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Robbk

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Everything posted by Robbk

  1. What Chalky wrote. Chicago's King Records' office was mainly used to interface with distributors, sign local talent, interface with songwriters, and get singer demos recorded. The final recordings were done in Cincinnati, as was arrangement for pressing and mastering. King also had a business/A&R office in Detroit, which had signed The Dominoes, Five Jets and many solo acts and a few other group acts. They also had offices in New York and L.A. But the headquarters of the company was always in Cincinnati, with Syd Nathan presiding.
  2. I bought it new, in the mid '60s. There were a fair amount around. I saw several copies at John Anderson's in King's Lynn in 1979, and in the early '80s. It wasn't a "rare" record. It may be fairly scarce now, but turns up now and then.
  3. I'm sure that Van McCoy produced that session in New York, and that the master was purchased by Atlantic. Otherwise there would have been at least two Tommy Hunt singles released by Atlantic.
  4. So what is that song called? Was it recorded at Motown? It doesn't sound like a Motown vocal. Was it a "ptrate" stealing a Motown track and using it? What was the story of this recording?
  5. Can anyone post a link to the Kent version of Tommy Hunt's "Hold On"? I'm very curious to hear it.
  6. Yes, Soulful Detroit Forum still exists, but Ron Murphy, Joe Hunter, The Count and other members from the industry have died, other artists and producers and arrangers and songwriters have left, too ill or busy to post (Bob Babbitt, Clay McMurray), and others, like Bobby Eli have left to go elsewhere. Dennis Coffey, Spyder Turner, and a few others still post once in a while.
  7. I had a batch of about 100 NS records stolen from me between sending them off in L.A.'s Terminal Annex post office, and their getting on the plane to be sent to Manchester. I think someone in the US customs office in L.A. took them. Then, shortly after that, a friend of mine in Lancashire sent off 3 fairly valuable 45s to me to my L.A. digs, and they never arrived in the L.A. terminal Annex Post Office. They must have been stolen by that same customs worker. Now I never have records sent to my L.A. address. I have them sent to me only in Holland, or to my sister's address, if I absolutely must have them in L.A.(almost never). One of the records I am especially pissed about, as a serious Detroit collector. It was a dead rare (almost unknown) HOB group record I'd never seen in all my years of digging, by Mr. X and The X-Tones. My friend in Lancashire did play it for me over the telephone before sending it. The other two Detroit records in that package I have since obtained. But, I am still angry over the loss of both packages.
  8. Here's the Tommy Hunt. Another brilliant Van McCoy composition.
  9. Very nice tunes and singinjg. Nice to hear this stuff. Typical 1961 R&B/Soul transition music. I like 1959-64 VERY much.
  10. Tommy Hunt sang it on Atlantic (2278), and that version came out first. Both versions are great recordings.
  11. I'm sure Hondo was a small, local L.A. label. I only saw the record in shops in L.A. I doubt that the record had any distribution outside Southern California. I never saw it in San Francisco Bay Area shops, nor in any other part of USA that I looked for records (rest of USA other than The Deep South). I'm sure that the label was located in Eastern Culver City, near where Modern, and SAR had been. That has The Rio Hondo (a tributary of The Los Angeles River) running through it, which, I believe gave the label its name. I would be very surprised if Hondo's Anne Heywood was a Caucasian. Not all Soul singers sang in "Ebonics". Some had professionals for parents, and were raised in integrated neighbourhoods, and used "good" diction.
  12. I see now, upon reading it. I assume that the "unknown" designation there shows that his file was not found by the uploading application he used.
  13. I tried taking out the comma before the period, but it STILL goes nowhere. I tried by taking out the comma AND "unknown", but it doesn't go anywhere. Please correct the link.
  14. All Contours' songs led by Billy Gordon, Billy Hoggs, and Sylvester Potts!
  15. Same to you Peter! And many more!
  16. It might be easier to identify if we could hear it. Otherwise, it will be mere speculation. How many millions of recordings have been made in history? I wouldn't want to start guessing. I'm 67 years old, and not likely to guess right if I would spend 20 hours a day, every day till age 117.
  17. Writing a book takes a LOT more hours than lay people think. There are hundreds of hours of thinking about how it will fit together cherently (in the best order). More on self-editing, even if your publisher will do the final editing. But, most books with limited audiences like those that would interest our forum members, will have to be self published,, and printed based on pre-ordering. As stated above, it might take 12 years. Not many people are willing to use up all their free time for 3-7 years only to "break even", or make a few thousand Quid. The only people willing to do that are people who are bursting to get their story out to the public. There are very few such people. It is reserved mainly for retired people, who have a lot of free time, and people who write for a living. I've got a few books in me, but they've got to wait until I'm retired with a comfortable income (which, I can see already, will NEVER happen). Until then, I'll have to spend the time it takes to finish writing books on books I think have a pretty good chance of selling to a mass audience, and will be picked up by a successful publishing house, rather than self-published niche-market books.
  18. Good point. He could get better deals and service from distributors by threatening the easy move of X label to one of his other distributors. just like the various labels were parcelled out to various distributors, the talent within Motown had to be divided up among the various labels, so he could get more records played per any given time due to the "payola" restrictions. He wanted to have records played from all 5 of his labels, so the talent had to be shared accordingly. Gordy was really just a name change from Miracle to Gordy, to stop Thelma Gordy from naming her record label (really her parents' and Don Davis' label) "Gordy. They ended up using "Thelma". And THAT was really a name change from "DaCo" (Davis/Coleman).
  19. I was located mainly in Europe in 1981 and 1982, and I was not around for our recording session with him. i believe I may have shaken his hand and said "hello" once. But we never talked.
  20. We also recorded him, and released a record on him at Airwave Records, in 1981 and 1982.
  21. Yes. You are missing the fact that I placed a question mark after my sentence referring to the uploader listing Priscilla Price as "Priscilla Page". I have never seen any information proving that they are the same person. The fact that Prisca Sutton has commented on Priscilla Page's Alcor and Topper uploads, and NOT on Priscilla Price's records leads me to believe that it IS a mislabeling only, as you guess.
  22. Bob, do you use Facebook? If so, you could contact her there. I don't, and don't want to get involved in that. I'm on The Internet way too much, to the detriment of my work, as it is.
  23. So, Priscilla Page IS Priscilla Price, after all, and used "Priscilla Price" as a stage name in the 1970s? I knew that Geneva was a Detroit label, and Jimmy Roach worked out of Detroit during the 1970s.
  24. Bob. I clicked on Prisca Sutton's name, and it sent me to her private You-Tube page. There is a click button to send her a message. It states that the link to her answer will be sent to my e-mail via Google +. Would you like me to relay an e-mail address or messaging service user name you use to her so she can contact you? I would tell her that you are a DJ/music historian who wants to learn more specifics about her career. Or, if not, do you have specific questions that you'd like me to ask her? Robb
  25. Not surprising. If it would be okay to do that, I'd already have done it. But you have a lot of other questions that you'd like to ask her about her career. Often I get a personal message sent to me through my Yahoo e-mail. I guess that comes because Yahoo Mail is affiliated with Google, and has automatically made me a member. I don't use Facebook or Twitter, or any other message service. I wouldn't want to list my e-mail address on a You-Tube thread.


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