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Roburt

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Everything posted by Roburt

  1. Your track has sort of an 'Impressions' feel to it .......... ...... was that your intention when you went into the studio ? If not, who's sound were you aiming at (who were the groups you admired) ??
  2. No idea if the Curtis Anderson who played in the band that backed up Jimmy Briscoe (see end of attached article) is the same Curtis A who made "How Can I Tell Her" ... BUT ... it seems strange to me that there would be 2 C.A's involved on the Baltimore music scene at the same time (the HCITH guy mainly being a local radio stn DJ in 72) ................. ... mind you if there were 2 different guys of that name on the Balto scene, that may have been the reason his record was released as just by Curtis. However, it could just as easily have been to hide the fact that the track was by a top Baltimore radio DJ and thus improve its chances of getting air play on other radio stns.
  3. All the CD series that UnsignedSoul put out are well known to MS fans. Each CD they have released has at least a couple of top tracks on it. If you like MS (dancers & ballads) then it's worth checking out the soundfiles for their CD's on the web site as they can be bought for £6 (incl P&P).
  4. Don't think these guys invented the genre.... ... they were just jumping on the bandwagon after the event .... ...
  5. From the date of the article & the reference in it to "How Can I Tell Her" having been in local record shops for 3 weeks, it seems that it was released around the 10th October 1979.
  6. "Chills & Fever" did well on the radio up in New York .... ... probably due to Atlantic distributing Dial & getting behind the 45 ... ... guess that exposure helped in Paul's later decision to relocate to the city ....
  7. An article about Curtis / Curtis Anderson ............
  8. I was thinking (when I made my comment) of 1990's or Y2K tracks Bob. I'd agree that in the early days (70's) of 12"ers, the 7" was the 'normal' version with the 12" being an extended take on that (usually mixed after the event by a specialist such as Tom Moulton).
  9. Richard lives in St Helens nowadays....there's a big conversation in there that I'm opting out of haha. ...... quite right too .... don't ask most of the artists whose tracks appeared on those 12"ers what they think of him.
  10. Get it quick coz it seems French WEA put out the Sam Dees CD without realising that US WEA don't hold undisputed rights to the album.
  11. The 12" version is usually taken (by soul fans; I have no idea about NS'ers) as the definitive take .... .... with the 7" edit just being a shortened version the record company can fit onto the smaller disc. So the 7" is usually the 'poorer' version. Though with some 8 min long 12" tracks, i prefer dancing (at my age) to the shorter version.
  12. Do you have any details on when & the cause ? (I know he had been ill for some time).
  13. Born in Florida, but brought up (& based) in Canada ..... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xGLY-e8AXdo
  14. A Billboard ad from 1972 .....
  15. Can't find anything on the net about his passing .... AND ... ... as he had 9 US Soul 45 Chart entries, you would have thought that the US music press would have reported his passing.
  16. It's being reported that Paul Kelly had passed away in South Carolina. Anyone know if this is true and have any details of the circumstances ? INFO on Paul .......... https://www.soulcella...yinterview.html https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oy7xhuTxZhM This post has been promoted to an article
  17. It has been confirmed by a family member that R B Greaves (age 68) has passed away. R B Greaves spent much of the 1960's in the UK where under the name of Sonny Childe he fronted the TNT who were a top live mod / soul act in clubs here. He returned to the US around 1969, changed he performing name to R B Greaves and had a couple of big hits ("Take A Letter Maria" being the biggest of these).
  18. Another date on that UK tour was ............ ABC Cinema Edinburgh ..... 20th March 1967 Roy Orbison, The Small Faces, Paul & Barry Ryan, The Jeff Beck Group, The Settlers, Sonny Childe & The TNT, The Robb Storme Group, & Ray Cameron (compere). Sonny & the group were the opening act on the bill. A gig the group did at the Mojo in Sheffield is one of my wife's top memories of her visits to the allniters held at the venue. That's because, during the group's performance, Sonny pulled a couple of girls up to dance on stage with the group and she was one of them.
  19. A big UK touring package that Sonny & the group took part in ..... did he use his UK stage-name after returning to the US ?? ......
  20. Ronald Bertram Aloysius Greaves was born on Nov. 28, 1943, at an Air Force base in Georgetown in what was then British Guyana. He was the nephew of Sam Cooke and was raised on a Seminole reservation in California. In 1963, he moved to England to perform and record as the frontman for Sonny Childe and the TNT's. One of the songs he recorded in the UK was a cover of Sam Cooke's "Ain't That Good News".
  21. SOME INFO on Sonny Childe & the TNT's ..... Screaming Lors Sutch needed a new band after members of his old outfit had quit. He went to see Liverpool outfit Derry Wilkie & The Others in a South London Club. He got talking with members of the Others who in conjunction with ex members of the Four Saxes became the new Savages (SLS's backing band). The members of the Others worked for Screaming Lord Sutch for a considerable time, playing a lot of dates with him in England and Scotland. They were the set of Savages that recorded "One Eyed Flying Purple People Eater" - with Nicky Hopkins on piano - and played 6 concerts over a weekend in early 1966, starting at the Astoria Finsbury Park and promoted by Robert Stigwood, alongside The Who, The Fortunes and The Merseybeats. Sutch made Derry Wilkie (the Other's lead singer) dress up as a woman for one part of the act so he could chase him around the club with an axe. Derry did it as a good sport for a while but he didn't really enjoy having to but the pay was good and they all needed the money. Soon after the departure of Noel McManus, the Savages were approached by heavy-weight boxer Freddy Mac to form a larger "Soul" stage show which included American vocalists Cleo Sylvester (who previously worked with The Rolling Stones in '64) and Ronald Bertram Greaves aka "Sonny Childe". As a result, the whole band - Phil Kenzie, Derek Bond, Ernie Hayes and roadie Bazz Ward - apart from Billy Adamson ended up involved with this project and left Dave Sutch. The group called "This 'n' That" was in fact two groups which merged to form one large soul band with three singers and debuted at the Ram Jam Club in Brixton in April 1966. It was short lived and Derry Wilkie, who felt he was not getting the same attention as Sonny Childe, opted out. By mid '66, the group finally left Freddy Mac because they felt they could do better as a smaller unit. They became Sonny Childe and TNT and recorded for Polydor.
  22. A ballad from Sonny Childe .....
  23. A Sonnye Childe & the TNT UK recorded cut ....
  24. It has been confirmed by a family member that R B Greaves (age 68) has passed away.R B Greaves spent much of the 1960's in the UK where under the name of Sonny Childe he fronted the TNT who were a top live mod / soul act in clubs here. Tap to view this Soul Source News/Article in full
  25. Bob,I don't have the full facts on his lead vocals on the Mad Dog & the Pups 45's BUT he did sing lead on some (Doubt it was all) of their tracks ...... he told me that the kids 'officially' in the group were selected to look just like another Jackson 5 type outfit; only none of them could sing !!!


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