Search results for My Old Friend the Blues
18,
08:24,
2008-01-15 06:53:59 Description: Another unknown US chat show that I have from 1987 with Steve Earle performing Sweet Little 66 and My Old Friend the Blues and being hit on by the presenter during the interview! (More) Another unknown US chat show that I have from 1987 with Steve Earle performing Sweet Little 66 and My Old Friend the Blues and being hit on by the presenter during the interview! (Less)
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2,
02:49,
2009-11-23 07:41:53 Description: Hunter Varnam, Ethan Clewis and drummer friend play the blues at The Man Cave, Dec. 31, 2006. Self taught teenagers. Amazing talent. Sorry I don't know the drummer's name. Hunter is my (More) Hunter Varnam, Ethan Clewis and drummer friend play the blues at The Man Cave, Dec. 31, 2006. Self taught teenagers. Amazing talent. Sorry I don't know the drummer's name. Hunter is my nephew. He's on the left. 15 years old here. (Less)
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1042,
02:36,
2008-04-17 15:09:52 Description: The Temptations (often abbreviated as "The Tempts" or "The Temps") are an American Motown singing group whose repertoire has included doo-wop, soul, psychedelia, funk, disco, (More) The Temptations (often abbreviated as "The Tempts" or "The Temps") are an American Motown singing group whose repertoire has included doo-wop, soul, psychedelia, funk, disco, R&B, and adult contemporary. Formed in Detroit, Michigan in 1960 as The Elgins, the Temptations have always featured five African American male vocalists/dancers. The group, known for its recognizable choreography, distinct harmonies, and onstage suits, has been said to be as influential to soul as the Beatles are to rock.[1] Having sold an estimated 22 million albums by 1982,[2] The Temptations are one of the most successful groups in music history[3] and were the definitive male vocal group of the 1960s.[4] In addition, they have the second-longest tenure on Motown (behind Stevie Wonder), as they were with the label for a total of 40 years: 16 years from 1961 to 1977, and 24 more from 1980 to 2004 (from 1977 to 1980, they were signed to Atlantic Records). As of 2007, the Temptations continue to perform and record for Universal Records with only one original member, founder Otis Williams, in its lineup. The original group included members of two local Detroit vocal groups: The Distants, which featured second tenor/baritone Otis Williams, first tenor Elbridge "Al" Bryant and bass Melvin Franklin; and first tenor/falsetto Eddie Kendricks and second tenor/baritone Paul Williams (no relation to Otis) from The Primes. Among the most notable future Temptations were lead singers David Ruffin and Dennis Edwards (both of whom became successful Motown solo artists after leaving the group), Richard Street (another former Distant), Damon Harris, Ron Tyson, Ali-Ollie Woodson, Theo Peoples, and G.C. Cameron. Like its sister female group, the Supremes, the Temptations' lineup has changed frequently over the years. Over the course of their career, the Temptations have released four Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles and 14 Billboard R&B number-one singles. Their material has earned them three Grammy Awards, while two more awards were conferred upon the songwriters and producers who crafted their 1972 hit "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone". History The Primes Childhood friends Eddie Kendricks, Paul Williams, Kel Osbourne, and Wiley Waller formed a doo-wop group called the Cavaliers in their hometown of Birmingham, Alabama, in 1955.[5] Reduced to a trio after Waller left the group in 1957, Kendricks, Williams, and Osbourne left Birmingham in order to break into the music business. After first moving to Cleveland, they settled in Detroit. The Primes, as the doo-wop trio was now called, were well-known around Detroit for their meticulous performances.[6] Group manager Milton Jenkins even created a sister group for the Primes called the Primettes, recruiting Florence Ballard, Mary Wilson, Diane (later Diana) Ross, and Betty McGlown for the spin-off act.[5] The Distants Otis Williams had moved from his native Texarkana, Texas to Detroit as a young boy, to live with his mother.[7] By 1958, he was the leader of Otis Williams & the Siberians, a doo-wop group that included Williams, his friend Elbridge "Al" Bryant, James "Pee-Wee" Crawford, Vernard Plain, and Arthur Walton.[8] This quintet recorded the single "Pecos Kid" backed with "All of My Life" for a label run by local radio deejay Senator Bristol Bryant.[8] The single never took off outside the local Detroit market, and the Siberians changed their name to The El Domingoes shortly afterward.[5] At this time, more changes took place. Montgomery, Alabama native Melvin Franklin replaced Arthur Walton as the bass singer, and Franklin's cousin Richard Street replaced Vernard Plain as lead singer.[9] The group soon signed with Northern Records, run by Johnnie Mae Matthews, who renamed the group The Distants. The Distants recorded two singles for Northern, "Come On" (1959, featuring additional background vocals by the Andantes), and "Alright" (1960).[9] Between these two releases, Albert "Mooch" Harrell replaced Pee-Wee Crawford.[9] "Come On" was a local hit for the Distants, and the Warwick label picked the record up for national distribution.[9] After the release of "Alright", Matthews appointed Williams the group leader, and the group was renamed Otis Williams & the Distants.[10] [edit] Influences and colleagues The Primes and the Distants were but two of dozens of local male vocal acts, the most famous of which was the Miracles, led by Smokey Robinson. The Miracles were known for their stage show, and their pop success was something for which both groups strived.[11] Other important inspirations included the Cadillacs, Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers, the Drifters, and the Isley Brothers.[12] The various members of The Primes and the Distants who would later become part of the Temptations met a number of their later Motown bandmates, labelmates, and producers during the early part of their careers. Melvin Franklin had been a member of the recording group the Voice Masters, which also included among its ranks Lamont Dozier and David Ruffin.[9] The musicians at the recording session for the Distants' "Come On" included James Jamerson on bass; the Andantes on background vocals; and Norman Whitfield on tambourine.[9] A promotional image of the original early 1960s Temptations lineup. Clockwise from top right: Otis Williams, Paul Williams, Melvin Franklin, Eddie Kendricks, and Elbridge "Al" Bryant. [edit] Forming the Temptations Although "Come On" was a local success in the Detroit area, the Distants never saw much of their share from the record sales, and the second single was not as successful. After receiving an offer from Berry Gordy of Motown Records, the group got out of its contract with Matthews and left Northern. At the same time, it lost Mooch Harrell, Richard Street, and the rights to use its name. Street would front a new group of Distants for the local Thelma label during the early 1960s. The Distants were acquainted with the Primes, as both groups made the same rounds to local record hops, talent shows, and concerts. The two groups were friendly rivals. The Primes disbanded in 1960 when Kel Osbourne moved to California, and Eddie Kendricks and Paul Williams returned to Alabama. While in Detroit visiting relatives, Kendricks called Otis Williams who, needing two more members for an audition for Gordy, offered Kendricks a place in the Distants. Kendricks agreed, with one condition -- that he could bring Paul Williams with him. Otis Williams agreed, and Kendricks and Paul Williams moved back to Detroit to join the group. The new lineup of Otis Williams, Franklin, Bryant, Kendricks, and Paul Williams took on the name The Elgins and auditioned for Motown in March 1961. Gordy agreed to sign the group to his Miracle Records imprint, but discovered just before signing that there was already a singing group called the Elgins. The quintet quickly began tossing about ideas for a new name on the steps of Motown's Hitsville U.S.A. headquarters. On a suggestion from Miracle Records employee Billy Mitchell and Otis Williams, The Temptations became the group's new moniker. The "Elgins" name would re-surface at Motown in 1965, when Gordy renamed a quartet called The Downbeats as The Elgins. The Temptations released two singles on Miracle, "Oh Mother of Mine" and "Check Yourself", before it was closed and merged with the Gordy label (to avoid confusion with the Miracles singing group). All seven of the Temptations' singles released between 1961 and 1963 failed to make it onto the U.S. pop singles charts; the 1962 single "Dream Come True" made it to number 22 on the R&B chart. Paul Williams and Kendricks split most of the leads during this period, with Bryant, Otis Williams, and Franklin occasionally singing lead. Many songwriter and producer teams had been trying to craft a hit for the Temptations, including Berry Gordy, Mickey Stevenson, Clarence Paul, and Norman Whitfield. Gordy had in fact written the song "Do You Love Me" for The Temptations in 1961, but when he was unable to get ahold of the group, he recorded the song with the Contours instead. Miracles lead singer/songwriter/producer Smokey Robinson produced his first Temptations single, the Paul Williams-led "I Want a Love I Can See", in 1963, and proved to have the best rapport with the group. Elbridge Bryant, who preferred his day job as a milkman to performing, soon became restless and uncooperative. After a performance at the 1963 Motown company Christmas party, Bryant was fired from the group. His replacement was Meridian, Mississippi native David Ruffin, younger brother of Motown artist Jimmy Ruffin. Though both Ruffin brothers were considered, David was given an edge over Jimmy thanks to his performance skills, which David displayed when he joined the Temptations on-stage during a local Detroit performance earlier that year.[13] The "Classic Five" lineup of the Temptations, circa 1965. Left to right: Melvin Franklin, Eddie Kendricks, Otis Williams, Paul Williams, and David Ruffin. The "Classic Five" era In January 1964,Miracles members Smokey Robinson and Bobby Rogers co-wrote and produced "The Way You Do the Things You Do" with Kendricks on lead; the single became the Temptations' first Top 20 hit that April. While traveling as part of Motown's Motortown Revue later that year, Robinson and fellow Miracle Ronnie White wrote a song for the emotive Ruffin to sing lead on, which the group recorded in the fall of 1964. Released as a single on December 24, 1964, "My Girl", became the Temptations' first number-one pop hit in March 1965, and is their signature song to this day. David Ruffin's emergence as lead singer gave way to the Temptations' most successful period, today referred to as the "Classic Five" era, during which Ruffin, Kendricks, Franklin, Otis Williams, and Paul Williams recorded many of the group's most familiar hits. After the success of "My Girl", Ruffin sang lead on the next three Temptations singles: "It's Growing", "Since I Lost My Baby" and "My Baby", all of which made it to the Top 20 in 1965. The b-side to "My Baby", "Dont Look Back", featured a lead from Paul Williams, and was a sleeper hit on the R&B charts. In 1966, Norman Whitfield became the Temptations' new main producer, after his "Ain't Too Proud to Beg" performed better than Robinson's "Get Ready" on the U.S. pop charts. Whitfield began pushing the group away from Robinson's ballad-based production towards a harder-edged and brass-heavy soul sound reminiscent of the work of James Brown. Nearly all of the pre-1968 Whitfield-produced Temptations singles featured David Ruffin on lead vocals, including the R&B number-one/pop Top 10 hits "Beauty Is Only Skin Deep" and "(I Know) I'm Losing You". Other singles from this period included "You're My Everything", on which Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin share lead vocals, and "All I Need", produced by Whitfield's protg Frank Wilson. Whitfield's writing partners during this period included Roger Penzabene, Temptations road show manager/guitarist Cornelius Grant, and Edward Holland, Jr.. After Eddie Holland left Motown with the rest of the Holland-Dozier-Holland songwriting/production team in 1967, Barrett Strong (who sang Motown's first hit, 1960's "Money (That's What I Want)") began working with Whitfield and Penzabene on Temptations material. Two of Whitfield/Strong/Penzabene's collaborations, "I Wish It Would Rain" and "I Could Never Love Another (After Loving You)", became hits in 1968. Strong became Whitfield's sole collaborator after Penzabene's suicide in December 1967. Exit David Ruffin Between 1964 and 1968, the Temptations went from unknown hopefuls to international stars. The group appeared frequently on television shows such as American Bandstand and The Ed Sullivan Show, and catered to middle America with a pop standards album (The Temptations in a Mellow Mood, 1967) and performances at the Copacabana in New York City and other such supper clubs. Outside of music, the Temptations were made honorary members of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity, Inc. Initially laid back and even-keeled, by 1967 David Ruffin felt that he was almost single-handedly responsible for the group's success. He demanded special treatment, riding to and from gigs in a private mink-lined limousine with his then-girlfriend, singer Tammi Terrell (known for her duets with Marvin Gaye), instead of in the group limousine the other four Temptations used. Ruffin missed a number of rehearsals, concerts, and group meetings; and began regularly using cocaine. After seeing how Motown had made Diana Ross the focus of the Supremes by renaming the group Diana Ross & the Supremes, Ruffin demanded that his group be renamed, as well -- to David Ruffin & the Temptations. Additionally, Ruffin was demanding an accounting of the Temptations' earnings, which caused friction between him and Berry Gordy. There was general agreement among the rest of group that Ruffin needed to be replaced. Otis Williams insists that Ruffin was given fair warning that if he did not change his attitude he would be fired. When Ruffin missed a June 1968 engagement at a Cleveland supper club in order to attend a show by his new girlfriend (Dean Martin's daughter Gail), it was decided that he had crossed the line. The other four Temptations drew up legal documentation firing Ruffin from the group, and Dennis Edwards, formerly of the Contours, was hired to replace him. Edwards and Ruffin were good friends, and Ruffin at first went along with the changing of the guard. After a short time, however, Ruffin began turning up at Temptations shows, jumping onstage during performances of the songs he once sang lead on and stealing the spotlight. The audiences were delighted, but the Temptations and Motown were frustrated and embarrassed. Extra security guards were hired to prevent Ruffin from attending other Temptations' performances. Ruffin sued Motown in October 1968, seeking a release from the label, and Motown settled by offering Ruffin a solo recording deal. Beginning in 1968, Berry Gordy commissioned a number of collaborations for the Temptations with Diana Ross & the Supremes. The results included a joint tour, two studio albums (Diana Ross & the Supremes Join the Temptations, which featured the number-two hit single "I'm Gonna Make You Love Me", and Together), and two NBC television specials, TCB (aired December 9, 1968) and G.I.T. on Broadway (aired November 12, 1969). The tracks for Diana Ross & the Supremes Join the Temptations included Dennis Edwards' first studio recordings with the Temptations. Psychedelic soul Dennis Edwards' addition to the Temptations coincided with producer Norman Whitfield's adoption of a new sound for the group. In the fall of 1968, Whitfield began producing psychedelic-based material for the Temptations, derived primarily from the sound of funk band Sly & the Family Stone. This new style, which debuted with the Top 10 hit single "Cloud Nine" in October 1968, was a marked departure from the David Ruffin-era ballads. The instrumentation was funkier, the beat was hard-driving, and all five Temptations traded lead vocals, similar to Sly & the Family Stone. "Cloud Nine", the centerpiece of the group's landmark Cloud Nine LP, was a Top 10 hit and won Motown its first Grammy Award, for Best R&B Vocal Group Performance of 1969. The blending of the Motown sound and psychedelic rock sound resulted in a new subgenre of music called "psychedelic soul", also evident in the work of Diana Ross and the Supremes ("Reflections", "Love Child"), Marvin Gaye's version of "I Heard It Through the Grapevine", and the music of the Fifth Dimension and War. More Temptations psychedelic soul singles would follow in 1969 and 1970, among them "Runaway Child, Running Wild" (a number-one R&B hit), "I Can't Get Next to You" (a number-one pop hit), "Psychedelic Shack" , "Ball of Confusion (That's What the World Is Today)", and "Ungena Za Ulimwengu (Unite the World)". Exit Eddie Kendricks and Paul Williams During the late-1960s, Paul Williams' physical and mental health began to decline sharply. Williams suffered from both depression and sickle-cell disease, and also developed alcoholism, all of which made it hard for him to continue performing. Oxygen tanks were kept in the wings of performance venue stages for Williams, and the other four Temptations made valiant efforts to raid and drain his alcohol stashes. By 1969, former Distant Richard Street, now lead singer of Motown act The Monitors, was touring with the group as a backup replacement for Williams. For most shows, Street would sing Williams' parts (save for his solo numbers) from offstage behind a curtain, while Williams danced and lip-synched onstage. At other shows, and during most of the second half of 1970, Street took Williams' place onstage. As Paul Williams' health failed, Eddie Kendricks became detached from the group. He regularly picked fights with Otis Williams and Melvin Franklin over the group's leadership. In addition, Kendricks was uncomfortable with the psychedelic soul material the group was now performing, preferring the ballad material from the earlier days. Kendricks rekindled his friendship with David Ruffin, who persuaded him to quit the Temptations and go solo. After another confrontation between himself, Otis Williams, and Franklin during a November 1970 Copacabana engagement, Kendricks walked out in-between shows and did not return. Both Franklin and Otis Williams agreed at this time that Kendricks would be leaving the group. Before Kendricks officially left the Temptations, he and Paul Williams recorded the lead vocals for "Just My Imagination (Running Away with Me)", a lush, wistful ballad that became Kendricks' Temptations swan song. Released as a single in January 1971, "Just My Imagination" began steadily climbing the U.S. pop singles chart. By the time "Just My Imagination" hit number-one in March, Kendricks had negotiated his release from the group and signed a solo deal with Motown's Tamla imprint. Kendricks' original replacement was Ricky Owens, from the Los Angeles-based vocal group the Vibrations. However, Owens gave poorly-received performances during the few shows he performed with the group, and he was dropped after only a few weeks. During most of the spring of 1971, the Temptations remained a quartet, and re-recorded the single "It's Summer" without a fifth member. In April, Paul Williams quit the Temptations, after a medical declaration that he was unable to continue performing. Richard Street officially took his place, while Williams remained on the group's payroll as an advisor and choreographer. After Williams had recovered enough to perform again, Motown made plans for a Paul Williams solo career, but he died at age 34 in Detroit on August 17, 1973. Williams' death was ruled a suicide. The Temptations in the early 1970s By May, The Temptations had found a permanent replacement first tenor in twenty-year-old Baltimore native Damon Harris. Otis Williams, Edwards, Franklin, Street, and Harris continued recording and performing, and Norman Whitfield continued producing hits for them. Among these were Top 40 hits such as "Superstar (Remember How You Got Where You Are)" (1971), a message from the Temptations to the estranged David Ruffin and Eddie Kendricks, and "Take a Look Around" (1972). The fall of 1972 saw the release of Whitfield's magnum opus, "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone". Originally a three-minute record written and produced for the Undisputed Truth, Whitfield took the sombre tune and created a sprawling, dramatic eleven and -minute version for the Temptations. An edited seven-minute version was released as a single in September 1972, hitting number-one on the pop charts and number-five on the R&B charts. In 1973, "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone" won the Temptations their second Grammy for Best R&B Performance by a Group. Whitfield and arranger/conductor Paul Riser won the award for Best R&B Instrumental Performance with the instrumental version of "Papa" on the single's b-side, and Whitfield and Barrett Strong won the songwriters' Grammy for Best R&B Song. After "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone", Whitfield stopped working with Barrett Strong, and began writing the Temptations' material on his own. The success of "Papa" led Whitfield to create more elongated, operatic pieces, including the Top 40 hit "Masterpiece" (1973) and several of the tracks on the resulting Masterpiece album. Tensions developed between Whitfield and the group, who found Whitfield arrogant and difficult to work with. The group cited his habitual tardiness, his emphasis of the instrumental tracks over the vocals on many of his productions, and the declining singles and albums sales as other sources of conflict. Otis Williams complained about Whitfield's actions and the Temptations' stagnant sales to Berry Gordy, who intervened and reassigned them to Jeffrey Bowen, co-producer of the 1967 In a Mellow Mood album. The final Norman Whitfield-produced Temptations album, 1990, was released in late 1973, and included the Top 30 single "Let Your Hair Down". Whitfield left Motown shortly afterwards, and in 1975 established Whitfield Records, taking with him the Undisputed Truth, Willie Hutch, and Rose Royce, who performed the instrumental track for "Let Your Hair Down". Dry spell Bowen's first LP with the Temptations was January 1975's A Song for You, which included a cover of the titular Leon Russell tune (popularized with soul audiences by Donny Hathaway), along with the pop Top 40/R&B number-one hits "Happy People" (featuring the Commodores as the instrumentalists) and "Shakey Ground" (featuring instrumentation by Funkadelic's Eddie Hazel and Billy Bass Nelson), and "Glasshouse", the group's final Top 40 Pop hit. Damon Harris was fired from the group during the recording of A Song for You, as his behavior and work ethic were deemed unprofessional.[14] His replacement was Washington, D.C. native Glenn Leonard, formerly of the Unifics.[15] A number of producers, including Bowen, Brian Holland, James Carmichael, and even the Temptations themselves tried producing hits for the next three LPs, House Party (November 1975), Wings of Love (March 1976), and The Temptations Do the Temptations (August 1976). None of these recordings were as commercially successful as A Song for You, and none of their singles entered the Billboard Hot 100 Top 40.[16] As time progressed, Bowen pushed Dennis Edwards further to the front. This was evident in on Wings of Love, which features Edwards' voice more prominently than the other Temptations' backing vocals.[17] Otis Williams felt that this was hurting the group, and after The Temptations Do the Temptations was recorded in 1976, Edwards was fired from the group.[18] His replacement was Louis Price. The Temptations left Motown for Atlantic Records, citing Motown's inattention as the reason for their declining sales and popularity.[19] However, the group's releases on Atlantic -- Hear to Tempt You (1977), Bare Back (1978), and their associated singles -- failed to perform better than their last handful of Motown singles, and in 1979 Atlantic released the group from its contract.[17] Shortly afterwards, the Temptations met with Smokey Robinson and Berry Gordy, and the group re-signed with Motown in 1980.[20] ] Return to Motown and Reunion Upon the return to Motown, Louis Price departed from the group and joined the Drifters. Dennis Edwards, who had been inactive for the previous three years despite remaining with Motown as a solo act, returned to the lineup. Berry Gordy co-wrote and produced the Temptations' first single under the new contract, "Power", from the album of the same name. "Power" missed the Billboard Hot 100 Top 40, but hit number 11 on the R&B charts. Two years of underperforming singles and albums followed, including an eponymous album with Philadelphia-based producer Thom Bell, until Motown began planning a Temptations reunion tour in 1982. Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin agreed to rejoin the group for the Reunion album and tour. Melvin Franklin's nephew, Motown funk star Rick James (who had previously used the Temptations as backup vocalists on his 1981 hit "Super Freak"), wrote, produced, and guested on the Reunion album's lead single, "Standing on the Top", which featured Ruffin, Kendricks, and Edwards on lead. The single went to number-six on the R&B charts. While the ensuing Reunion tour with all seven Temptations (Ruffin, Kendricks, Otis Williams, Franklin, Edwards, Richard Street, and Glenn Leonard) was financially successful, it ended up being a stressful venture: Kendricks' voice had weakened after decades of chain smoking, and Ruffin, still addicted to drugs, missed a number of the performances. At the conclusion of the Reunion tour, Ruffin and Kendricks were fired, and they began touring and performing together as a duo. One more album, Surface Thrills, was released in 1983. It featured a sharp departure in the group's sound by incorporating elements of then-current rock. Following its release, Glenn Leonard left and was replaced by Ron Tyson. Tyson had been a songwriter at Atlantic during the Temptations' time there, and co-wrote several songs on the album Hear To Tempt You. [edit] From the 1980s to the 1990s By this time, the Temptations' releases were no longer performing well on the pop charts, though they sometimes made the R&B Top 20. "Love on My Mind Tonight", a single from Surface Thrills, made it to number 17. "Sail Away", produced by a returning Norman Whitfield and featuring Ron Tyson's first lead vocal, peaked at number 13. Dennis Edwards was again fired in 1984, this time for missing rehearsals, or showing up hungover. He attempted a second solo career, and his place was taken by Ali-Ollie Woodson, who had been a potential candidate to replace Edwards back in 1977. The album Back to Basics was released; it was the first album featuring Ron Tyson, and featured one track with Woodson, "Stop the World Right Here (I Wanna Get Off)". Woodson's first lead on a single was 1984's "Treat Her Like a Lady", co-written by himself and Otis Williams, and co-produced by Al McKay and Ralph Johnson, formerly of Earth, Wind and Fire. The single became their biggest success on R&B radio in some time, reaching number-two on the R&B charts, and just missing the Pop Top 40. The group experienced similar success the following year with the single "Lady Soul", another Top 5 R&B smash. On July 13th 1985, Eddie Kendricks and David Ruffin would achieve "World comeback" recognition for their performances with Pop/Rock superstars Daryl Hall and John Oates(Hall and Oates) in a performance given at the "Live Aid" concert in Philadelphia televised world wide. The segment with Kendricks and Ruffin included a Medley of "Get ready/The way you do the things you do/My Girl. The combination of Hall, Oates, Ruffin and Kendricks went on to perform the resurrected Hall and Oates hit (made popular by the English artist Paul Young), "Every time you go away". This was the exact performance the singing quartet had just recorded live in a sold out performance for the "reopening" of the historic Apollo Theater. The medley recorded on "Live at the Apollo" for RCA, became a top 20 hit on the pop charts. Ollie Woodson remained with the Temptations until 1987, when he was fired and replaced by an again-returning Dennis Edwards. The group recorded one album during Edwards' third tenure, Together Again, released in late 1987. The following year, Otis Williams published his autobiography, Temptations, co-written with Patricia Romanowski, chronicling the careers of the group from the Primes/Distants days to the present, and focusing on the lives of Williams and Melvin Franklin. An updated version of the book was published in 2002. Edwards was fired for the third and final time in late 1989, with Woodson re-joining the lineup. Also that year, the Temptations were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, honoring Edwards, Franklin, Otis Williams, David Ruffin, Eddie Kendricks (now performing as "Eddie Kendrick"), and, posthumously, Paul Williams. Most of the Temptations, present and former, showed no ill feelings towards each other, although Otis Williams reported that Kendricks would not speak to him during the ceremony. [21] The Temptations ended their induction with Paul Willaims' signature song, "Don't Look Back", dedicated to his memory. After reuniting at the induction ceremony, Edwards, Ruffin, and Kendrick made plans to tour and record as "Ruffin/Kendrick/Edwards, Former Leads of The Temptations". The tour was carried out, much to the chagrin of Otis Williams and Motown, but production on an album was terminated when Ruffin, age 50, died on June 1, 1991 in Philadelphia after a drug overdose. Kendrick was diagnosed with lung cancer but continued to perform; he died on October 5, 1992 at the age of 52, in his native Birmingham. The Temptations in the 1990s From the 1990s on, the Temptations' lineup began to change more frequently than before. Richard Street missed a performance in 1992 after undergoing emergency surgery to remove kidney stones. Otis Williams was not aware of Street's surgery, and called him, angry about Street's absence. Street felt Williams was unsympathetic, and as a result, he left the group in 1993 after twenty-two years. His replacement was St. Louis native Theo Peoples. Two years later, Melvin Franklin was forced to stop performing because of failing health. He died on February 23, 1995 at the age of 52, after suffering a brain seizure. Ray Davis from Parliament/Funkadelic came on as new bass, and the group recorded the pop standards album For Lovers Only, which contained two tracks led by Melvin Franklin. Davis left shortly after completing the album, due to a throat cancer diagnosis. The group continued as a quartet for a short time, before recruiting bass Harry McGilberry, a former member of The Futures. For Lovers Only would also be the last for lead Ali-Ollie Woodson; he was released from the group in 1996 due to health problems, having suffered two battles with throat cancer. He was replaced by his fill-in from his first health concern, new member Terry Weeks. The new Temptations lineup, consisting of Otis Williams, Ron Tyson, Theo Peoples, and newcomers Harry McGilberry and Terry Weeks, debuted at the halftime show of Super Bowl XXXII, which celebrated the 40th anniversary of Motown. In 1998, The Temptations released Phoenix Rising, their first million-selling album in over twenty years. The album was anchored by the Theo Peoples-led single "Stay", a number-one hit on the adult contemporary charts that featured a sample from The Temptations' "My Girl". During the recording of Phoenix Rising, however, Theo Peoples departed, and was replaced by Barrington "Bo" Henderson. The completed album features both Henderson and Peoples (who later joined the Four Tops) on different tracks. A scene from the 1998 Temptations NBC miniseries. The Temptations mini-series Main entry: The Temptations (miniseries). Nineteen ninety-eight also saw the debut of The Temptations, a four-hour television miniseries based on Otis Williams' Temptations autobiography. It was broadcast in two parts on NBC on November 1 and November 2, 1998. The miniseries was a ratings success and won an Emmy award for Best Direction; it was subsequently rerun on the VH-1 cable television network and released to VHS and DVD. Otis Williams' former wife Josephine, Melvin Franklin's mother Rose Franklin, and David Ruffin's family, jointly filed a lawsuit against Williams, Motown, de Passe Entertainment, Hallmark Entertainment, and NBC for a number of charges, including defamations of character. The judges ruled in favor of the defendants, and the ruling was upheld when the plaintiffs appealed in 2001. Williams later claimed that, although his book was used as the source material for the film, he did not have a great deal of control over how the material was presented. From 2000 to the present day The Temptations were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 1999. In 2001, their 2000 album Ear-Resistible won the group its third Grammy, this one for Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance. Three classic Temptations songs, "My Girl", "Ain't Too Proud to Beg", and "Papa Was a Rollin' Stone", are among The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll. Bo Henderson was fired from the group in 2003, prompting a wrongful termination lawsuit [22]. His replacement was former Spinners lead G.C. Cameron. The lineup of Cameron, Otis Williams, Ron Tyson, Harry McGilberry, and Terry Weeks recorded for a short time before Harry McGilberry was dismissed;[23] his replacement was former Spaniels bass Joe Herndon. McGilberry died on April 3, 2006, at age 56. The group's final Motown album, Legacy, was released in 2004. Later that year, The Temptations asked to be released from their Motown contract, and moved to another Universal Motown Records Group label, New Door Records. Their latest album, Reflections, was released on January 31, 2006, and contains covers of several popular Motown songs, including Diana Ross & the Supremes' "Reflections", the Miracles' "Ooo Baby Baby", Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell's "Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing", and the Jackson 5's "I'll Be There".[24] The Temptations were nominated for the 2007 Grammy Award for Best Traditional R&B Vocal Performance, for their version of Gaye's "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)" from Reflections. G.C. Cameron left the group in June of 2007 to focus on his solo career.[25]. The current lineup is Otis Williams, Ron Tyson, Terry Weeks, Joe Herndon, and new member Bruce Williamson. Splinter groups Several former Temptations continue to perform outside of the group in spin-off or offshoot acts. The most well known splinter was "Ruffin/Kendrick/Edwards: Former Leads of the Temptations", which featured the three former Temptations and three other members (David Sea, who'd been a consideration to replace Edwards in 1984, Nate Evans, a former member of The Impressions, and a female vocalist). Following David Ruffin's death, Dennis Edwards and Eddie Kendrick began touring as "The Temptations", still with David Sea and Nate Evans, and bringing in another former Temptation, Damon Harris. The group had different sixth vocalists at different times, including Charles Blackmon and Curtis Taylor.[26] This prompted a legal battle with Otis Williams. Following Kendrick's death, the group splintered: Dennis formed "Dennis Edwards and the Temptations Review," Damon formed "Damon Harris and the Temptations Review" (featuring future Temptation Joe Herndon), David Sea went on to a solo career[27], and Evans and Taylor formed a Temptations tribute band[28]. Dennis Edwards' group tours to this day. The group has appeared on several PBS music specials. The lineup is Edwards, David Sea (baritone, returning in 1999), Mike Patillo (bass since 1993), Chris Arnold (first tenor/falsetto, joined post-2000)[29], and another former Temptation, Ali-Ollie Woodson. Woodson previously fronted an act called Ali-Ollie Woodson & the Emperors of Soul--Emperors of Soul being the name of the 1994 Temptations boxed set. He replaced Bernard Gibson[30][31] in 2007; Gibson was an original 1993 addition, and was in the group for all of their PBS performances. Damon Harris split from his group in the late 1990s; the other four members then joined with another former Temptation, Glenn Leonard, to become "Glenn Leonard and the Temptations Experience." Joe Herndon left this group to join the Temptations[32] His spot was filled by former Temptations bass Ray Davis, and, following Davis' death on July 5, 2005, Harry McGilberry, another former Temptations bass (McGilberry died on April 3, 2006). Damon Harris would form a new group later, billed as "Damon Harris and the Temptations Tribute." Richard Street also leads a group, billed as "Richard Street" or "Richard Street's Temptations"[33]. Street is in the process of writing a book regarding his time with The Temptations entitled Ball of Confusion. If it is published, it will be the second autobiography regarding the group. [edit] Musical style The Temptations' songs depended upon the individual members' interaction as a group; unlike many other R&B groups, each member of the Temptations was a lead singer of some capacity. Although the group always had an appointed main lead singer who dominated most the lead vocals (from Paul Williams to David Ruffin, Dennis Edwards, and later singers such as Louis Price, Ali-Ollie Woodson, and Terry Weeks), that singer was never given more of a promotional push than the other members. Co-lead songs, with two or more of the singers sharing the lead vocals, are common in the Temptations catalog, particularly among the psychedelic-era recordings of the late 1960s/early 1970s The "Motown Sound" The group would alter their style several times over the years following their first Motown hit, adapting to the popular styles of the day while retaining their signature visual and vocal styles. The earliest Temptations recordings reflect the influence of producers Berry Gordy and Smokey Robinson, featuring a blend of black rhythm and blues and white pop music that came to be later identified as the "Motown Sound". Backed by Motown's stalwart studio band, the Funk Brothers, pre-1966 Temptations recordings were built around songs (usually ballads like "My Girl") with simple, direct lyrics supported by an R&B rhythm section with orchestral strings and horns added for pop appeal. During this period, each recording usually featured only one lead singer, usually David Ruffin or Eddie Kendricks, although Paul Williams, Melvin Franklin, and Otis Williams each had solo numbers of their own at various times. Like most Motown groups, melisma and other complicated vocalization techniques were eschewed by the Temptations for a more direct, yet obviously gospel-rooted vocal approach, to make the songs more palpable for white audiences. Creative control remained primarily in Smokey Robinson's hands, although the Temptations, most frequently Eddie Kendricks, periodically co-wrote some of their material. Kendricks also handled the vocal arrangements for all of the Temptations' material. In 1966, Norman Whitfield changed the group's dynamic, moving them away from the previous one lead singer model and adding elements derived from the rougher soul of artists like James Brown, Wilson Pickett, and the performers at Stax Records. Whitfield and his lyricists crafted Temptations songs with shifts of dynamics, syncopated horn stabs, and more intricate harmony arrangements which spotlighted each singer's unique vocal range. Onstage, this change was reflected in the group's use of a custom-made four-headed microphone, which allowed each member freedom to perform without having to all crowd around one or two microphones. Under Whitfield's control, the Temptations retained their white pop appeal, but also gained popularity amongst black audiences as well. Psychedelic and cinematic soul When David Ruffin was replaced by Dennis Edwards, and Sly and the Family Stone became popular, Whitfield again restructured the Temptations' sound, this time driving the group almost completely into a "psychedelic soul" sound. Recordings from this period (such as "Cloud Nine" and "Psychedelic Shack") featured echoed vocal tracks, distorted guitar lines with prominent use of the wah-wah pedal, hard-hitting drums, and various stereo effects and sound effects. The majority of these songs feature at least two lead singers; often, all five Temptations sang lead, trading bars a la the Family Stone. Dennis Edwards, whose vocal style had a rougher, more Southern-soul based sound than David Ruffin's, was featured prominently on most of these recordings. The lyrics for these songs, inspired heavily by Sly Stone's concurrent works, centered primarily around social issues such as integration, the Vietnam War, and self-consciousness. Ballads in the group's traditional style were still being recorded as b-sides and album fillers (the exception being "Just My Imagination"). Many of the psychedelic soul recordings were presented in extended-length mixes longer than the typical three-minute Motown song. Tracks such as the album version of "Run Away Child, Running Wild" from Cloud Nine, "Take a Stroll Thru Your Mind" from Psychedelic Shack, and "Smiling Faces Sometimes" from Sky's the Limit, all run at least eight minutes in length. Much of the running time for each song consists of instrumental passages without vocals, at Whitfield's insistence. The hit version of their smash 1972 single "Papa Was a Rolling Stone" was nearly seven minutes long, with an instrumental intro that was almost two minutes long -- a rarity for songs of that era. "Psychedelic soul" soon gave way to "cinematic soul": Long recordings with detailed orchestration and extended instrumental introductions and bridging passages, oten focusing on lyrics about the ghettos and inner cities of black America. These songs were heavily influenced by the work of singer/songwriters Isaac Hayes and Curtis Mayfield. Unlike Hayes and Mayfield, the Temptations had no creative control over their recordings, and were not fond of the twelve and thirteen-minute long songs that Norman Whitfield was now producing for them. Whitfield's contributions were the focal point of Temptations albums such as Solid Rock, All Directions, and particularly Masterpiec. From funk to disco to adult contemporary After Whitfield was dismissed as the Temptations' producer in 1974, the group altered its sound to accommodate a balance of both up-tempo dance material and ballads. The vocal arrangements began to again focus primarily on one lead singer per track, although leads were still being periodically shared. In addition, the Temptations themselves, after fighting Motown and Berry Gordy for creative control, began to write and produce some of their material. From this point on, the Temptations focused almost exclusively on songs about romance; songs about social issues similar to the Whitfield-era recordings were periodically recorded as well. Mid-1970s Temptations recordings focused significantly on funk music influences from artists such as Parliament Funkadelic and Sly and the Family Stone; members of both acts contributed to Temptations material during this period. The group's ballads, reduced to filler material during much of the Whifield period, were restored to the lush sound of the earlier Smokey Robinson-produced hits. After a brief diversion into disco in the late-1970s, the Temptations settled into an adult contemporary-rooted form of R&B, a style in which they continue to record. As the ages of its members increased, the Temptations' live shows have focused on less intricate choreography, although dancing remains an important aspect of the group's act. Legacy and influence The Temptations, with their tailored suits and detailed choreography, set the bar for male soul and R&B groups. Before the Temptations became popular, most black vocal groups were rough, high-energy acts with rawer vocals and more improvisational dance movements. Only a few performers, including contemporaries Marvin Gaye, Sam Cooke, and the Four Tops, showed the refined style that would be popularized by the Temptations. Berry Gordy insisted his acts be equally appealing to white and black audiences, and employed a creative team to help tailor Motown talent for crossover success. Paul Williams and Motown choreographer Cholly Atkins created the Temptation's trademark precise and energetic, yet refined, dance steps. The most famous of these, the "Temptation Walk", or "Temptation Strut", was adapted from similar moves by the Flamingoes and the Vibrations. From those two sources, Paul Williams crafted the group's signature dance routine. During the 1960s and 1970s, a number of soul groups showed significant influence from the Temptations, among them the Delfonics, the Stylistics, George Clinton's original Parliaments, the Dramatics, and Motown labelmates the Jackson Five. These acts, and others, showed the influence of the Temptations in both their vocal performances and their onstage choreography. Several more recent soul and R&B vocal groups, including the Johnny Gill-led version of New Edition, Jodeci, BLACKstreet, Dru Hill, and, most notably, 1990s Motown act Boyz II Men, also showed significant influence from the Temptations. Temptations songs have been covered by scores of musicians, from R&B singers such as Luther Vandross ("Since I Lost My Baby"), to pop vocalists such as Bette Midler ("Just My Imagination"), to rock bands such as Rare Earth ("Get Ready"), Duran Duran ("Ball of Confusion (That's What the World Is Today)") and the Rolling Stones ("Ain't Too Proud to Beg"). In 1991, British singer Rod Stewart collaborated with the Temptations on the single "The Motown Song". The lives and careers of The Temptations were one of several inspirations for Robert Townsend's 1991 film about a 1960s Motown-esque male group, The Five Heartbeats. In 2004, Rolling Stone Magazine ranked The Temptations #67 on their list of the 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.[34] (Less)
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2008-04-17 15:10:54 Description: MAE WEST : SINGLES BRUNSWICK 6495 (78rpm) MAE WEST WITH STUDIO BAND (a) / MAE WEST WITH VICTOR YOUNG ORCH. (b) I Like A Guy What Takes His Time / Easy Rider 1933 US BRUNSWICK 6675 (78rpm) MAE (More) MAE WEST : SINGLES BRUNSWICK 6495 (78rpm) MAE WEST WITH STUDIO BAND (a) / MAE WEST WITH VICTOR YOUNG ORCH. (b) I Like A Guy What Takes His Time / Easy Rider 1933 US BRUNSWICK 6675 (78rpm) MAE WEST I'm No Angel / I Found A New Way To Go To Town 1933 US BRUNSWICK 01635 (78rpm) MAE WEST I'm No Angel / I Found A New Way To Go To Town 1933 UK BRUNSWICK 6676 (78rpm) MAE WEST They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk / I Want You, I Need You 1933 US COSMOPOLITAN 7501 (78rpm) MAE WEST WITH DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCH. (a) / DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCH. (b) My Old Flame (Mi Vieja Llama) / Rockin' Chair (Mecedora) (b-side recorded in 1931 and originally issued as by The Whoopee Makers) 1934 US CYCLONE 505 (78rpm) MAE WEST, ORCHESTRA: JOSEPH CHERNIVASKY (a) / MAE WEST, ORCHESTRA: LENNY MARVIN (b) Come Up N See Me Sometime / That's All Brother, That's All 19?? US DECCA 9-29452 MAE WEST, ORCHESTRA DIRECTED BY SY OLIVER Love Is The Greatest Thing / All Of Me 1955 US DECCA 32738 MAE WEST The Saying Of Mae West / More Sayings Of Mae West 1955 US MEZZOTONE 100 (78rpm) MAE WEST Frankie And Johnny / ? 19?? US MEZZOTONE 2 MAE WEST Slow Down / ? 19?? US MEZZOTONE 3 MAE WEST Guy That Takes His Time / ? 19?? US TOWER 260 (p/s) MAE WEST Day Tripper / Treat Him Right 1966 US TOWER 261 (p/s) MAE WEST Shakin' All Over / If You Gotta Go 1966 US STATESIDE SS 2021 MAE WEST Twist And Shout / Day Tripper 1967 UK PLAZA P-506 MAE WEST Am I Too Young / He's Good For Me 19?? US DRAGONET 6 MAE WEST Put The Loot In The Boot, Santa / With Love From Me To You 1966 US 20TH CENTURY FOX 6718 (p/s) MAE WEST Hard To Handle / You Gotta Taste All The Fruit 1968 US EMBER EMBS 275 (p/s) MAE WEST & ZSA ZSA GABOR WITH KEN MOULES LONDON JAZZ CHAMBER GROUP Great Balls Of Fire / The Naked Ape 1970 UK MGM K 14491 MAE WEST Great Balls Of Fire / The Naked Ape 1972 US MGM 2006 203 MAE WEST Great Balls Of Fire / Men 1973 UK MAE WEST : ALBUMS DECCA D/DL-79016 THE FABULOUS MAE WEST (LP) Love Is The Greatest Thing / I'm In The Mood For Love / Pecado (Sin) / My Daddy Rocks Me (With One Steady Roll) / All Of Me / They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk / Frankie And Johnny / I Want You, I Need You / Havana For A Night (Vereda Tropical) / A Guy What Takes His Time / If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight) / Criswell Predicts -- UK edition: Brunswick LAT 8082, 1956/reissues: Columbia CL 2751/MCA LP 1530/Rev-Ola CR REV 181, 2006 UK/also issued as 3 x 7" 45rpm EP package with the original LP sleeve -- 1956 US TOWER T/ST-5028 WAY OUT WEST (LP) Treat Him Right / When A Man Loves A Woman / You Turn Me On / Shakin' All Over / If You Gotta Go / Lover, Please Don't Fight / Day Tripper / Nervous / Twist And Shout / Boom Boom / Mae Day (recorded with Somebody's Chyldren) (includes a poster/a photo insert) -- UK edition: Stateside S/SL 10197, 1967/Australian edition: Capitol-Encore ENC-9231 -- 1966 US DRAGONET LP DG-48 WILD CHRISTMAS (LP) Santa Claus Is Back In Town / My New Year's Resolution / Santa Bring My Baby Back To Me / With Love From Me To You / Merry Christmas Baby / Santa Baby / Santa Come Up To See Me / Put The Loot In The Boot Santa -- reissues: "Under The Mistletoe", Round Record LP RS-100, 196? AUS/"Mae In December", AEI LP 2104, 1980 -- 1966 US DECCA 32738 (promo with co. sleeve only) THE SAYINGS OF MAE WEST (LP) When I'm Good / It's Not The Men In Your Life / It's Better To Be Looked Over / When Women Go Wrong / Between Two Evils / Come Up And See Me Sometime (with musical intros) / When I'm Good / It's Not The Men In Your Life / It's Better To Be Looked Over / When Women Go Wrong / Between Two Evils / Come Up And See Me Sometime / Mae West uncensored: I'm Always Wonderful At Night-One Of The Finest Women / Love At The First Sight-What Kind Of A Woman / Mae West and friends: W.C. Fields And Mae West-Mae West & Man & W.C. Fields / Mae West And Friend-Friend And Mae West-"A Proposal"-W.C. Fields & His "Chickadee" 1970 US DECCA D/DL-79176 THE ORIGINAL VOICE TRACKS FROM HER GREATEST MOVIES (LP) Sayings of Mae West / Mae West uncensored / Mae West & friends / Around the world with Mae West / Mae West has the last word / Mae West & W.C. Fields together / Mae West & friend / Mae West teaches a class / A swingin' sermon / Personal appearance / Mae West sings (I Want You I Need You / Frankie & Johnny / Mister Deep Blue Sea / My Old Flame) (includes a poster) 1970 US MGM SE 4869 GREAT BALLS OF FIRE (LP) Great Balls Of Fire / Men / The Naked Ape / The Grizzly Bear / Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On / Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen / After The Lights Go Down Low / Light My Fire / How Miss West Won World Peace / Rock Around The Clock -- UK edition: MGM Super 2315 207, 1973/German edition: MGM 2315207, 1973 -- 1973 US MARK 56 RECORDS 643 ORIGINAL RADIO BROADCASTS (LP) Adam & Eve Sketch, Edgar Bergen, Charlie McCarthy Show (December 1937) / Rudy Vallee Show (mid-30's) / 2 cuts from American Forces Radio Service Christmas Shows (1971 & 1972) with Frank Bresee 1974 US CALIBAN 6036 MAE WEST AND HER GUYS: ALL THE LAUGHS BAWDY FUN AND SONGS - SPECIAL GUEST STAR DUKE ELLINGTON (LP) 19?? US MEZZOTONE #21 ALBUM OF MAE WEST SONGS (10" LP) Come Up 'N' See Me Sometime / Frankie & Johnnie / That's All Brother That's All / Imaginary Love / My Man Friday / Page 54 (10" boxset of three 78rpm singles) 19?? US RADIOLA MR-1126/THE MIND'S EYE C-CAS ? MAE WEST ON THE CHASE & SANBORN HOUR (LP) Edgar Bergen-Charlie McCarthy (Chase & Sanborn Hour, December 12, 1937): Adam & Eve / Charlie vs. Mae: My Man Friday / Frankie & Johnny / Page 54 / That's All Brother / Pardon Me For Loving And Running / Put It Off Until Tomorrow / Slow Down / Come Up And See Me Sometime 1981 US DEMAND PERFORMANCES CASSETTES DPC-718 NAUGHTY BUT WISE (C-CAS) Pardon Me For Loving And Running / Put It Off Until Tomorrow / Slow Down / Come Up And See Me Sometime / Frankie & Johnny / My Man Friday / Page 54 / That's All Brother 1986 ROSETTA RR 1315 WOMENS HERITAGE SERIES FOREMOTHERS, VOL.7 - SIXTEEN SULTRY SONGS SUNG BY MAE WEST QUEEN OF SEX (LP/CD) Come Up And See Me Sometime / Slow Down / Easy Rider / Memphis Blues / My Old Flame / St. Louis Blues / Out On That Deep Blue Sea / They Call Me Mister Honky Tonk / Pardon Me For Loving And Running / I'm An Occidental Woman In A Oriental Mood For Love / Put Off Tomorrow / Mademoiselle Fifi / Frankie & Johnny / A Guy What Takes His Time / That's All Brother / My Daddy Rocks Me (with Duke Ellington & his Orchestra) 1987/1995 US JASMINE CD 04980 102 I'M NO ANGEL (CD) The Original Commercial Recordings: I Like A Guy What Takes His Time / Easy Rider / I'm No Angel / I Found A New Way To Go To Town / I Want You, I Need You / They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk / The Film Soundtracks: Willie Of The Valley (My Little Chickadee) / I Like A Guy What Takes His Time / Easy Rider / Frankie And Johnny / They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk (I'm No Angel) / That Dallas Man / I Found A New Way To Go To Town / I Want You, I Need You / I'm No Angel / When A St. Louis Woman Comes Down To New Orleans (Belle Of The Nineties) / My Old Flame / Memphis Blues (with Duke Ellington & his Orchestra) / Troubled Waters (with Duke Ellington & his Orchestra) / He's A Bad, Bad Man (Goin' To Town) (with Paramount Studio Orchestra) / Mon Coeur S'Ouvre A Ta Voix (Softly Awakes My Heart) (with Paramount Studio Orchestra) / I'm An Occidental Woman In An Oriental Mood For Love (Klondike Annie) / Mister Deep Blue Sea / Little Bar Butterfly / On A Typical Tropical Night (Go West Young Man) (with Xavier Cugat & his Orchestra) / I Was Saying To The Moon (with Paramount Studio Orchestra) / Fifi (Every Day's A Holiday) (with Paramount Studio Orchestra) / Now I'm A Lady (Goin' To Town) (with Paramount Studio Orchestra) -- reissue: "Matinee Collection", Bronco? Music & Entertainment, 2000 UK -- 1996 US SANDY HOOK CD 2098 MAE WEST ON THE AIR! RARE RECORDINGS 1934-1960 (CD) My Old Flame (with Duke Ellington) / The Chesterfield Supper Club with Perry Como (January, 1949) / The Chesterfield Supper Club with Perry Como (February 16, 1950) / The Dean Martin Show, NBC-TV (1959) / The Red Skelton Show, CBS-TV (March 1, 1960) 199? US DIONYSUS/BACCHUS ARCHIVES MAE DAY : MASQUERS CLUB SALUTES MAE WEST (CD) untitled (by Andy Albin) / untitled (by Hal Leonard / Hal Kanter) / untitled (by George Raft) / untitled (by Lloyd Nolan) / untitled (by Jack La Rue) / untitled (by Jim Backus) / untitled (by Peter Marshall) / untitled (by Steve Allen) / untitled (by Michael Landon) / untitled (by Mae West & Hal Kanter) / Diamond Lil' (Skit) (by Mae West) / Frankie & Johnny (by Mae West) / untitled (by Calvin Bartlett) / Pleasure Man (by Mae West) / After You're Gone (by Mae West) / untitled (by Andy Albin & Joe Pasternak) / untitled (finish) 1998 US REV-OLA CR REV 181 THE FABULOUS (CD) Love Is the Greatest Thing / I'm In The Mood For Love / Pecado (Sin) / My Daddy Rocks Me (With One Steady Roll) / All Of Me / They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk / Frankie And Johnny / I Want You - I Need You / Havana For A Night (Vereda Tropical) / A Guy What Takes His Time / If I Could Be With You / Criswell Predicts 2006 UK MAE WEST : COMPILATIONS HARMONY HS 11374/HS 11405 MAE WEST & W.C. FIELDS: SIDE BY SIDE (LP) A Guy What Takes His Time / (I Wonder Where My) Easy Rider's Gone / I'm No Angel / They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk / I Found A New Way To Go To Town / (+ W.C. Fields: The Temperance Lecture / Promotions Unlimited / The Pharmacist) 1970 US PROSCENIUM 22 W.C. FIELDS: HIS ONLY RECORDING (PLUS 8 SONGS BY MAE WEST) (LP, gatefold cover) Frankie & Johnny / My Man Friday / Page 54 / That's All Brother / Pardon Me For Loving & Running / Put It Off Until Tomorrow / Slow Down / Come Up And See Me Sometime (+ 2 tracks by W.C. Fields: The Temperance Lecture / The Day I Drank A Glass Of Water) -- reissues: "Original And Authentic Recordings By The Great W.C. Fields", Blue Thumb BTS 3/"W.C. Fields & Mae West", American LP 120 -- 19?? US EPIC SN 6059 V/A: THOSE WONDERFUL GIRLS OF STAGE, SCREEN & RADIO (2-LP) 19?? US FLYING FISH FF 70518 RAY CAMPI: WITH FRIENDS IN TEXAS (LP/CD) Ray Campi with Mae West: Caterpillar -- LP reissue with gatefold cover: Bear Family BFX 15258, 1988 GER -- 1986/1990 US RHINO R1/R2 70187 V/A: GOLDEN THROATS : THE GREAT CELEBRITY SING-OFF! (LP/CD) Twist And Shout 1988 US BBC RECORDS REB 728 V/A: SAUCY SONGS (LP) I Like A Guy What Takes His Time / I Found A New Way To Go To Town / Easy Rider / They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk 1989 UK COLUMBIA CK-57111 V/A: THIS IS ART DECO (CD) A Guy What Takes His Time 1993 US COLUMBIA CL 2751/SONY-COLUMBIA ACL 2751 ETHEL MERMAN, LYDA ROBERTI & MAE WEST: SONGS FROM MUSICALS OF THE EARLY 1930'S (HALL OF FAME SERIES) (LP/CD) Guy What Takes His Time / I Wonder Where My Easy Rider's Gone? / I'm No Angel / I Found A New Way To Go To Town / I Want You, I Need You / Call Me Sister Honky Tonk 1995 US FOREVER GOLD PERCD 003 V/A: HOLLYWOOD SINGS! (2-CD) They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk 2000 UK MAD DEADLY WORLDWIDE COMMUNIST GANSTER COMPUTER GOD DEC-13-2 V/A: CELEBRITIES... AT THEIR WORST! VOLUME 2.9 - BITCH BITCH BITCH! (CD) (Mae West does commercials for Poland Spring and talks to a fan on the phone, while pretending not to be Mae West.) 2001 US SEPIA RECORDINGS CD 1075 V/A: THE FABULOUS MAE WEST AND OTHER WONDERFUL GIRLS (CD) Love Is the Greatest Thing / I'm In The Mood For Love / Pecado (Sin) / My Daddy Rocks Me (With One Steady Roll) / All Of Me / They Call Me Sister Honky Tonk / Frankie And Johnny / I Want You - I Need You / Havana For A Night (Vereda Tropical) / A Guy What Takes His Time / If I Could Be with You / Criswell Predicts 2006 UK (Less)
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2008-05-13 11:46:24 Description: This is the song that Cyrus always has playing in his car on the Trailer Park Boys. The song is called "I'm Old (You're Young)" The CD is called " Twice As Hard" it was (More) This is the song that Cyrus always has playing in his car on the Trailer Park Boys. The song is called "I'm Old (You're Young)" The CD is called " Twice As Hard" it was recorded by Rick Jeffery who was the brother of one of my best friends (Jack Jeffery).
They both played for the blues master Dutch Mason in their music careers.
The song is very rare and hard to find...I was blessed to be a friend of Rick Jeffery's family. I hope you enjoy!
Rick passed away in 2003, as did his brother, Jack 2007.
Please rate and comment :-)
. (Less)
Channel: youtubeTags: Arts Benard Blues boys car corvette Cyrus's Entertainment fan fight gun Jeffery Music News park Performing red Rick Robichaud Rock trailer TV World
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12,
03:59,
2008-04-21 16:54:20 Description: Y'all pass me that bottle, and I'll sing you all a real song. Yeah! Let me get my key, ahum! Well, I'm looking through Harlem. My stomach squealed just a little more. A stagecoach (More) Y'all pass me that bottle, and I'll sing you all a real song. Yeah! Let me get my key, ahum! Well, I'm looking through Harlem. My stomach squealed just a little more. A stagecoach full of feathers and footprints, pulls up to my soap box door. Now a lady with a pearl handled necktie, tied to the driver's fence. Breathes in my face, Bourbon and coke possessed words. "Haven't I seen you somewhere in hell, or was it just an accident?". You know how I felt behind all of that, and so. Before I could ask, "Was it the East or West side?" My feet they howled in pain. The wheels of a bandwagon cut very deep, but not as deep in my mind as the rain. And as they pulled away I could see her words stagger and fall on my muddy tent. Well I picked them up, brushed them off, to see what they said. And you wouldn't believe "Come around to my room, with the tooth in the middle, And bring along the bottle and a president". And sometimes it's not so easy, baby 'specially when your only friend. Talks, sees, looks and feels like you, and you do just the same as him. Gets very lonely up this road, baby. Yeah, hmmm, yeah. Got more to say! Well I'm riding through LA, huh, on a bicycle built for fools. And I seen one of my old buddies, And he say, "You don't look the way you usually do". I say, "Well, some people look like a coin-box". He say, "Look like you ain't got no coins to spare". And I laid back and I thought to myself, and I said this, "I just picked up my pride from underneath the pay phone, And combed this breath right out of my hair." And sometimes it's not so easy, 'specially when your only friend. Talk, sees, looks and feels like you, And you do just the same as him. I just got out of a Scandinavian jail, and I'm on my way straight home to you. But I feel so dizzy I take a quick look in the mirror, to make sure my friend's here with me too. And you know good well I don't drink coffee, so you fill my cup full of sand. And the frozen tea leaves on the bottom, sharing lipstick around the broken edge. And my coat that you let your dog lay by the fire on, And your cat he attacked me from his pill-box lair. And I thought you were my friend too, man, my shadow comes in line before you. I'm finding out that it's eh not so easy, especially when your only friend. Talks, looks, sees and feels like you, And you do the same just like him. Lord it's so lonely here, hmmm, yeah. Yeah! Pass me that bottle over there...Yeah, yeah, okay... Thank you. (Less)
Channel: youtubeTags: Asia blues China cry Friend fuzz guitar hendrix hong japan jazz jimi kong love music My of rock taipobryan univibe wah
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11,
04:38,
2008-04-22 09:21:35 Description: A nice sunny day in the fall, time to put on the ol' Panama hat and do some Texas blues for my Lone Star friend Al. Mance Lipscomb (1895-1976)was one of Texas most important bluesmen, or songster (More) A nice sunny day in the fall, time to put on the ol' Panama hat and do some Texas blues for my Lone Star friend Al. Mance Lipscomb (1895-1976)was one of Texas most important bluesmen, or songster as he preferred to be called. He recorded 6 lp's for the Arhoolie label, most of them have been released on cd as well. This song is also known as Kate Allen or Katy Adams which were Mississippi steamboats. Joe Turner, a notorious "bad man" turns up only in one verse hence the other names for this song I suppose. It's a simple repetitive song, and those are often the finest, that creates a hypnotic effect on the listener. Great example of "less is more". Mance plays it with a pocketknife and doesn't damp the strings behind the slide, therefore you get a lot of "authentic" string noise; I imitated this by not damping too (something I usually do as my other slidesongs show). The structure of the lyrics is not AAB like a standard blues but AB which makes is a pre-blues song. I'm playing my old Stella and am tuned to open A. I recorded a new version of this song on my cd "Blues and Gospel from the 78rpm era" Available at http://www.youtunerecords.com/daddystovepipe.html (Less)
Channel: youtubeTags: accoustic blues bottleneck daddystovepipe fingerpicking fingerstyle guitar joe libscomb mance slide solo stella turner
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13,
03:39,
2008-04-22 16:20:48 Description: A simple blues song with a (slight) twist in the tail. Folks I have a story about an old friend of mine, he called to my front door and he told me, his future looked fine. You see he'd met this (More) A simple blues song with a (slight) twist in the tail. Folks I have a story about an old friend of mine, he called to my front door and he told me, his future looked fine. You see he'd met this woman and now he called her his own. And he just seemed so happy, he's no longer alone. But then this young woman, she found another man, And she felt she just had to, Abandon my friend. Life can be hard sir, when you're lonely and free, But you see I'm not crying, because the other man as me. Lyrics & Music (Copyright) - Kevin Dardis (Less)
Channel: youtubeTags: big blues dardis deutschland friend his kev kevin lost murphy my nuremberg nürnberg original woman
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18,
02:38,
2009-09-06 19:52:01 Description: Acker Bilk MBE (born 28 January 1929), born Bernard Stanley Bilk (known more familiarly as Mr. Acker Bilk), is a clarinetist. He is known for his trademark goatee, bowler hat, striped waistcoat and (More) Acker Bilk MBE (born 28 January 1929), born Bernard Stanley Bilk (known more familiarly as Mr. Acker Bilk), is a clarinetist. He is known for his trademark goatee, bowler hat, striped waistcoat and his breathy, vibrato-rich, lower-register clarinet style. He was born in Pensford, Somerset, England. Bilk earned the nickname Acker from the Somerset slang for friend or 'mate'. His parents tried to have him learn the piano, but Bilk as a boy found it restricting upon his love of outdoor activities including football (soccer). He also lost two front teeth in a school fight and half a finger in a sledging accident, both of which Bilk has claimed impacted his eventual clarinet style. He learned the clarinet while serving in the Royal Engineers in the Suez Canal Zone, and by the mid-1950s he was playing professionally. Bilk was part of the boom in traditional jazz that swept the United Kingdom in the late 1950s and 1960s. He first joined Ken Colyer's band in 1954, and then after he formed his own ensemble in 1956. Four years later, his single "Summer Set" (a pun on his home county) hit the British charts and it began a run of eleven top 50 hit singles. Bilk was not an international star until an experiment with a string ensemble and a composition of his own as its keynote piece made him one in 1962. He wrote "Stranger on the Shore" for a British television serial series, and recorded it as the title track of a new album in which his signature deep, quivering clarinet was backed by the Leon Young String Chorale. The single was not only a big hit in England (where it stayed on the charts for a remarkable 55 weeks, gaining a second wind after Bilk was the subject of the TV show This Is Your Life) but shot to the top of the American charts as well at a time when the American pop charts and radio playlists were open to just about anything, in just about any style [1] making Bilk the first Briton ever to have a song in the number one position on the Billboard singles chart. The album was also highlighted by a striking interpretation of Bunny Berigan's legendary hit "I Can't Get Started." At one point, at the height of his career, Bilk's public relations workers were known as the "Bilk Marketing Board", a play on the then Milk Marketing Board. Bilk recorded a series of albums in England that were also released successfully in the United States (on the Atlantic Records subsidiary Atco), including a memorable collaboration (Together) with Danish jazz pianist-composer Bent Fabric ("The Alley Cat"). But his success tapered off when British rock and roll made its big international explosion beginning in 1964, and Bilk shifted direction to the cabaret circuit. He finally had another chart success in 1976, with "Aria," which went to number five in England. In the early 1980s, Bilk and his signature hit were newly familiar, thanks to "Stranger on the Shore" being used in the soundtrack to Sweet Dreams, the film biography of country music legend Patsy Cline. Most of his classic albums with the Paramount Jazz Band have been reissued and are available on the UK based Lake Records label. Bilk has been described as "Great Master of the Clarinet" [2] and is often said to be the originator of 'Hyung-Tiger' playing, often copied by such artists as Johnny Range and Ted Morton. His clarinet sound and style was at least as singular as had been those of American jazzmen such as Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, and Russell Procope, and "Stranger on the Shore" which he was once quoted as calling "my old-age pension" remains a beloved standard of jazz and popular music alike. By 2000, Bilk was reportedly semi-retired and taking up painting as a hobby, but still appears with contemporaries, Chris Barber and Kenny Ball (both of whom were born in 1930) as the 3B's. One of his best recordings is ironically with the Chris Barber band, sharing the clarinet spot with the band's regular reedsmen, John Crocker and Ian Wheeler. He made a CD with another legend of British Jazz Wally Fawkes for the Lake Records label in 2002.He has appeared on two recent albums by Van Morrison, Down the Road and What's Wrong With This Picture?. (Less)
Channel: 123video Rate it: Rate:
13,
02:17,
2008-06-14 04:27:24 Description: Dad covering Steve Earle's 'My Old Friend the Blues' next to the fireplace Jan 2007
Channel: myspace Rate it: Rate:
0,
02:17,
2008-06-14 04:59:50 Description: It already says 'My Old Friend the Blues'. What more do you want?
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0,
02:52,
2009-03-12 08:28:34 Description: This is not a blues, nor is it country...
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0,
09:19,
2008-04-27 15:43:30 Description: At the recent Juke Joint and Planter's Celebration in Clarksdale, Mississippi, I had a chance to catch up with my old friend from NYC, Deak Harp. He was blowing solo street harp, amped up, with (More) At the recent Juke Joint and Planter's Celebration in Clarksdale, Mississippi, I had a chance to catch up with my old friend from NYC, Deak Harp. He was blowing solo street harp, amped up, with percussion, and it's an impressive sound.
If you're interested in finding out more about Deak, visit http://www.deakharpblues.com, or http://www.myspace.com/deakharp
If you've got the ambition of blowing street blues harp someday, you might want to visit my website, http://www.modernbluesharmonica.com
I was a street musician for many years and began my career as a solo street player in Greenwich Village before hooking up with Sterling "Mr. Satan" Magee in Harlem. (Less)
Channel: youtube Rate it: Rate:
5,
03:42,
2008-04-21 21:00:35 Description: The Gary Davies classic taught to me by an old friend blues player. Not my best version but the only one under 100Mb (More) The Gary Davies classic taught to me by an old friend blues player. Not my best version but the only one under 100Mb (Less)
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0,
06:12,
2009-09-02 14:56:15 Description: Me and my friend during a blues jamming in my garage (hence the name The Garage Blues). The song is performed by the duo Old School Orchestra which is: Walter Gasparetto (guitar) and Damiano Amadio (More) Me and my friend during a blues jamming in my garage (hence the name The Garage Blues). The song is performed by the duo Old School Orchestra which is: Walter Gasparetto (guitar) and Damiano Amadio (drum). I hope you will appreciate it. Thanks to everyone. (Less)
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