Jump to content
  • Sign Up

Ady Croasdell

Members
  • Posts

    6,597
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    28
  • Feedback

    0%

Everything posted by Ady Croasdell

  1. Anyone got a contact for anyone connected to the lass who sang He Was A Big Freak and Stepping In Her I Miller Shoes? She was on Island and Just Sunshine, there's a girl wanting to do a documentary on her. Ady
  2. Does anyone know if the Sequins on Gold Star/Crajon were the same as the ones on Renfro? The Soul Harmony book says not but it does say the Renfro ones were the same as the ones on Detroit Sound. Which means the ones in the In Crowd are the wrong ones! Ady
  3. Aktcherly it's the fey non soul approach of both Spearmint and Johnny Boy that makes them so groovy. There's no point in a couple of English wimps trying to out-soul sing the US originals. What would you know Smith, you Perry Como clothes horse. A-D
  4. Talking of mixes there's a great new one based on Cigarette Ashes by Johnny Boy called The Generation That Bought More Soul. I think it's brilliant (I also loved Spearmint's Sweeping The Nation which used Out On The Floor) but a fellow list member wasn't too impressed. Ady
  5. Before vinyl I used to collect cigarette cards (and newts). Incidentally I just read that our (LCFC) 60s/70s wizzard of the wing, Lenny Glover (who may have been Charlton previously I know it was a London club), just got three and a half years for part of a big dope smuggling operation. Graham Cross also did time after embezzling his own Post Office and one of that eras players was shagged by Joe Orton on the eve of a cup final. That makes Messrs Dickov, Gillespie and Sinclair look pretty tame. Up the City Ady PS Apologies to footy haters but there is a sexual reference to liven it up.
  6. Good on yer. Bring it down on Saturday and I'll forge Keith Peacock's autograph for you. Ady
  7. Can anyone loan me He's A Flirt? Ady
  8. Is that Gayle Adams (one of Randy's old plays) a freak price and is it just the 12", I'm sure I've got it buried somewhere on 7 & 12" Ady
  9. He was Al Wilson's brother. Ady
  10. That brings tears to my eyes, though you can't tell with those glasses on. Ady
  11. Funnily enough, I only just discovered 'The Drifter' is a bit of a dancefloor disaster for my "Bambi on ice" legs. Speaking of which if you check out Gene's photos you'll see me trying to twist to Carol & Gerri in my gardening jumper and dad's trousers. That geezer who doesn't like the intro to 'Get Out' has got it wrong. It's the easiest bit. Ady
  12. Thanks Kolla and whoever did the technical thing. Tony I didn't mean sultry, you look like you're playing with yourself. A-D
  13. Blox, it doesn't come up. Speaking of which are you doing a Sylvia Kristel in the rest of your photo Tony?
  14. So is that how you get your mug shot on the posting. I want to see me in those top punk glasses so I'll stick this up. That's Clarkie & Roger in the car on the way to Wigan. Roger drove for years without a licence, we were ever so naughty in those days. Ady
  15. They were still cutting acetates on 78 as late as 1964, I've got Lou Johnson's 'The Panic Is On' on an Associated one. Ady
  16. DORIS TROY Doris passed away yesterday, 16th June 2004, in her Las Vegas home. Tap to view this Soul Source News/Article in full
  17. DORIS TROY Doris passed away yesterday, 16th June 2004, in her Las Vegas home. I’m not sure of the causes but she had suffered from breathing problems for a long while. Born Doris Payne in New York City in 1937, she was a truly great soul singer and songwriter who shot to fame in 1963 with her top ten Atlantic smash ‘Just One Look’. She cut more soulful sides for the label; ‘He Don’t Belong To Me’ and ‘Tomorrow Is Another Day’ are personal favourites. By 1964 she had visited the UK and enjoyed the Swinging London scene so much that she stayed (she recorded here frequently over the next ten years). In that year her ‘Whatcha Gonna Do About It’ single was a hit in the UK only and that as well as ‘Just One Look’ were covered to great commercial success by the Hollies. She then moved on to Capitol records for a great double sider, ‘Face Up To The Truth’ / ‘He’s Qualified’, and then on to Calla for the Philly produced Northern Soul classic ‘I’ll Do Anything’. Lack of commercial success Stateside saw her return to the UK where she signed for the Beatles’ Apple label for whom she cut an album and several singles. Her signing was down to the group themselves who had been big fans of hers for years, in fact the whole of the UK pop scene seemed to be captivated by her talent and unaffected charm. After Apple she cut for the UK People label and staged concerts with gospel choirs that she had worked with throughout her music business career. In the early 90s she wrote and performed in an autobiographical play about her career called "Mama I Want To Sing". When the show came to the West End she acted her own mother’s role and Chaka Khan, Deniece Williams and Mica Paris acted her part at different times. The show ran for several months, and stars such as Prince and Stevie Wonder turned up to see it and meet the legend. At this time I was running my fourth Cleethorpes Northern Soul weekender and had been let down by an act I had booked for it. I rang Doris cold and asked her if she could come up and help me out with a PA at the event. She agreed to straight away (and very reasonably), even if it was on the only day she had off from the show. Her presence was tremendous and of course she was great with the fans. The meeting lead to me working as her agent, when she decided to stay on in London after her show closed. She performed many jazz and supper clubs and did a full soul show at the 100 Club where Van Morrison came down to see her as a fan, remembering her fondly from the 60s. She then appeared at another Cleethorpes weekender with full backing band and this was filmed by Channel 4 for a documentary they did about the event. Bad health forced her to return to the States where she lived in New York with her sister Vi, a top DJ over there. Eventually her health worries forced her to live in Las Vegas where the climate helped her breathing. Doris was one of the most understanding and kind hearted people you could ever wish to meet. Her approachability often made you forget what a talented artist she was. She would treat each fan as graciously as each megastar who came to see her. And when she referred to her friends as "Baby, Baby, Baby", they always felt very special. Ady Croasdell


×
×
  • Create New...