________________________________________________________________________ SPECTROPOP - Spectacular! Retro! Pop! ________________________________________________________________________ There are 2 messages in this issue. Topics in this digest: 1. Re: The Satisfactions' "Daddy You Just Gotta Let Him In" From: Mick Patrick 2. Brooks Arthur From: Country Paul ________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________ Message: 1 Date: Fri, 14 Oct 2005 22:37:23 +0100 From: Mick Patrick Subject: Re: The Satisfactions' "Daddy You Just Gotta Let Him In" John Black: > I believe that "Daddy, You Just Gotta Let Him In" by the > Satisfactions was included on the compilation . . . > GIRLS http://www.spectropop.com/recommends/index2004.htm#Zonk > GO http://tinyurl.com/85nj7 > ZONK!! http://tinyurl.com/a2ywh > on RPM http://www.cherryred.co.uk/rpm/artists/variousdreambabes.htm Rick Hough: > It shoulda been a pre-Boots Nancy Sinatra single...imagine > Frank's cameo in the video as a Hell's Angel shows up at the > door fleeing "trouble on the road" while Nancy pleads the > boy's case...perhaps in a baby-doll nightie. The lead singer of the Satisfactions was Gracia Nitzsche, Jack's wife. But you knew that. Away from the Spector camp, one of Jack's great achievements was his production of singer-songwriter Bob Lind's 'Elusive Butterfly'. Another was his role as keyboardist on the Stones' 'Satisfaction' – hence, it's said, this group's name. Flip over their fabled 45 to reveal 'Bring It All Down', a Spectorish folk rock nugget originally penned by Bob Lind for Sonny & Cher. Find the track on the CD "Hearing Is Believing: The Jack Nitzsche Story": http://tinyurl.com/c6kae The other week I had the pleasure of hearing the original demo version of "Daddy You Just Gotta Let Him In", taped from Jack Nitzsche's personal acetate. No artist was credited on the label, but I'd bet money that the singer was Barbara English. I'd upload the demo to musica, but I have yet to master the black art of converting from memory to digital. Hey la, Mick Patrick -------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]------------------- Message: 2 Date: Sat, 15 Oct 2005 02:07:41 -0400 From: Country Paul Subject: Brooks Arthur For Mick Patrick's Brooks Arthur project: Brooks Arthur recorded The Front Porch's Jubilee output as well, but had no part in writing it. He may have had a hand in the production as well, especially "Undr The Boardwalk" and "Wonderful Summer," although according to Marc Scott, the nominal producer was Jay Tropp, who I believe Marc said worked for Brooks Arthur: http://www.spectropop.com/FrontPorch/index.htm Country Paul -------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]------------------- SPECTROPOP - Spectacular! Retro! Pop! End