
________________________________________________________________________
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______________ S P E C T R O P O P ______________
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Jamie LePage (1953-2002)
http://www.spectropop.com/Jamie.htm
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There are 24 messages in this issue.
Topics in this digest:
1. Stu Phillips
From: Team Spectropop
2. Re: The Shadow Nose
From: Steve Harvey
3. Re: Matthew Reid's "Jane"
From: Billy G Spradlin
4. Larry Verne
From: Doc
5. The Jet Set
From: Steve
6. Re: Larry Verne's string of hits
From: Tom Taber
7. Re: Bobby Womack "Lookin' For A Love"
From: Teri Landi
8. Re: Larry Verne / The Lovelites
From: Andrew Jones
9. Re: The Breakaways' Darling tune
From: Declan Meehan
10. Re: The Jet Set
From: Mikey
11. Re: Roy Phillips
From: Watson Macblue
12. Re Judy Henske's Dolphins In the Sea
From: Hans Ket
13. Re: Judy Henske's Dolphins In The Sea
From: Phil Milstein
14. The Peanuts, Anyone?
From: Jeffery Kennedy
15. Re: Breakaways
From: Norman
16. Re: Matthew Reid's "Jane"
From: Mike Miller
17. Re: The Peanuts, Anyone?
From: Astro
18. Nothern Gore
From: Steve Harvey
19. Re: Freddie is alive and well
From: Roger Kaye
20. Re: Stu Phillips
From: Paul Richards
21. Soft As Snow
From: James Botticelli
22. Re: The Jet Set
From: Steve Harvey
23. Charlatans SF; Keillor book; Reid; Valentinos; more
From: Country Paul
24. The Liquid Room 2/16/03
From: David Ponak
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 1
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 12:33:50 -0000
From: Team Spectropop
Subject: Stu Phillips
New at Spectropop Recommends: Stu Who? by Stu Phillips
BLUE MOON by those demented Pittsburgh doo-woppers the Marcels,
MY DAD by ex-Disney Mouseketeer Paul Petersen, the heavenly
JOHNNY ANGEL by Spectropop darling Shelley Fabares, hunky James
Darren's GOODBYE CRUEL WORLD... Spot the connection??
Yep, each and every one of these delicious nuggets of pure pop
candy was produced by Colpix Records' studio maestro STU PHILLIPS.
He also produced Nina Simone and the Ronettes and brainstormed a
series of mega-selling albums by the Hollyridge Strings.
Like many of his contemporaries, Stu Phillips went on to work in
the TV and movie world, scoring 96 episodes of The Fall Guy, and
composing the soundtracks of Beyond The Valley Of The Dolls, Buck
Rogers and Battlestar Galactica, among many others. To date he
has been nominated for four Grammy Awards.
Well S'poppers, Stu Phillips now has yet another feather in his
cap; the recent publication of his autobiography STU WHO? Is it
any good? Mike Edwards says "Yes". Click here to read his review:
http://www.spectropop.com/recommends/
Enjoy!
The S'pop Team
Spectropop: Spectacular! Retro! Pop!
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 2
Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2003 16:16:35 -0800 (PST)
From: Steve Harvey
Subject: Re: The Shadow Nose
Jeff Lemlich:
> I have had this on Kapp, but have never seen a Kama
> Sutra copy.
I seem to recall reading something about the
Charlatans being relagated to Kapp when they really
wanted to be on Kama Sutra (which has the Lovin'
Spoonful). I think Eric Jacobson produced the
Charlatans at some point. I don't think it ever came
out on Kama Sutra, come to think of it.
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 3
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 01:01:14 -0000
From: Billy G Spradlin
Subject: Re: Matthew Reid's "Jane"
Thanks for the info on Matthew Reid - the B-side of "Lollypops"
is a nice cover of The 4 Seasons "Cry Myself to Sleep" from their
"Born to Wander" LP.
I have a 45 on Atlantic by Van Trevor "Tuesday Girl/I Want To Cry"
thats produced by Crewe, arrangements by Sid Bass, both sides
written by "Boulanger" I wonder if its the same guy?
Billy
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 4
Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2003 22:09:35 -0500
From: Doc
Subject: Larry Verne
The Mr. Custer LP is great.
Doc
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 5
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 01:04:35 -0000
From: Steve
Subject: The Jet Set
Could someone please give some info on The Jet Set and who
they are? I cannot find any info on them or the song...
Thanks Spectropoppers for your help...
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 6
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 08:15:02 -0800 (PST)
From: Tom Taber
Subject: Re: Larry Verne's string of hits
Mr. Verne had a followup called, I believe, "Mr. Livingston" which may
have barely charted, and I don't remember ever hearing it. Another,
"Abdul's Party", was a big enough hit on WKBW Buffalo that I went out
and bought it, and it is one of a handful of records from my ill-spent
youth that has disappeared - perhaps accidentally sold at a long ago
record show. It was a string of bad jokes, such as "Would you like to
join me in a cup of tea?" "Do you think we will both fit?", and his
attempts to be admitted by Abdul to his party. The door was probably
green, and Jim Lowe had given up trying to gain admittance several
years earlier - must have been one hell of a party!
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 7
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 11:30:23 -0500
From: Teri Landi
Subject: Re: Bobby Womack "Lookin' For A Love"
Bobster:
> Simon White, I recently bought an M- 45 of What Is This? by Bobby Womack.
> His late 6Ts output was fantastic! Sounds like another Northern Soul
> raver! Now I would kill for his ORIGINAL recording of "Lookin' For A Love"
> circa 1969-70!
Bob,
You will find the original recording of "Lookin' For A Love" (from 1962) on
the Sam Cooke SAR Records Story 2CD set. Bobby originally recorded this song
with his brothers AKA The Valentinos. There are many of the great recordings
that the Womacks made for Sam's label SAR on this set including the original
"It's All Over Now" written by Bobby & his sister Shirley. Bobby's
innovative guitar work just shines. He re-recorded "LFAL" in 1974 for UA on
Lookin' For A Love Again".
I too love those Minit label recordings Bobby made in the late 60s with
Chips Moman producing.
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 8
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 11:37:04 -0500 (EST)
From: Andrew Jones
Subject: Re: Larry Verne / The Lovelites
Bob Rashkow: Larry Verne's follow-up to "Mr. Custer" was "Mr.
Livingston," with Larry as Henry Stanley. In fact, Larry recorded a
whole album of "Mr." songs, titled MISTER ... LARRY VERNE.
Also, I love the Lovelites article
http://www.spectropop.com/lovelites/index.htm
Very well done as usual, Mick. But I was surprised to read at the
very end that Alan Betrock is dead; his book "Girl Groups: The Story
of a Sound" was a seminal work of Spectropop scholarship.
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 9
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 16:52:50 -0000
From: Declan Meehan
Subject: Re: The Breakaways' Darling tune
I asked:
> ...haven't posted for a while, but watching a VHS copy of
> DARLING starring Julie Christie and Dirk Bogarde the other
> day got me wondering about the girl group track during one
> of the party scenes. Forgive my ignorance, but anyone know
> it or who it's by?
M. Anthony replied:
> That darling tune was "Someone To Talk To, Baby" performed
> by Britain's greatest girl group, the one and only Breakaways.
> Unfortunately, the track was never released on record. The
> group's own releases were few and far between. However, at
> their peak, they were the busiest session singers in the land...
Thanks for replying ! Should of guessed that it was the Breakaways
('Don't be a Baby' being a particular fave) and hoping for a
compilation of released and unreleased stuff might be released in the
near future as was mentioned on the group some months ago now. Anyone
out there know if the Breakaways comp is in the pipeline still?
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 10
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 12:40:23 -0800
From: Mikey
Subject: Re: The Jet Set
Steve:
> Could someone please give some info on The Jet Set and who they are?
> I cannot find any info on them or the song... Thanks Spectropoppers
> for your help...
>>>>>>>The Jet Set were a folk group in the early 60s. They had a one
famous member, for some reason I think it was Roger Mcguinn of the Byrds.
Mikey
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 11
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 10:14:59 -0800 (PST)
From: Watson Macblue
Subject: Re: Roy Phillips
Dan Hughes, in a very helpful reply to my Roy Phillips inquiry, wrote:
> And I found this: When the Peddlers disbanded, Phillips emigrated to
> New Zealand and now owns a recording studio in Auckland.
> And this:... and the cool organ sounds and strange crooning (by one
> Roy Phillips, who is now a taxi driver in New Zealand)
These quotes throw up a couple of interesting questions. One is the
musical fates of the other two Peddlers. Trevor Morais, the so-good-it-
was-scary drummer (eat your heart out, Hal Blaine), went on to work with
Bryan Ferry and (oh, gee!) Bjork, and now has a studio in Malaga. Bassist
Tab Martin (who sat on a stool and held his bass vertically on his knee -
weird) is similarly holed up in Portugal. So how did Roy Phillips wind up
driving a cab? I get a strong sense of internal band seismic problems
centred around Phillips; anyone who could do what he did to a helpless
little song like By The Time I Get To Phoenix almost certainly has a mean
streak. (The song is delivered in an arrogant snarl that suggests an
airstrike might not be out of the question by the time he gets to Oklahoma).
Dan's second quote, however, suggests a more interesting question - if Phillips's singing is "strange crooning," then what constitutes good
singing? Someone (I'd like to be reminded *who*) once said that Bryan Ferry
sounded like "a subaltern on Talent Night," but he did better than the
Peddlers (and look closely at his relationship with the rest of Roxy in the
light of what I wrote above). Similarly, if Phillips is a "strange
crooner", what's Lou Reed? I was once threatened - I exaggerate not one jot
- with physical violence if I didn't switch off Reed's "dooitwitchoo"
assault on Kurt Weill's September Song. And exactly how much paper can you
put between (say) Celine Dion and (say) Kathy Kirby? As a matter of stone-
cold technical fact, Kirby was by far the better singer, but ...
Watson
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 12
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 18:38:21 +0100
From: Hans Ket
Subject: Re Judy Henske's Dolphins In the Sea
Fred:
> Hans, is "Dolphins In the Sea" (by Judy Henske) the Fred Neil song?
Yes it is Fred. You can see/hear the song and record label/credits
from the unsurpassed http://www.spectropop.com/JackNitzsche/index.htm
Hans
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 13
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 11:10:54 +0000
From: Phil Milstein
Subject: Re: Judy Henske's Dolphins In The Sea
Dan Hughes wrote:
> Is (Judy Henske's) "Dolphins In the Sea" the Fred Neil song?
It is the same song. I think Neil's version had a shorter title, but the
song is the same, and Henske's is a pretty faithful rendering.
--Phil M.
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 14
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 18:18:39 -0000
From: Jeffery Kennedy
Subject: The Peanuts, Anyone?
I am looking for biographical/career information about the Japanese
pop female duo the Peanuts. I've found a terrific Japanese web site
dedicated to the pair, but my search for information in English has
proven fruitless so far.
Some background: The Peanuts made records for 20 years or so, roughly
1957-1977. They covered many American pop hits, including "Johnny
Angel, "Johnny Get Angry," "California Dreamin'," and "Proud Mary" (!!!),
and they recorded in several languages, including Japanese, English and
German. They made at least one appearance on the "Ed Sullivan Show" and
released at least one LP in the U.S. They are probably most famous in
the U.S. for playing twin fairies in the original "Mothra" movie.
I really enjoy the Peanuts CD reissues I've been able to get from
Japan, but I know nothing about them, really, not even their names!
Any details anyone could provide would be most appreciated.
Thanks a million.
Jeffery Kennedy
San Francisco
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 15
Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2003 06:55:56 +1030
From: Norman
Subject: Re: Breakaways
M. Anthony:
> Here's a revamped list of acts on whose recordings the (Breakaways) sang
> backing vocals. Can anyone add any names to the list:
I am led to believe that when Australian singer Normie Rowe recorded in
England The Breakaways were featured backing singers. The tracks recorded
in England included Ooh La La and It's Not Easy. So, I suppose Normie can
be added to that list.
Norman
Message: 13
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 00:42:24 +0000 (GMT)
From: M. Anthony
Subject: Re: Darling tune
Declan Meehan wrote:
> ...haven't posted for a while, but watching a VHS copy of
> DARLING starring Julie Christie and Dirk Bogarde the other
> day got me wondering about the girl group track during one
> of the party scenes. Forgive my ignorance, but anyone know
> it or who it's by?
That darling tune was "Someone To Talk To, Baby" performed
by Britain's greatest girl group, the one and only Breakaways.
Unfortunately, the track was never released on record. The
group's own releases were few and far between. However, at
their peak, they were the busiest session singers in the land.
Here's a
Steve Aldo
John Andrews
Paul Anka
Richard Anthony
Antoinette
Miki Antony
Valerie Avon
Burt Bacharach
Bachelors
Long John Baldry
Brigitte Bardot
Sandra Barry
George Bean
Madeline Bell
Barry Benson
Dave Berry
Johnny Bev
Cilla Black
Tony Blackburn
Graham Bonney
Tony Brook
Elkie Brooks
Joe Brown
Tommy Bruce
Jan Burnnette
Ethna Campbell
Vicki Carr
Carter-Lewis & the Southerners
Dany Chandelle
Chubby Checker
Petula Clark
Alma Cogan
Cindy Cole
Glenda Collins
Tony Colton
Peter Cook & Dudley Moore
Tommy Cooper
Louise Cordet
Ken Cope
Harry H. Corbett
Chris Curtis
John Curtis
Alan David
Troy Daines
Patrick Dane
Guy Darrell
Alan David
Bryan Davies
Billie Davis
Kiki Dee
Carol Deene
Jackie DeShannon
Lonnie Donegan
Diana Dors
Donna Douglas
Charlie Drake
The Dunning Brothers
Vince Eager
Christine Evans
Adam Faith
Marianne Faithfull
Georgie Fame
Bruce Forsyth
The Fourmost
Fran & Alan
Freddie & the Dreamers
Billy Fury
Gary & the Ariels
Giles, Giles & Fripp
Linda Graham
Julie Grant
Lorraine Gray
Johnny B. Great
Teddy Green
Johnny Halliday
Francoise Hardy
Jet Harris
Michael Haslam
The Tony Hatch Sound
Heinz
Jimi Hendrix
Robert Henry
Susan Holliday
Christine Holmes
The Honeycombs
Mike Hurst
Kris Ife
Frank Ifield
The Interns
Bid Dee Irwin
Simone Jackson
Tony Jackson & the Vibrations
Calvin James
Jimmy James & the Vagabonds
Nicky James
Joey & the Gentlemen
Jack Jones
Janie Jones
John Paul Jones
Paul Jones
Rick Jones
Ronnie Jones
Salena Jones
Samantha Jones
Tom Jones
Judd
Jimmy Justice
Eden Kane
Barbara Kay
Karol Keyes
Johnny Kidd
Eddie King
Kathy Kirby
The Koobas
Billy J. Kramer
Krimson Kake
James Last
The Lemmings
Stevie Lewis
Russ Loader
Mark London
The Long & the Short
Debbie Lee
Lulu
Kenny Lynch
Vera Lynn
Jackie Lynton
Glo Macari
The McKinleys
Janie Marden
Beryl Marsden
Jean Martin
Millicent Martin
Johnny Mathis
Susan Maughan
Millie
Valerie Mitchell
Mood Mosaic
Zoot Money
Bob Monkhouse
The Moontrekkers
The Motions
Matt Munro
David Nelson
Olivia Newton John
Patsy Ann Noble
Mally Page
Jan Panter
Rita Pavone
Peanut
Peter & Gordon
Pinkerton's Assorted Colours
Adrienne Poster
Brian Poole
Yvonne Prenosilova
P. J. Proby
Christine Quaite
Daryl Quist
Emma Rede
Tawney Reed
Lewis Rich
Cliff Richard
Bobby Rio
Julie Rogers
Gloria Roma
John Rowles
Barbara Ruskin
Paul & Barry Ryan
Bobby Rydell
Freddie Ryder
Barry St. John
Tammy St. John
Johnny Sandon
Mike Sarne
Linda Saxone
Helen Shapiro
Tony Sheveton
Andee Silver
Simon & Pi
Joan Sims
Ray Singer
Martha Smith
Sounds Incorporated
Sheila Southern
Dusty Springfield
Sue & Sunshine
John Summers
Victor Sylvester
David Symonds
Sharon Tandy
Eleanor Toner
Jackie Trent
Twice As Much
Frankie Vaughan
Dave Ventura
The Walker Brothers
Dionne Warwick
George E. Washington
Tony Washington
Dilys Watling
John L. Watson & the Hummelflugs
Marty Wilde
Mike & Bernie Winters
Mark Wirtz
Mark Wynter
By the way, I'll be contacting the winner(s) of my little
Soul Quiz off list.
M. Anthony
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 16
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 16:36:54 -0500
From: Mike Miller
Subject: Re: Matthew Reid's "Jane"
Hey Billy
Actually, it's funny, but the Four Seasons were the ones who
covered the tune "Cry Myself To Sleep" as although it was
written by Bob Gaudio; it was first recorded by Matthew Reid
on Topix records in 1961, a full 3 years before the "Born To
Wander" LP. The Four Seasons appear on the original recording
by Reid, but only in backup roles.
Van Trevor is definitely an artist of his own and should not be
confused with Matthew Reid (aka D.C. Larue). he had quite a few
recordings of which at least 2 singles were produced by Crewe
in the early 60s.
doowopdaddy
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 17
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 15:13:10 -0500
From: Astro
Subject: Re: The Peanuts, Anyone?
Jeffery Kennedy:
> I really enjoy the Peanuts CD reissues I've been able to get from
> Japan, but I know nothing about them, really, not even their names!
Though it is in Japanese, this Peanuts website is FANTASTIC!!!:
http://www.interq.or.jp/world/gracenet/peanuts-holiday-top.htm
I can't read Japanaese, but I've explored this site using babelfish,
and with a little creative guesswork (and a LOT of tolerance for
clumsy computer translation!) I was able to get a lot out of this
site from bios to career highlights, filmography (yes they did much
more than Mothra movies!!) and discography. One neat fact is that
they were on the Ed Sullivan show, and I keep watching "Best of
Sullivan" on PBS hoping against hope that their appearance comes up.
Oh, and I forgot to add that their names are Emi and Umi (sometimes
spelled Yumi) Ito (sometimes I see them credited as The Peanut Sisters)
Astro
Hope this helps
Astro
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 18
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 15:09:40 -0800 (PST)
From: Steve Harvey
Subject: Nothern Gore
Can anyone tell me what Lesley Gore tune was
considered Northern Soul? Is this a cruel hoax?
I love her stuff, but never considered it soul.
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 19
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 22:56:08 -0000
From: Roger Kaye
Subject: Re: Freddie is alive and well
JB:
> The group is called The Spirit of Atlanta. Buddah Records
> LP. BDS 5135 ST. 1973. It has recently been reissued. "Freddie
> Is Alive And Well" was also issued as a single in 1974. Did
> not place on the Soul Charts in the U.S. It's very orchestrally
> funky and bears no melodic resemblance to "Freddie's Dead".
> Highly recommended uptempo funkiness at this address.
Thanks JB. I bet I first heard this spun on the Sugar Shack all those
years ago. Great tune. Now that I know who did it I'll have to track
it down once the snow melts. Can you help me out with another answer
song /rewrite - this one is a version of Edwin Starr's "War", but the
chant is "Crime" this time. No luck figuring this one out and haven't
heard it in years.
-- RK --
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 20
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 18:27:36 EST
From: Paul Richards
Subject: Re: Stu Phillips
Stu rules the school! 'Stu Who?' is a great story of a great
composer, thoroughly recommended.Rock on Stu!
http://www.spectropop.com/recommends/
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 21
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 21:52:27 -0500
From: James Botticelli
Subject: Soft As Snow
To the Spectropopper who over a year ago sent me a CD-R called
"Soft As Snow": I became aware of the collection's brilliance
today. Also, any word on the Spectropop NYC Party? Just back
from a blizzard there. It was wonderful. It didn't hurt that I
found The Walker Brothers double CD from Holland either!
--
James Botticelli
Member: The Easy Rebellion
Will I get discovered before I get found out?
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 22
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 15:03:50 -0800 (PST)
From: Steve Harvey
Subject: Re: The Jet Set
I thought the Jet Set was the embryonic Byrds: Clark,
McGuinn and Crosby.
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 23
Date: Thu, 20 Feb 2003 01:52:55 -0500
From: Country Paul
Subject: Charlatans SF; Keillor book; Reid; Valentinos; more
Steve Harvey:
> Al Linkletter had a hootenanny album with various acts
> including David and the Balladeers.
Actually it was JACK Linkletter, host of ABC-TV's "Hootenanny"
series and son of ART. (Is Al the "missing Linkletter"?!?)
And Steve, I have the probably more familiar Charlatans (SF) 45,
Van Dyke Parks' "High Coin" on Phillips, also with a picture sleeve.
A friend who was in SF in '67 said they were excellent live and are
unjustly forgotten.
> The Shadow Knows was not the band's choice for the single.
> It was supposed to be Buffy Saint Marie's Codeine
Your reference reminds me of the excellent version by Matthew Moore
Plus Four on White Whale (#223, I believe). Stylistically related
to the Nitzsche/Henske "Dolphins" (yes, the Fred Neil song). Thanks
for posting it, Martin!
George Leonard:
> How would you evaluate Garrison Keilor's classic book, WBLT, a
> Radio Romance? .... "Spectropop: an Internet Romance."
> We never realize we're in "history" until later.
I'd discuss the book with you on- or off-list, but I confess I hadn't
even heard about it until now. But, about your comment regarding this
group: There have been times in my life that in the process of doing
something - being at WBRU helping to create freeform radio, doing it
and starving for a living at WHCN, and some personal stuff, I've
realized in some of those unique moments that they will become "the
good old days" I'll be looking back on later. There have been a couple
of times in the couple of years I've been proudly associated with this
group that I've had the same feelings about it. (And comments like
those of the Lovelites only reinforce that feeling.)
Mike Miller, thank you for the Matthew Reid info. I'm finding "Jane" to
be quite delightful on repeated listening, especially with the Seasons'
beautiful and rich back-ups. I also have "Lollipops Went Out of Style,"
which I think is a bit too cute but still very well done.
Dan Hughes, I'm very happy to stand corrected about Larry Verne.
Obviously rumors of his passing were greatly exaggerated! (Guess
I'd better get myself the Billboard One-Hit Wonders book.)
Bob Rashkow:
> I would kill for [Bobby Womack's] ORIGINAL recording of "Lookin'
> For A Love" circa 1969-70!
The actual original is on SAR/Abkco Records' 2-CD box, "Sam Cooke's
SAR Records Story," recorded 2/28/62 in Chicago by The Valentinos
(Bobby; Cecil; Curtis; Friendly, Jr.; and Harry Womack) as SAR S132.
Bobby sang lead, as he did on the more familiar "It's All Over Now"
(recorded 3/24/64 in Hollywood), SAR S154. Both are produced by Sam
Cooke, and are wonderful!
Finally: RIP Johnny Paycheck at age 64 today, from emphysema and asthma.
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
Message: 24
Date: Tue, 18 Feb 2003 09:05:01 -0800
From: David Ponak
Subject: The Liquid Room 2/16/03
The Liquid Room, (usually) hosted by David Ponak (me), airs
every Saturday night from Midnight to 3AM (PDT) on 90.7FM KPFK
Los Angeles, as well as streaming at http://kpfk.org.
Please join me this coming weekend (Feb 22/23) for a special
Black History Month edition of the Liquid Room.
The following week (March 1/2), I'll be joined for a live in
studio performance by local buzz band, The 88
The Liquid Room 2/16/03
1.The Association/Come On In
Birthday (WB)
2.The Mike Flowers Pops/Velvet Underground Medley
A Groovy Place (Fontana-UK)
3.David Alexandre Winter/Qu'est-ce Que J'ai Danse!
Spinout 60's (Universal Music-Japan)
4.The 88/How Good It Could Be
Kind Of Light (EMK)
5.The Turtles/Guide For The Married Man
The Turtles Anthology (Rhino)
6.Mello Cads/Soapland
Soft As A Rock (Franklin Castle)
7.The Negro Problem/Bermuda Love Triangle
Welcome Black (Smile)
8.New Order/Thieves Like Us
International (Rhino)
9.Karminsky Experience Inc./The Wayward Camel
The Power Of Suggestion (POB-UK)
10.The Wondermints/On The Run
Mind If We Make Love To You (Smile)
11.The Association/Birthday Morning
The Association Anthology (Rhino)
12.Lemon Jelly/Soft
Nice Weather For Ducks (single b-side) (XL-UK)
13.The Four Seasons/C'Mon Marianne
The Very Best Of Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons (Rhino)
14.The Human League/The Black Hit Of Space
Travelogue (Caroline)
15.Houston Wells And The Marksmen/North Wind
Joe Meek-The Alchemist Of Pop (Castle-UK)
16.The Frank Popp Ensemble/The Catwalk
The Sound Of Garden (Philter-Japan)
17.The Turtles/She's My Girl
The Turtles Anthology (Rhino)
18.Primal Scream/Autoban 66
Evil Heat (Sony)
19.Scott Walker/On Your Own Again
Scott 4 (Phillips-UK)
20.Royksopp/Remind Me (Ernest St. Laurent Moonfish Mix)
Melody A.M. (Astralwerks)
21.Tom Jones/I Who Have Nothing
Mr. Jones (V2-UK)
22.New Order/Touched By The Hand Of God (Original 12")
International (Rhino)
23.Puffy/Tokyo Nights
Nice (Sony-UK)
24.Simian/When I Go
We Are Your Friends (Astralwerks)
25.Katerine/Le Soleil Suffit
8eme Ciel (Universal France)
26.The Association/Goodbye Forever
The Association Anthology (Rhino)
27.The Association/Goodbye Columbus
The Association Anthology (Rhino)
28.Seksu Roba/Intersexual Overdrive
Eenie Meenie Sampler (Eenie Meenie)
29.Qypthone/On The Pallette
Montuno No. 5 (Happiness-Japan)
30.The Polyphonic Spree/Hanging Around
(single) (679-UK)
31.Elektel/Better Living For Better Kindness
Space Travel With Teddy Bear (Sucre-Japan)
32.Gal Costa/Objeto Sim, Objet Nao
Gal Costa (Phillips-Japan)
33.Casino Vs. Japan/Summer Clip
Whole Numbers Play The Basics (Carpark)
34.The Wondermints/Ride
Mind If We Make Love To You (Smile)
35.The Four Seasons/Opus 17
The Very Best Of Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons (Rhino)
36.Mello Cads/To Put Up With You
Soft As A Rock (Franklin Castle)
37.The Negro Problem/Watering Hole
Welcome Black (Smile)
38.New Order/Shell Shock
International (Rhino)
39.Paul Williams/Mornin' I'll Be Movin' On
Someday Man (Reprise)
-------------------[ archived by Spectropop ]-------------------
End
