long Thanksgiving Weekend in 1999.


David Cassidy

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DAVID CASSIDY TODAY:

Over the past several years we've had virtually nothing but bad news to report on the David Cassidy front.  (Talk about your fallen idols!)

We've run story after story of his DUI arrests and convictions ... disappointing and belligerent live concert appearances ... even printed photos of his infamous mug shots ... his reputation and demeanor have been spiraling down the tubes for ages now ... and last week, when he appeared agitated and disoriented on a British talk show, stories started circulating that he had appeared drunk on the air.



I don't know that I believe this to be the case.  From the onset you could tell he was having problems properly hearing the questions asked by the British news team assigned to handle the interview.  And, in my opinion, based on the line of questioning, they absolutely went out there with the intent to rattle and "rubbish" him.  (Scroll down to watch the full-length clip.  As one FH Reader wrote in, "Everybody loves a trainwreck.")  Cassidy reacted accordingly, letting (as Cyndi Lauper would say) his true colors come shining through ... which is NEVER a pretty sight.  The reason this went as big virally as it did is because the public has come to love seeing Cassidy portrayed in an unflattering light.



I would hope that David would be smart enough not to appear intoxicated live on camera while still serving out his probationary rehab sentence ... but as he himself has publicly explained it, alcoholism is a disease.  I think what we witnessed was more a case of the long-term effect that this affliction has had on his body and his mind over the years.  When I saw him a few months ago, he looked skeletal ... not even alive.  He hasn't aged well and this addiction has clearly taken its toll on him physically and mentally.  (Some bad plastic surgery hasn't helped his situation either!)  It's sad really ... he spent most of his life downplaying the importance of his teen idol status ... and yet now he seems to be sorely lacking the love, affection and attention it afforded him for so many years.

That being said, (and being fully aware of his condition ... and the compromised position it puts him in every time he drinks too much) MY biggest problem with all of this is that Cassidy would even consider getting behind the wheel of a car to drive himself home.  Learn your lesson ... you're in no position (or condition) to make this type of a decision ... hire a driver!  If your disease gets the better of you, DON'T DRIVE!!!  Get somebody else to take you home.  And then get some help ... some counseling ... some therapy ... because the years you've already spent doing so still haven't solved the problem.  Your inner demons are stronger than ANYTHING else you've learned about yourself and your affliction.  Acknowledge this ... and then DO something about it! Each and every time you get behind the wheel of a car in this condition, you jeopardize the lives of every other innocent motorist you may come in contact with. 

David was devastated when a fan was crushed to death at one of his concerts in the early '70's ... he had a very tough time getting over the fact that a young girl who adored him and had come out just to see him perform should lose her life this way.

My feeling is that David needs to conjure up the feelings of that horrific experience again and not even THINK about EVER getting behind the wheel of a car again if he's been drinking.  Being fully aware of his own illness and the consequences of driving in this condition, making the conscious decision to get behind the wheel anyway is, in my opinion, akin to going out on a reckless murder spree and opening up random fire in a crowd of hundreds of people as there is no way in knowing just how many lives he might endanger when doing so.  The very fact that he has been arrested multiple times while driving intoxicated elevates him to serial killer / mass murderer status ... and he needs to recognize this.  It's just plain dumb.  (For whatever reason, this seems to be a recurring nightmare for Cassidy ... scarier still:  how many times HASN'T he been stopped while driving intoxicated?!?!  The prospect is staggering.) 

Here is our plea ... DON'T DO IT!!!  THINK!!!  You've been up and down your entire career ... and you're going thru a tough time again right now due to the divorce ... which means you may not be in the right frame of mind to be thinking clearly.  STEP BACK!!!  Evaluate.  Don't risk your own life and the lives of others simply to numb your own internal pain.  

"The Higher They Climb The Harder They Fall"???  Yep, that's you in a nutshell.  FIX THIS!!!

DAVID CASSIDY:  THE GLORY YEARS

Here, '60's Flashback style, is a piece we did on David Cassidy several years ago (2004 to be exat!) as part of our '70's Teen Idol Series ... 


We asked some of the women on the list to describe some of the memories surrounding their earliest teenage crushes. Let's face it, many of you were ten years old (or even younger!) when you plastered DAVID's or DONNY's or LEIF's or ANDY's posters on your bedroom walls ... yet there was something about them that turned you on ... musically and physically. I'm not really sure that you could have even understood the physical part of the reaction at such an early age ... most girls on the list said that they simply wanted to MARRY their heart-throb ... it wasn't really a sexual urge as much as a need to feel that he belonged to only you. (LOL)  

Being a guy, I never really understood it ... we didn't have those same types of crushes.  Sure, back then we debated many of the same things that we continue to debate in FH ... who was hotter: GINGER or MARY-ANN ... SAMANTHA or JEANNIE ... WILMA or BETTY ... and, I WILL admit to having a special fondness for NANCY SINATRA's SUGAR TOWN album cover ... and maybe HERB ALPERT's WHIPPED CREAM Cover, too.  (We've certainly shown THAT one a time or two here in Forgotten Hits!)  

It seemed different for you girls, 'though. I've had women tell me that they used to kiss their DAVID CASSIDY poster good night every night ... they'd make-out with their pillow, pretending it was DONNY OSMOND ... and, based on the cold harsh realities of life, these are girls who would have been about eight or nine years old at the time they were doing this! One woman said she spent her early adult years looking for someone who had "DAVID CASSIDY's lips" and a young black girl (who would have been about eight when THE BEATLES first hit our shores) was absolutely convinced that SHE would marry GEORGE HARRISON ... without any logical consideration of age, race or probability ... she truly, truly believed it. 

So this week, we're going to try to dig a little deeper into just what fueled these urges ... and we hope that some of you will share your memories and crushes with us, too. Along the way, we'll look at some of the most popular teen idols of the time and hear some long-since overlooked bubblegum pop.

Today's feature was written by FH list member JACK'S TROPHY WIFE (Laura), who not only made it through the '70's TEEN IDOL craze and lived to tell about it but also buys, sells, trades and collects old 16 MAGAZINES ... and all OTHER types of rock-related magazines ... with her hubby, JACKJ13. Thanks for the inspiration ... we hope you'll enjoy some of the other comments as well!   

David Cassidy, Rock Me Baby, circa October 1972.

THIS 45 spent a lot of time on my older sister's Close & Play, especially during our marathon dance sessions on the front porch. (We were too young to be embarrassed dancing on our front porch, after dark, with the porch light on, on the main highway of a small town. At least I was; perhaps she should have known better.) According to his autobiography (which I no longer own, because someone ran off with it, so I cannot give you an exact quote), David was horrified to learn that his vocals on Partridge Family songs were speeded up to make his voice higher and thus theoretically less threatening and more appealing to young girls. Fortunately for those of us dying to be threatened by our teen idols, David eventually released this solo (correct speed) number, a delicious shock. This wasn't the David of the old days who told us to come on and get happy. THIS David was a midnight man!
---Jack's Trophy Wife / Laura



DAVID CASSIDYwas the consummate teen idol ... at one time, he was getting more fan mail than THE BEATLES at their peak. Between constant television exposure through THE PARTRIDGE FAMILYand solo concert tours on the weekends, he may have TRULY been the hardest-working-man-in-show-business, despite what JAMES BROWN says!

Between his hits with his stepmom SHIRLEY JONES and their fictitious PARTRIDGE FAMILY and his solo smashes, CASSIDY hit the Pop Top 40 a dozen times between 1970 and 1972, topping the charts with I THINK I LOVE (1970) and DOESN'T SOMEBODY WANT TO BE WANTED (1971) and scoring Top Ten Hits with I'LL MEET YOU HALFWAY (#2, 1971), I WOKE UP IN LOVE THIS MORNING (#9, 1971) and CHERISH (#3, 1971).

According to a "Fact Sheet" he filled out for16 MAGAZINEback in January of 1970, his favorite singing group was THE BEATLES (he covered their PLEASE PLEASE ME and hit The British Top 20 with it), his favorite individual singer was ANTHONY NEWLEY, his favorite TV Show was LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE, his favorite actor was MARLON BRANDO and his favorite food was lobster. He likes "girls who are bright ... I can't stand dumb girls" and he dislikes "plastic people."


(And all this time you thought it was 
DONNY who had the PUPPY LOVE!!!) 







 


CASSIDY continues to wow them live in concert ... in fact, he finally c'mon and got happy a few years ago and now performs most of his solo and PARTRIDGE FAMILY hits in their original arrangements. A live concert DVD and Greatest Hits CD have both been released in the past year ... pretty amazing since DAVID spent nearly two decades denouncing the whole KEITH PARTRIDGE connection. (His infamous ROLLING STONE"Naked Lunchbox" cover pretty much told all his female fans, 13 and under, that he really was a "Rocker" and was having sex with any willing "of age" follower! He goes into much greater and graphic detail in his autobiography, C'MON, GET HAPPY ... listing many of his sexcapades) 



The music that LAURA selected for today is CASSIDY's 1972 rocker-image attempt, ROCK ME BABY, a #26 pop hit in Cash Box Magazine.  (Track posted above)

We've also added one of his prettier solo ballads as well ...COULD IT BE FOREVERwent to #15 in Cash Box the same year ... and was a #5 smash here in Chicago.



ok you asked for it ...
In the early 70's, when I was no more than 4 or 5, it was David Cassidy, ALL the way! I had a real thing for the Partridge family ... used to pretend that they were my family ... I wanted Keith to be my older brother! I even begged my mom to buy me a corduroy maroon pant suit (couldn't find velvet) with a frilly blouse underneath the vest, so that I could dress like them.
Mary Ruth    


What was it?
Lawdy! That's easy!
Hormones, of course! lol  
AuntyBellum

 
16 CONNECTION:DAVID CASSIDY first began appearing in 16 MAGAZINE back in the late '60's ... editor GLORIA STAVERS sensed that he had teen-idol sex appeal after catching his appearances on television dramas like BONANZA and IRONSIDE ... a year and a half before THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY made its television debut. Once that series became a teen hit, CASSIDY grabbed the headline banner of 16 MAGAZINE for every issue released between January and October of 1971! (The next 15 issues seemed to rotate between CASSIDY and newcomer DONNY OSMOND!)

 
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