Seems that by early 67, Mitch Ryder was far from happy with the tracks Bob Crewe was getting him to record …. he broke free from Crewe (having to loose the Detroit Wheels along the way) and started performing live with a new backing band. Seems he was still tied to Crewe & New Voice / Dynovoice Records as he cut more stuff with the teaming right thru till late 68 (unless Crewe had quite a bit of material in the can in late 67 / early 68). By 69, he'd switched to the distributing label (DOT) and was recording with the Stax crew down in Memphis. 1970 saw him rebadge himself & his band as Detroit featuring Mitch Ryder and cutting for Paramount.
Mitch never really got back the commercial success he'd enjoyed with his early Bob Crewe outings though, but he toured the US performing live for a good length of time.
Seems that by early 67, Mitch Ryder was far from happy with the tracks Bob Crewe was getting him to record …. he broke free from Crewe (having to loose the Detroit Wheels along the way) and started performing live with a new backing band. Seems he was still tied to Crewe & New Voice / Dynovoice Records as he cut more stuff with the teaming right thru till late 68 (unless Crewe had quite a bit of material in the can in late 67 / early 68). By 69, he'd switched to the distributing label (DOT) and was recording with the Stax crew down in Memphis. 1970 saw him rebadge himself & his band as Detroit featuring Mitch Ryder and cutting for Paramount.
Mitch never really got back the commercial success he'd enjoyed with his early Bob Crewe outings though, but he toured the US performing live for a good length of time.
This article captures the anger he felt towards Crewe after their initial period together … https://baltimorejam.wordpress.com/2015/03/14/the-mitch-ryder-show-courtesy-of-george-shuba/
Edited by Roburt