Ady Croasdell
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Everything posted by Ady Croasdell
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Thanks Andy, I didn’t think Kent had a Jobete connection. I can only see You Got Me Hurtin All Over as by Dimples on Jobete but she’s more likely
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Thanks Robb. I’m tending towards the theory that it’s Dimples on the Ollie Jackson now
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Hi Robb, do you know for definite Kent was with Jobete. I think Marcene "Dimples" Harris was but I don't know anything by Kent as Jobete. If you do know of any, I would love to know the titles. Thanks Ady
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Boot. Stealing a lot of great tracks from the Dave Godin comps
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Articles: Dave Godin's Deep Soul Treasures Ranked 1-100
Ady Croasdell replied to a topic in Front Page News & Articles
Top of my head Jaibi You Got Me Dori Grayson Try Love Barbara Lynn Suffer the Enchanters I Paid For The Party Ray Gant Don’t Leave Me Baby Soul City Who Knows Kenny Carter Showdown Van & Titus Cry Baby Cry Knight Brothers I’m Never Gonna Live It Down Helena Ferguson Where Is The Party -
The Best Of Margie Joseph and Hurt Of The City LPs
Ady Croasdell replied to Soulandy's topic in Look At Your Box
All correct suppositions and statements apart from a few of the anniversary TPs were skipped because we were late: surprise! -
My view is that most mod clubs in the late 60s played a high percentage of soul but it wasn’t until about 1968 that the Wheel played all nighters of virtually all old soul records. In fact Old Soul was the name given to the scene round my way (Northants crowd). The Wheel was the leader but other areas had their own thing. My home town Market Harborough ran all nighters like this in 1970 at the Lantern club in the Frollocking Kneecap discotheque. The night the Wheel closed, a lot of blocked customers who had been rudely interrupted drove down to Harboro for it. About May The previous year I went to a similar Nighter in a disused railway station in North Northants so the Nighter scene was well established around our way by then. There had been one earlier at Earls Barton racetrack but I don’t think it would have been exclusively old records. All these clubs were largely illegal so none of them advertised, it was word of mouth. The Northern Soul rag was given to the scene after it was established so largely irrelevant as to the beginning
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Obituary Tony May came from an arts-based family. His father was an actor and classically trained violinist, while his mother was a jazz pianist and composer; she wrote an Ella Fitzgerald 1939 recording. Tony learnt the piano and, as a teenager, tuned them at venues including the Harlem and Brooklyn Apollos and many other top black music night spots. This gave him an insight into the world of contemporary music. A degree course in Physical Education at Temple University didn’t work out - he found the course uninspiring and quit. Musicians had always fascinated him but his first job was in the air force as a technician. Tony May eventually got into the music business as a humble record store worker, at the legendary Harlem black music store the Record Shack. A similarly unskilled job, at the big publishing organisation BMI, was taken on with the aim of furthering his musical learning. However, he was moved into the accounts department; which wasn’t really the idea. While there he began writing songs on the piano and met a fellow songwriter Naomi Stancil, which led to a recording session; Naomi knew an engineer there. On entering the studio Tony fell in love with the whole milieu and to get into a studio, even if only employed as a lowly gofer, he was prepared to drop his wages from $250 per week to $55. Within a year he was well-versed in recording techniques - his air force training helped. He worked as a full studio engineer first at Adelphi, then at Mira Sound in the Hotel Americana with Brooks Arthur, who was Goffin and King’s main engineer. Later workplaces included DCP for Don Costa and then the top independent studio in town - Bell Sound. He eventually became a master engineer for RCA. His film work on classics such as Barbarella, Cotton Comes To Harlem and Alice’s Restaurant are of particular note. The list of his musical engineering credits are endless but “It’s Your Thing” for the Isleys and the “Into The Mystic” for Van Morrison (recorded live) stand out. While in the air force, May joined a vocal group that included George Banks, the brother of Larry Banks who was a member of New York vocal group the Four Fellows. While on leave Tony met George’s sister Harriet with whom he fell in love and married. He also became close friends with Larry and the two became life-long buddies. Much of that friendship was based on music, both were songwriters and in 1962 the Four Fellows recorded Tony’s first released number - ‘The City’ for the Pop-Line label. The pair formed Kev-Ton publishing and their next project was the mighty ‘Go Now’ / ‘It Sounds Like My Baby’ session that became a US R&B hit. They then saw the Moody Blues’ cover version of the Larry Banks and Four Fellows-member Milton Bennett’s ‘Go Now’ song chart worldwide. Bessie’s next single was for Spokane, both ‘Do It Now’ and ‘You Should’ve Been A Doctor’ were Banks & May songs and they also produced the tracks. An all-girl group called the Pleasures would be the duo’s next project, they cut three sides which came out over two 45s on RSVP in 1964 and 65. The Pleasures’ lead singer was Joan Bates, later known as Jaibi when she married, wrote and sang with Larry Banks. By 1965 Tony and Larry were at DCP Productions in Manhattan where they cut Larry on ‘I Don’t Wanna Do It’ and ‘I’m Comin’ Home’ when the proposed singer, Kenny Carter, didn’t make the session. Tony then teamed up with Teddy Randazzo at DCP and wrote ‘You’re Not That Girl Anymore’, for Little Anthony. It was only used as an LP track, so Randazzo recorded it himself on 45, then Tony and Teddy wrote the beautiful ‘It’s A Big Mistake’ for the Royalettes, which was issued on MGM. Tony also cut Gayle Harris’ ‘Here I Go Again’ for DCP in 1965. By 1966 Tony May was a full-time engineer at most of the major facilities in Manhattan. Though he continued to write, usually with Larry, he used the pseudonym Anthony Cotto to keep his two types of work separate. It was a name he told me he adapted from the actor Yaphet Kotto. He had first used it as a co-composer along with his own real name for ‘The City’ in 1962; that was an odd thing to do – maybe Yaphet actually did have a hand in that first published work. He wrote as Anthony Cotto for the Geminis and Kenny Carter at RCA. In 1967 he reverted to Tony May when he composed and produced three more tunes, on his own, for Bessie Banks. Two were released on Verve - ‘I Can’t Make It Without You’ and ‘Need You’, the first of which became popular among UK soul fans belatedly in the 70s. The third song ‘Don’t Just Tell Me’ was unissued but was recut by Marian Love and featured on her 1972 LP that Tony produced in its entirety. The same year he wrote ‘Do You Feel It’ for the Joe Cuba Sextet on Tico. He also produced the Brazilian musician Hermito on an album in 1970 and the Brazilian jazz drummer Airto and the Voices Of Joy’s Paramount 45 in 1971. There was teo final productions of gospel LPs, one by Andrea Vereeen & The St Marks Choir in 1974 and Nat Townsley Jr’s “I Fell In Love With God” on ABC/Peacock. As the years passed Tony fell out of love with the music industry to a large degree; having to engineer an endless list of “Now That’s What I Call Music” CDs will do that to a man with taste. But he was proud of the music he and his soul mate Larry created throughout their lives. When Larry died Tony was devastated and the loss of his loving wife Harriette only a year later meant he had a very tough time. Ross Anthony May passed away 18th March 2020
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New York studio engineer, songwriter and producer who often worked with Larry Banks Tap to view this Soul Source News/Article in full
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It’s the only one that affects me like that. I play it because it sounds brilliant loud and is terrific to dance to
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I always thought they were different musically but played a couple on YouTube and they sound the same. Must have been off my box when I heard the Larry version. I got a copy off Shifty and when it arrived I played it and thought what a shit record. Then I played it out and it sounded wonderful, it’s the only record I can think of that does that to me
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Hi John, I don’t have a copy in front of me but it should say a Crossover recording which it was and which it has on the Atlantic single. It wasn’t an Atlantic recording, I think this version is a little longer than the Atlantic 45 too
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Unearthing Kenny Carter - Guardian Article
Ady Croasdell commented on Mike's article in News Archives
Not really, Kennys RCA recordings were before the Detroit Magnificents which was a one off random session. The group also featured Brooks O’Dell. The images are largely unrelated to the song -
Unearthing Kenny Carter - Guardian Article
Ady Croasdell commented on Mike's article in News Archives
Thanks Mike, great timing as we have a CD of 22 fully produced RCA tracks on Kenny from 1966 coming out in late May. It will be a truly astonishing CD -
Eddie Parker - 2 different versions or the same ?
Ady Croasdell replied to Blackpoolsoul's topic in Look At Your Box
Doh! oh yeah, so Donald Smith is probably DJ Smith. Thanks for the memory nudge -
Eddie Parker - 2 different versions or the same ?
Ady Croasdell replied to Blackpoolsoul's topic in Look At Your Box
No idea, the songs are in the link Blackpoolsoul put up a few posts up -
Eddie Parker - 2 different versions or the same ?
Ady Croasdell replied to Blackpoolsoul's topic in Look At Your Box
Anyone know those two Baku songs? Was DJ Smith one of the Smith Brothers? -
Eddie Parker - 2 different versions or the same ?
Ady Croasdell replied to Blackpoolsoul's topic in Look At Your Box
Those scans are very interesting, thanks. I’m afraid Jack wouldn’t be able to help on any of these things, he’s either got a poor memory or not interested in the minutiae of his flops -
Eddie Parker - 2 different versions or the same ?
Ady Croasdell replied to Blackpoolsoul's topic in Look At Your Box
"at least to the extent of Ashford arranging for her to be paid her royalties." What Robb says is the minimum of her involvement, it is so hard to say definitively about this part of the story. Baku was Lorraine's dog -
Eddie Parker - 2 different versions or the same ?
Ady Croasdell replied to Blackpoolsoul's topic in Look At Your Box
That's how I see it Robb -
Eddie Parker - 2 different versions or the same ?
Ady Croasdell replied to Blackpoolsoul's topic in Look At Your Box
Baku was Lorraine’s publishing company so it actually hints at her involvement, both she and Jack couldn’t remember much. It would be good to find a Smith Brother. Minefield! -
Thanks for the mention John. Tena, if you want any advice, the company I work for has been reissuing this type of material for 45 years. I’m ady.croasdell@btinternet.com if you want to pursue it. I actually have a great unissued acetate by Roy called Stop Sign
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'i've Got To Get Myself Together' Who Was First ?
Ady Croasdell replied to Tlscapital's topic in Look At Your Box
Kenny Carter's version was recorded 27/12/65 but didn't get an RCA release until May 66, the Billboard review was 12th May 66. I personally think Kenny wrote it, Julius Dixon cut it on Spyder in New York before Kenny had signed to RCA and Nate Edmonds got his name on there as part of a deal. When RCA cut it they reverted to just Kenny as writer as the first deal was probably not 100% kosher. It's odd the Nate Edmunds song registration and Kenny's recording date are only a month apart. I think we can safely say we'll never know for certain unless Spyder has a clerer memory -
All tracks sound very good; varying tempos but great performances and fully realised.
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Hi Loced Out, Sebastian kindly told me about the posting of the tapes and as Head Of A&R for Ace Records, we would be very interested in licensing the recordings through June Jackson if you were amenable to that. I have been in touch with June in the past and he is amenable to this, so let me know via email if you might be interested; I don't think he has copies of his own tapes. The one you demonstarted sounds excellent. Many thanks to Seb for the detective work and I know June was an arranger and producer so these are likely to be his own recordings. I'm ady.croasdell@btinternet.com and Ace Records is www.acerecords.com Thanks Ady