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Posted

Was this a Cleveland group that recorded for Way Out Records?  If I'm not mistaken, the most well known Soul Charades group was a New York group that recorded for MGM, Choreo, and Okeh. 

Posted

This sounds like a White soul band from Ohio, most of those tracks are covers, this could have been a demo for shows. I don't see a Way Out connection and there was no released record by a Charades on Way Out.

 

Robb, what is "choreo"? The New York group recorded for Okeh, Mercury, and MGM and included Cuba Gooding Sr. pre-Main Ingredient.

Posted

This sounds like a White soul band from Ohio, most of those tracks are covers, this could have been a demo for shows. I don't see a Way Out connection and there was no released record by a Charades on Way Out.

 

Robb, what is "choreo"? The New York group recorded for Okeh, Mercury, and MGM and included Cuba Gooding Sr. pre-Main Ingredient.

i hadn't heard about any connection between a Charades group from Cleveland.  I was just asking if anyone knew about this group, and if they had recorded for Way Out.  There wasn't much else going on in Cleveland as far as Soul music production, other than Saru, Courier and Compass, and other small labels. 

 

The Charades on Choreo sang "Please Be My Love Tonight", which was an East Coast regional hit in 1962.  They were from New York.  But, as you didn't list them along with the other Cuba Gooding Charades' labels, i guess they must have been a different New York group.

Posted

Now that I've listened to the snippets, I agree that they must be a Caucasian Soul group.  They sound pretty good, at least on "No time For You", "Ain't No Big Thing", and "Sweet Little Girl", that rock song, "Underdog" was terrible.

Posted

google does take you to a brief bit of iinfo about a short lived Cleveland  "the Charades"

 

https://www.angelfire.com/ny/bolinfan/canyon.html

 

 

clip

Maver's next group, the Charades, formed in 1969 (evolving later into a slightly different version known as Charade). Steve Popovich, a friend of Maver's who was then working for Columbia Records in New York, introduced him to a Columbia vice president, who flew to Cleveland to hear the Charades play at the Agora. He signed them to Columbia, promising that Sylvester Stone, of Sly and the Family Stone, would produce their record. But a few weeks later, the vice president called to say he was leaving the label to manage Sly and the Farrely Stone and cotfid not take on any new projects.
 
The Charades ended up signing with Columbia subsidiary Epic. They went to New York to record at CBS, released a single and opened for well-known artists. Then Epic told their manager that the label wanted the group to record an album at Columbia's new studios in San Francisco, under the auspices of two top Columbia producers.
 
more info via the link
  • Helpful 1
Posted

Choreo that I know was a NY label, released mostly "dance instruction records".

Not sure if that's the label Robb means though.

Pretty sweet cover of "No Time For You" & I actually like the "Underdog" track a lot.  Is that a cover??

Not sure if they sound all white, might be mixed.

Cool find.

Guest jameson
Posted

thanks much for all the info so far.

Posted

Choreo that I know was a NY label, released mostly "dance instruction records".

Not sure if that's the label Robb means though.

Pretty sweet cover of "No Time For You" & I actually like the "Underdog" track a lot.  Is that a cover??

Not sure if they sound all white, might be mixed.

Cool find.

 

this is the record Robb mentioned, the label is Ava:

 

Posted

also, I'm sure all the songs are covers, although not every song was in the audio file to confirm:

 

- ain't no big thing is a radiants cover
- lucky ole sun is pretty much a traditional
- sweet little girl is a manhattans cover
- underdog is a sly cover as soulhawk mentioned
- don't look back is probably a temptations cover 
- don't waste your time is a 5 stairsteps cover
- no time for your is a commands cover
- you that i need is probably a temptations cover
Posted (edited)

Ava was Fred Astaire's label, distributed by MGM. It was originally Choreo Records and the name was changed in 1962.

Edited by garethx
  • 2 months later...
Posted

The band cited in the link is the band that made the acetate, confirmed by a band member. Most of the Charades were originally in the band Dick Whittingtons Cats, and were the band on the Bocky and the Visions 45s on Redda. The only other record by these Charades is a 45 on Epic "And You Do"/Somebodys Watching You" - the A side was a hit on Cleveland radio in the summer of 1970. The B side is another Sly/Family Stone cover.

 

google does take you to a brief bit of iinfo about a short lived Cleveland  "the Charades"

 

https://www.angelfire.com/ny/bolinfan/canyon.html

 

 

clip

Maver's next group, the Charades, formed in 1969 (evolving later into a slightly different version known as Charade). Steve Popovich, a friend of Maver's who was then working for Columbia Records in New York, introduced him to a Columbia vice president, who flew to Cleveland to hear the Charades play at the Agora. He signed them to Columbia, promising that Sylvester Stone, of Sly and the Family Stone, would produce their record. But a few weeks later, the vice president called to say he was leaving the label to manage Sly and the Farrely Stone and cotfid not take on any new projects.
 
The Charades ended up signing with Columbia subsidiary Epic. They went to New York to record at CBS, released a single and opened for well-known artists. Then Epic told their manager that the label wanted the group to record an album at Columbia's new studios in San Francisco, under the auspices of two top Columbia producers.
 
more info via the link

 

  • Helpful 1

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