{"id":25,"date":"2017-11-13T12:07:27","date_gmt":"2017-11-13T17:07:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/?post_type=chapter&#038;p=25"},"modified":"2017-11-27T15:11:13","modified_gmt":"2017-11-27T20:11:13","slug":"chicago","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/chapter\/chicago\/","title":{"raw":"Chicago","rendered":"Chicago"},"content":{"raw":"<p xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><\/p>\r\n<p xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">June 13 - 26, 1968<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The visit to Chicago was quite successful even if took some time to get to know the city. I made the mistake to arrive too close to the weekend and didn\u2019t have the opportunity to meet the right people to tell me what was happening. A couple of days were wasted when I ran around and never really found what I was looking for. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There were many artists from Chicago that I really wanted to meet and see in action. At least they recorded in Chicago but maybe lived elsewhere. I didn\u2019t know. The last couple of years a few great LPs had been released on the English President label. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley Mitchell and Alvin Cash had solo albums and then there was the collection with artists like Otis Clay, Johnny Sayles, Willie Parker, the Five Du-tones and last but not least Harold Burrage. There had been similar collections from the Chess\/Checker labels but this was the hard gospel based soul I liked best. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Of course I liked artists like Jerry Butler, whom I already had seen at the Apollo, or Betty Everett, Gene Chandler, Dee Clark and Major Lance, but my biggest favorite was still McKinley Mitchell. I had seen Howlin\u2019 Wolf, Little Walter, Jimmy Reed, Sonny Boy Williamson, Otis Rush, Junior Wells and Buddy Guy at the American Folk Blues Festivals. I had most records released in Europe with these artists. But many of them had obviously passed their peaks while many of the soul artists were at the height of their powers. And I wanted to see them. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Thursday, June 13<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was a rainy day in New York but the sun shone in Chicago when I left the plane. I had befriended Jim from Memphis on the plane. He had ridden for a while with the Hells Angels. The rate at the YMCA was $4 per night. It was too expensive for me and I started looking in the back streets. Jim tagged along, but I started to understand that he was not a great follower of Martin Luther King. He would only detain me in my research. On a parallel street to South Michigan Avenue lay The New Leonard (544 State Street) with the moderate price of $11.25 per week. It was integrated and most of their patrons were black. Jim left without a word when he realized this. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Signs on the walls said that it was forbidden to drink alcoholic beverages in the rooms, or have other visitors than the legal wife. In fact not unreasonable demands as the original rooms were divided into half with masonite walls thus making the rooms totally lacking sound protection. The pendant lamp was just a naked light bulb lit by a string.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My next door neighbor, however seemed to be constantly drunk and the paper basket in the communal toilet and shower-room was always filled with empty bottles of classic port-wine and muscatel brands like Hunts White Port. I started to use that too and my favorite was Georgia Peach Wine. Sometimes I had to step over a one legged war veteran from WWII or Korea who had passed out during his washing routine. His crutches and false teeth were on the floor. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A communal closet had a one flame gas stove for cooking. It lacked cooking utensils so once I put a can of pork and beans on it. When I came back after the shower it was missing. I cursed the dishonest patrons but eventually saw the exploded tin on the floor. The wall was full of beans and tomato sauce but it was not easy to spot among old stains already there \u2026<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The staff was very friendly and helpful. I especially remember the clerk in the reception. He had his larynx removed and talked with the help of a vibrator held on his Adam's apple. Foreign tourists were rare here.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I checked the surroundings. Houses in the neighborhood were run down despite the closeness to the city center. The Lexington hotel at (South) Michigan Avenue nearby, had been Al Capone\u2019s headquarter. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Friday, June 14<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was time to get to work. My goal was to understand the whole picture of the Soul Music scene in Chicago by visiting clubs, record companies, recording studios and radio stations and meet artists, DJs and industry officials. My first stop was Chess Records at 2120 South Michigan Avenue. This address, which also was a title of a Rolling Stones\u2019 instrumental had stuck in my mind. But Chess had moved, with no forwarding address posted at the door. I walked by Vee Jay\u2019s closed doors at number 1449. They were bankrupt since a couple of years and the premises were later taken over by Dakar. Impulse had Gabor Szabo albums in their windows. A couple of ethnic companies were selling polka music. In the window of Bunky Records at 1421 were the cover of the Esquires' first album. Constellation Records had previously been a tenant there. (When I later met the Esquires, their base-singer Mill Edwards\/Evans told me that he was currently living at 627 East 87<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> in Chicago. I found Chess\u2019 new address and One-derful! Records in the yellow pages.) <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I started feeling disappointed and lost and asked people for help. They recommended a visit to the Regal theatre and to the entertainment district at the North Side of Chicago. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">First I checked the North side and found the Happy Medium (901 N. Rush Ph: DE 7-1000). The Younger Brothers' name in big letters was on their marque. I had heard a fast, harmonica instrumental with them in Sweden. At other establishments I found nothing of interest. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I went to 47<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Street and to 4719 S. Parkway and The Regal Theatre (Ph: AT 5-9585). It was a pretty rough neighborhood and had visible signs from the riots after the assassination of Martin Luther King three months earlier. It was in the afternoon. Children in dirty and raggedy clothes were playing outside. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I went directly inside when I saw the names on the marque:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Stevie Wonder\/Archie Bell and the Drells\/Jive Five\/Detroit Emeralds\/Jean Wells\/Maurice and Mac\/Shelley Fisher\/Soul Crusaders Orchestra.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The ticket price was around $2. The big room looked pretty worn down. I remember it as slightly smaller than the Apollo, but wider. Their chairs were more narrow and space for legs was less.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I took a seat to the left in the 5th or 6th row. The stage was pretty high up and my eyes almost at the same level sitting so close to it. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shelley Fisher opened and he sang two numbers on the first show: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">On A Clear Day<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Swing Low Sweet Chariot. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">At the second show he also did Lou Rawls classic about the tough life in Chicago\u00a0\u2013\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Dead End Street <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and also had the opportunity to dance a little. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I was not so impressed as his background was jazz and more for fans of Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole. But he didn\u2019t reach the heights of his inspirators. I later found a couple of records by him on VeeJay which were not very memorable either for a soul fan. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Maurice and Mac were next. They were Chicago\u2019s answer to Sam &amp; Dave. They had based their performance on them and Mac was a good enough dancer to almost fill the role. Maurice was a little hoarse that day and didn\u2019t really get a chance to show what a fantastic singer he is. Which everybody who has heard the Radiants recordings can hear. (But I was not yet aware of that both came from that group.) Their <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You Left The Water Running <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">was much heard on the radio then.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Jean Wells was at the second stop of her Chitlin\u2019 Circuit tour. Her performance was pretty identical to what she had done at the Apollo the week before (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Try Me And See<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Have A Little Mercy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">). Here she also did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Giving Up<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that Gladys Knight and the Pips made early in their career. Jean\u2019s interpretation of this outstanding number confirmed my impression that she was one of the very best soul singers in USA. I saw this rather short singer on three occasions but I never took the chance to interview her. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shout Magazine<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> in England later published an article that I wrote with Tony Cummings that had some biographical data; She was born in West Palm Beach, Florida on August 1, 1942. After the obligatory learning period in different church choirs she debuted on record in Philadelphia 1959. (Many of my favorite soul singers happen to be from Georgia and Florida.)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Detroit Emeralds were a great group with four fine male singers that had not gotten so much big stage practice yet.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">First they did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Daytripper<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ode to Billy Joe<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and then they asked the audience: What time is it?!<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Before the audience had a chance to answer they themselves did: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Showtime!<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Showtime <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">was a great song that referred to Wilson Pickett, James Brown and Otis Redding and their recording successes. They recorded for Ric Tic, one of Detroit\u2019s best soul companies. When I started buying their records I never found <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Showtime <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">despite the fact that it had entered Billboard\u2019s Hot 100 in March of 1968.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Jive Five had accompanied Jean Wells from the Apollo theatre and they again showed what a great group they were. Eugene Pitt sang lead on <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Cry Like A Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sugar Don\u2019t Take Away My Candy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and the group member with a shaved head (not so common then) sang lead on <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">No More Tears <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">which had been added since the Apollo show and was just as good as their other Musicor recordings; their record company then. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Archie Bell and the Drells never showed up. Their manager (Skipper Lee) later explained that it was a false group and that he had stopped them. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Now the curtain was closed. It was time for <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Stevie Wonder! (It was at this stage that he recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Fingertips <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">five years earlier<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">When the curtain was pulled aside he was sitting at his electric piano. He was one of the best Motown artists and his recordings were always of top quality. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">First he sang and played <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shoo-Be-Doo\u2014Be-Doo-Da-Day<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and one about <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Life of Jimmy Brown<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. He then stood up and did the best song of the show: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Was Made To Love Her<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. The excitement also mounted when he probably unintentionally almost tripped and fell over an electric cord. Stevie had brought his own musical director who also assisted him on stage. They walked to the drum set and Stevie did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. His drumming was much appreciated and he was taken back to the piano and did a number I think was called <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Soul Talk <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">where he played chromatic harmonica just like Toots Thielemans. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He closed the show doing <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Uptight <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">standing up behind the piano. Musically it had been quite satisfying but he was not a great performer and he was unable to connect with the audience like Ray Charles. He simply didn\u2019t seem comfortable on stage. I was slightly disappointed and he didn\u2019t do any better at the second show. I had probably seen the very first performances of this week at the Regal Theatre. Jean Wells and the Jive Five came directly from the Apollo where a new week also started on the Friday afternoon. The others had probably rehearsed the show yesterday and today. In fact the Soul Crusaders Orchestra seemed a bit tired. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My lasting impression was that the Apollo shows were slightly better. They focused more on the small details trying to make everything perfect. I guess the Regal show improved as the days passed. (The owners was later bankrupt and the Regal was closed in 1968 and the building was tore down in 1973.)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Saturday, June 15<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I went to Chess Records new address at 320 East 21<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">st<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> St. It was closed on weekends but the reception was manned and there were a couple of people in the foyer. I was not able to get their attention and was only answered very briefly so I left.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I had found good soul music on station WVON at 3350 S. Kedze. It was my next stop but I got lost and never found it. I had also noted that the Ter-Mar studios where Chess recorded were at 2030 S. Calumet. But I never came there either. Instead I more or less wandered around aimlessly and found nothing of interest.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">What to do tonight? I was again recommended by someone in the street to go to the North Side. I found a club with a Louis Prima inspired trumpeter. His gift to musical history might have been playing on two trumpets simultaneously but it felt like a wasted day. Where were all soul artists? <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">On my way home on S. Michigan Avenue, near my hotel, there was a jazz club. The door was open but the orchestra had taken a break. I walked in and was almost immediately approached by a woman selling sex. So I left. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sunday, June 16<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Rather aimlessly I went out early looking for a black church. But the people standing outside seemed very well adjusted and middle class and for some reason I did not feel welcome or comfortable and I left. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I later found myself at an outdoor concert at South Parkway. It was not good enough for me to take any notes. At night I went to The Club (5523 State St).<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I had seen a poster on the town and made an association to Little Milton singing <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Welcome To The Club<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (original by Lee Shot Williams). It was a jazz club with a small cocktail drinking clientele. The revue had a jazz combo, a couple of pretty sophisticated vocalists, a comedian and a couple of dancers. The night was hosted by the conferencier from the Regal Theatre and we talked a little. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">With audience sounds and icecubes in drinks it was as close I got that summer to Ramsey Lewis <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The In Crowd<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (or to similar music by the Young Holt Trio). <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I was not happy with this day either.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Monday, June 17<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">During my Sunday walk I had seen a poster about a gospel concert where The Mighty Voices of The Tabernacle and Professor Charles Taylor &amp; The Taylor Singers were the major attractions. It took place at Dunbar Vocational High School on 2900 South Parkway. Barbara Acklin and Bobby Rush had studied there before.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The school was located in a well-to-do district and the audience seemed affluent too. It was quite well dressed and many wore furcoats in the middle of summer.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Before the first part of the evening Father Hayes welcomed the audience and the artists and read from the bible. This was the first annual Pentecostal Musical there. Then Bob Weaver from radiostation WBEE took over. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Voices of the Cosmopolitan were first. This forty-member choir resided in Father Hayes church. Their lead soloist Cynthia Price sang like Aretha Franklin. She was quite good and if desired could be a fine soul singer. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Delois Barrett Campbell &amp; Barrett Sisters followed. They sounded fine and reminded me of the Soul Sisters that had records out on English Sue Records and a following there.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Professor Taylor sang and played the piano. Behind him stood a small group of female singers. And when the holy spirit filled him he rose up and danced \u2013 not unlike James Brown. A fine performance.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Mighty Voices of the Tabernacle from Detroit closed the first part of the show. Their leader and conductor (Charles Prey?) also danced around on stage. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">After a short break all artists did another set. But at the very end it was announced that a surprise guest was there. Charles Hayes walked forward to the end of the stage and pointed at a woman. It was Mahalia Jackson! Charles pretended that he was as surprised as we to see her there and after a little persuasion Mahalia walked on stage. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">When she started singing it was like an electric current had hit the audience and a hurricane hit the building. People rose up, clapped their hands and screamed. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My next seat neighbor, a conservatively dressed young man in his best suit and in my own age raised his hands in what looked like a black power salute. He rose up and started running but tripped on my feet and fell to the floor. Then followed what seemed like a grand mal epileptic fit. I was worried. 2-3 nurses were now running around helping people in the stalls. But I saw none in the balcony where I sat. Mahalia sang 2-3 numbers and finally my neighbor came through. He sat up with a smile on his face. He was certainly not a case for the medical sciences. He had been hit with a healthy dose of the Holy Spirit. And all the commotion and all the people who fell out in ecstasy had only increased this excitement. This was my first ever gospel concert or should I say school concert. The world\u2019s greatest gospel singer is there and sings. In fact the best female singer in all categories of the 20<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> century!<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My luck had turned. I was on the right track. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tuesday, June 18<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The radio worked well all summer. Whenever hearing something worthwhile on the radio I wrote down the name of the artist and song and passed judgement in my 8<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">graded scale. The radio was always on when I was in my hotel room whether I corrected and rewrote my interviews or ate. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">WVON was the station I listened to most. And WGRT, which had slightly better music.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">These songs, that I heard in Chicago, were worth buying. My special favorites of these new discoveries have a *.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Working On A Groovy Thing<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Patti Drew<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Save Your Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Bobby Bland<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">What Is This - Bobby Womack (*)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Slip Away <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">- Clarence Carter<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Grazing In The Grass<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Hugh Masakela<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Love Makes A Woman<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Barbara Acklin<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Security<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Etta James (*)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Paying The Cost To Be The Boss <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">- BB King<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There Was A Time<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - James Brown<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Dark End Of The Street<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Little Milton (*)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(You Keep Me) Hangin On<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Joe Simon<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tuff Enough<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Junior Wells<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Never Give You Up<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Jerry Butler<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Turn On Your Love Light<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Bill Blacks Combo<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I\u2019m Getting Along Alright<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Raelets<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Here Comes The Judge <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">- Pigmeat Markham<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Know I Can <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">- Esquires <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You\u2019re Losing Me <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">- Barbara Lynn<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Satisfy My Soul<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - John Brown<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I\u2019m Sorry<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Delfonics<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Here I Am Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Marvelettes<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Soul Picnic <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">- Fifth Dimension<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He Don\u2019t Really Love You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Delfonics<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got To Have Money<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Bobby Welch<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Save Your Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Solomon Burke<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Wanna Know<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Jimmy Soul Clark<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">River Of Tears<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Gene Chandler<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It Should Have Been Me<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Gladys Knight &amp; The Pips<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tell Me The Truth<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Billy Stewart<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Stay in My Corner<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - The Dells<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Woman I Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - BB King<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My Kind Of Woman<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Jimmy McCracklin<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Yours Until Tomorrow<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Vivian Reed<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Two Can Make a Couple<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - \u201cJohnny Kirk &amp; Lily-Ann\u201d <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Working On A Groovy Thing<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> - Miss Danny Bruce<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Every tenth song on the radio was by James Brown. Aretha Franklin was very often heard too. There was a lot of Tamla Motown material and light weight soul. The deep, heavy, hard gospel styled soul was more of an exception. At every soul station you could hear songs not heard else where. In Chicago but not in other cities I heard for example John Brown, Bobby Welch, Johnny Kirk &amp; Lily Ann and Miss Danny Bruce.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Today I went directly to One-derful! at 1827 S. Michigan Avenue (ph: 225-0583). The office was a couple of kilometers from my hotel. Present there was Eddie Silvers, their musical leader, and after a while the owner George Leaner showed up. They seemed happy to see me and asked what had brought me there. I told them about the profound impact the records on their labels One-derfull!<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and Mar-v-lus and M-Pac had made on me. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My own favorites were McKinley Mitchell, of course, and Harold Burrage, plus Otis Clay, the great Johnny Sayles and Willie Parker\u2019s fantastic <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got Your Finger In My Eye<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> etc. The blues recordings from Chicago in the mid-60s didn\u2019t have the same intensity as these artists.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Betty Everett, a great Vee Jay star, had done very well with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Your Love Is Important To Me<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on George\u2019s company. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Alvin Cash and the Crawlers (or Registers) with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Twine Time<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Alvin\u2019s Boogaloo <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">were just as good as \u2013 or even better \u2013 than Booker T. and the MGs. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">One-derful!\u2019s office and studio were on the first floor and below, on the ground floor were United Record Distributors office and warehouse. It was run by Ernie Leaner, George\u2019s brother.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Eddie Silvers showed me around. Their studio laid empty. It seemed no new recordings were planned. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">One-derful! became my headquarter in Chicago. George Leaner was always welcoming and liked to talk about black music and culture, even if my language skills were not always on the level that I could follow. In fact the staff was so nice that I didn\u2019t bother to go back to Chess, where both Johnny Sayles and McKinley Mitchell had tried their luck after One-derful!. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">When I told George about Mahalia Jackson he said that she\u2019s a very unhappy woman.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But at my first visit I wanted to know where I could see all these fantastic artists live. In fact all others singing in the same style. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Harold Burrage was dead. His heart had been weak. His recordings of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got To Find A Way<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Master Key<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> had made a big impression on me. McKinley didn\u2019t work much anymore but I got his phone-number and address. I also got the number to Willie Parker. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Otis Clay was not in town. George sounded sad when he told me that he had lost him to Cotillion records, a subsidiary to Atlantic Records. His first recording, Sir Douglas Quintet\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">She\u2019s About A Mover,\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> was getting airplay in the southern states during my continued travels. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Billy \u201cThe Kid\u201d Emerson only appeared at very small clubs. It was difficult to find out where he was, said George.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sometimes there were a drop of bitterness or sarcasm in his voice when George talked about the music business. He had stopped going to clubs. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley had been the biggest club draw in Chicago for a short while. Then the fans flocked whereever he appeared. George was born into show business. Artists like Billie Holiday stayed in the Leaner home while on tour. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He promised to try to get Alvin Cash and McKinley Mitchell to the office so I could interview them. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">George also recommended me to see his former right hand \u2013 a woman in her 30s\u00a0\u2013 who had opened her own business in the same block. She was getting ready to meet people in the business to launch her own record company and artist Bobby King.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">High Chaparral and the Scott Brothers Revue<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">That night I went to High Chaparral. One of three recommended Soul clubs. It was a very big place and could probably hold 1000 (seated and standing) customers. First I entered a room with tables and a big bar and then a staircase led to the dance floor. There tables were located around a square stage which looked like a boxing ring without ropes. This was the place that Bobby Bland used to appear at, and Sam &amp; Dave and even James Brown before they got too big. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Not many people were there. Only the tables directly around the stage were occupied. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Scott Brothers started the evening with Alvin Cash\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Keep On Dancing<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and Cliff Noble\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Horse<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Moaning And Groaning.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">During <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Horse<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> the Go Go Dancers Vickie &amp; Joy shook their hips energetically. Then Scott sister Irene Scott did Aretha Franklin\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ain\u2019t No Way<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and continued with Aretha\u2019s sister Erma\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Piece Of My Heart<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> plus <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">After Loving<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Knock On Wood. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Scott Brothers did a medley called <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got To Get A Groove <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">that gave Vickie &amp; Joy plenty of room. They were also called the two T-s and one was skinny and the other chubby. They didn\u2019t stand still in one place but walked back and forth along the sides of the square stage swinging their hips keeping time with the music. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The comedian Manuel Arrington gave the musicians a chance to rest during a comic interlude before he presented the members of the Revue as the \u201cDoctors of Soul.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then it was time for James Bennett, who like so many others that summer was an able James Brown imitator. But he declared that he was more comfortable with slow numbers.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He did:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sam &amp; Dave\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Soul Man<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Walter Jackson\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Speak Her Name<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">James Brown\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Lickin\u2019 Stick<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Lou Rawls\u2019 <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Love Is A Hurtin\u2019 Thing<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">James Brown\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There Was A Time<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The six members of the Scott Brothers deserve credit for a job well done this evening.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It had been enjoyable but without any extraordinary experiences. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Wednesday, June 19<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I tried to get hold of Willie Parker on the phone (815-723-6553) mornings and afternoons, but he never answered. Perhaps he was at work in Joliet, Illinois where he lived. I went back to One-derful! and interviewed Eddie Silvers and had a long talk with George Leaner. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Eddie Silvers was born in Kansas City 1928. He was a reed man playing saxophone and flute. He was married to Mary Brown born 1941 and one of the earliest members of the Ikettes. They had met when Eddie was playing with Ike Turner. But first he started with Big Joe Turner and then (1954-1956) was with Paul Williams and 1956-1959 with Fats Domino.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1959 he joined the Upsetters, Little Richards former backing group which continued on their own after Richard had quit show business. Then followed Ike Turner\u2019s Kings Of Rhythm during the time Ike &amp; Tina had a giant hit with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It\u2019s Gonna Work Out Fine.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Later Eddie worked with Bill Doggett, Jackie Wilson and Sam Cooke. He can be seen in the films <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Big Beat<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Girl Can\u2019t Help It.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He had also worked with Little Johnny \u201c<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Part Time Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">\u201d Taylor and was arranger and musician at Duke\/Peacock Records. For example on a session with the blind singer Clarence Carter, probably when he was a member of the duo Clarence and Calvin. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Nowadays he used to play with Mighty Joe Young during weekends. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">During his time with One-derful!\/Mar-V-Lus Eddie worked as an arranger for Alvin Cash and Otis Clay and others. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was also a song writer. He especially mentioned the song <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Big Boy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that he had arranged and written for the group The Jackson Five. I had never heard about them at this time. \u201cIt was their very first record,\" Eddie said. \u201cA group of young boys and the leadsinger looks like eight years.\u201d (Later, I have always thought that Eddie was talking about \u201cI\u2019m A Big Boy Now\u201d which the Jackson Five recorded a little later for Steeltown. But an article in Washington post by Aaron Cohen in 2014 announces that the original <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Big Boy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> had been found in the One-derful! vaults. Wikipedia says that Ed Silvers is the composer.) <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Eddie also mentioned that many of his contemporary musicians had thought that they needed drugs like Charlie Parkers to be outstanding. I also wrote down the names of Miles Davis, Cannonball Adderley and Brother Jack McDuff. I guess that he had also played with them, or that they were among his favorite musicians. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I told him about the poor reception I had received at Chess Records. He suggested I contact Marshall Chess, the son of the Chess brothers or Ralph Bass there.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I always used to asked everybody I met about James Brown and Ike and Tina Turner. Ed simply said that Ike was a mean character. While George Leaner added that James Brown probably was much older than everybody thought. He was supposed to have appeared in a circus as a child as early as 1928. Now he was in his mid forties. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Eddie also wrote down names of recommended clubs to visit:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Bonanza Club (7640 Halstead)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Checkmate (at 55<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and Calumet)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Place (619 east 63<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">rd<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> ) Where the Mustangs resided<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">High Chaparral (7740 Stoney Island and busses 63-77)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Blue Flame (809 E. Oakwood),<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Packin\u2019 Room (71<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">st<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> east of Jeffery)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">On the West side, which is a rougher part of Chicago:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Mama Blues, Papa Blues, Silvios, Cheetah (4800 N. 900 W), Mr Fox.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">One of One-derful!\u2019s talent scouts, a man of circa 35 years, checked the list and made a couple of additions.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But when Eddie and George discussed whether there were any good shows in town they settled with Sarah Vaughn. The week after there was an evening with Billy Eckstine that they mentioned. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Later I knocked on George\u2019s door. He didn\u2019t seem to have much to do these days. He appeared to have lost interest in the music business. But he remarked, without being patronizing that my own interest bordered on religion. Which also was a nice way to say that I was a fanatic. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">His own family had been active in the music business since the early 1900s. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He knew a bit about Swedish Jazz, which he held in high esteem, and he mentioned baritone sax player Lars Gullin\u2019s name. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">George preferred the big picture rather than getting involved in the details. It was surprising that he\u2019d rather talk about black music\u2019s place in society in general than about his time as an assistant to Lester Melrose for example. His favorite word in these discourses was \u201cethnic.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But I understood that he had known Big Maceo and nowadays his son. But he never talked about Little Walter and the other blues artists that he and his brother Ernie had recorded for Parkway in 1950. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was quite frank when he talked about his own artists. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He seemed sincerely sorry to have lost Otis Clay. He felt that McKinley Mitchell was limited as a singer as he had no timing. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Wonder Boy?! - I will never forget his distorted facial expression and his sad and sarcastical laughter when he mentioned his name. I could understand that Wonder Boy had not fulfilled the promise George had had. That the picture Wonder Boy had of himself was not materialized in real life. Perhaps his facial expression also meant that he felt that Tyrone was too self-centered. It was evident that George felt that his stake on Davis had been wasted.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Still not long after this conversation Tyrone \u201cWonder Boy\u201d Davis became a national sensation and the biggest soul star in Chicago on the Dakar label.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He had great expectations on The Sharpees (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I\u2019m So Tired Of Being Lonely<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">). It was a very good vocal group that could have been the equals of the Temptations. But they fought among themselves and eventually he got tired of them. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He also felt that that Alvin Cash group should be named the Registers and not the Crawlers. George also talked about the promotional tours he had made to the south to sell their soul artists recordings.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Alvin Cash and McKinley had been contacted but they had not yet been at the office.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the evening I went to the Bonanza Club which was located on 7640 So. Halstead. (Ph: 846-8943). It was exciting to travel this way with the elevated train. It screeched its way on a wooden platform which from time to time felt unsteady. With every stop the number of black people increased. Imposing wooden apartment houses stood down yonder. They seemed to be created for musical house parties. I had a romantic view on life there. It must be a symphony of sensual pleasures with music, sex, liquor, drugs, gambling \u2013 every forbidden vice in fact. I daydreamed about it while the train slowly moved forward. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Outside the Bonanza a friendly guy introduced me to Pat. He said that he was working as a PR-man and talent scout for One-derful! records. (George didn\u2019t confirm or deny Pat\u2019s claim afterwards. They obviously knew each other.)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Pat was something of a jack of all trades at the Bonanza but he was kept in a rather short leach by the club manager Mr Edward. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The club was owned by Rudy Howard. I asked Pat about McKinley Mitchell and Pat answered that he was at the High Chaparral and that he himself was going there later. I think the Bonanza was closed that night since the whole staff was going to High Chaparral. It was still daylight outside so I walked through pretty empty quarters. I always tried to look efficient and walk fast under those circumstances and not giving anyone the impulse to rob me. During third and fourth grade I had trained track running with classmate and later Olympic gold medal winner Anders G\u00e4rderud (1976; 3000 meter steeplechase) so I thought optimistically that I could run away from any perpetrator. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There were music coming out from the open windows. But most often it was Martin Luther King\u2019s speech <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Have A Dream.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Almost at my goal I walked through some rather disorderly business blocks. Suddenly a police car drove up by my side and I was asked what I was doing there. I tried to explain and the policeman said \u201cTake a taxi, these are dangerous streets to walk around all alone.\u201d I waited until the police car was out of sight and then continued on foot the last stretch of a highway-like road out to Stony Island Ave. It was dark outside now but the road was lit by good street lights.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">At High Chaparral I was welcomed with open arms and a couple of free drinks. Pat introduced me to the Scott Brothers, Reggie Soul, James Bennett and Joan, Bonanza\u2019s very attractive cocktail waitress. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Unfortunately, McKinley Mitchell was not there but I believe that Pat wanted me to get acquainted with the Scott Brothers, using McKinley as bait. The same thing happened again, especially in New Orleans. Manuel Arrington was the MC and comedian also this night and he introduced me from stage when the show was about to begin. I rose up and got a little sparse applause.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Scott Brothers Orchestra were:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Howard Scott (bass and vocal), Walter Scott (guitar), John Jackson (tenor sax), Bill McFarland (trombone), George Robinson (trumpet), Ira Gates (drums). <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Howard told me that the orchestra could be heard on such outstanding recordings as Otis Clay\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Don\u2019t Pass Me By<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and Alvin Cash\u2019s\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Barracuda<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and also their latest release. They had worked with Monk Higgins and can be heard on many of his productions and have accompanied Tyrone \u201cWonder Boy\u201d Davis.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">They had produced Reggie Soul\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My World Of Ecstacy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on Capri Records. . <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">They were contracted to Mercury but planned to leave in a month when the contract expired. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In all there were ten brothers in the Scott family and all sing and play. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">During this night\u2019s set with the Scott Brothers Revue Irene Scott sang Aretha Franklin\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Baby I Love You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and James Bennett did Wilson Pickett\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You\u2019re Looking Good<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and James Brown\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Got The Feeling<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I also met the owner of High Chaparral who was dressed in a Hawaian shirt and a shell necklace and his friend Thurman Cooper who was working at the local union\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 the Chicago Federation of Musicians. Pat gave me some addresses and tips about what to do. He also suggested that I should film the weekend show at the Bonanza. But I said that I could not afford it. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">After the show I accompanied James Bennett and his girlfriend to the local train station. Both were very well behaved and sympathetic youngsters in my own age. James was waiting to record his first record on the Capri label with the Scott Brothers. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I never saw his name on a record label afterwards. (Unless he was for example managing LeJam Records in Jackson Mississippi.)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">James was soft spoken and quiet and perhaps better suited to be behind the stage than a touring artist. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My budget didn\u2019t allow any taxi travel and I was often sitting at stations waiting for the morning train. There were no trains in the middle of the night. But the night air was cool and refreshing and I was so excited after these Chicago concerts that sleep was impossible anyway. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Thursday, June 20<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the morning I went to the local grocery store to buy food. Among products on a shelf lay a small pile of 45-records with the Upsetters on the Little Star label. Eddie Silvers had told me about his time with the group so I naturally bought one (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Valley Of Tears \/ Freedom Ride<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">). Later playing it, I was surprised to hear Little Richard singing on it. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I continued to call Willie Parker, but he never answered. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Pat had given me the address to WGRT (221 North La Salle, 5<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> floor) and also written the names of five disc jockeys. Eddie Morrison, Mr Vee, Daddo Daley, Bob or Mr Tucker and Lon Dyson, whose names I marked\u00a0\u2013 perhaps after I met him.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Pat signed his introductory note with: \u201cTell them Pat from the Bonanza sent you.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The radio station WGRT was located on the fifth <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">floor in a modern office building in the center of town. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Lyn Dyson was very welcoming, but surprised that I was so interested in the careers of obscure Chicago artists. He seemed both well educated and in good shape physically. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Outside the Bonanza this night, I bumped into the energetic and skinny leader of the Scott Brothers, Howard Scott. He brought me to a record shop nearby and borrowed the gramophone and played a couple of new records that he had produced. It was Fred Johnson\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Don\u2019t Leave Me Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on Shi Lush. Which was a fine Johnny Sayles styled effort. Reggie Soul\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My World Of Ecstacy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Capri 11712) was a more mediocre try in the pop soul genre. I was given copies of both records. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My stay in Chicago circled around the Bonanza, Checkmate and High Chaparral Clubs. In the middle were the Scott Brothers Orchestra. They had the reputation of being Chicago\u2019s top soul band. I think that this reputation was well deserved.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">To me they represent the local soul band with large ambitions. They try hard to get a regional reputation and then win success on the national scene. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">First and foremost it was about creating a solid stage show and engage good singers and instrumental soloists. And to enlarge the orchestra with more instruments and to launch the singers on their own record labels Shi Lush and Capri. And to work as studio musicians for other artists. And to write their own songs and get hit records. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Howard Scott had written songs like <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got To Get Over \/ I Resign \/ Do You Know What Love Is \/ Teardrops<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> for Syl Johnson and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ain\u2019t That Good Enough<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> for Ira Gates. He had also produced <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ode To A Soul Man<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I take The Girl With The Skinny Legs<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"ar-SA\">for Syl Johnson.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">His Orchestra had appeared in all possible places in Chicago and accompanied Maurice and Mac, Johnny Sayles, Liz Lands, Syl Johnson, Otis Clay, Alvin Cash, Chi-Lites, Bobby Johns, Junior Wells, Garland Green, and others. His Orchestra was good enough to appear at the High Chaparral, Chicago\u2019s biggest soul club, even if it was on days when few people were out. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tonight Johnny Sayles was going to appear at the Bonanza accompanied by the Scott Brothers Orchestra. The club was located on the corner of 76<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Street and Halstead. From the entrance followed a rather wide corridor; where the toilets were, to a large square sized room for patrons. The stage was at the opposite side (to the left) as was the small dressing room. And to the right was the bar. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The club was usually half full and you could sit in the bar and talk without getting too disturbed. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The clubs in USA were air-conditioned and well ventilated in contrast to English rock-clubs and Swedish very smoky cellar clubs.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Bonanza club manager mostly stayed in his office. We didn\u2019t have much contact. But I got in free and got a free drink every now and then. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I arrived early as usual and sat and talked with Pat when Joan asked me if I wanted to play a free record on the juke box. I chose my favorite <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Looking For A Fox<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> with Clarence Carter, and without any hidden intentions whatsoever. But I noticed a young man sitting at the bar. He didn\u2019t look happy and he was Joan\u2019s boy friend!<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I was saved from making any more mistakes by the arrival of Syl Johnson. His name had been repeatedly mentioned the last days, by for example Howard Scott. But I had not heard any of his records. I don\u2019t think any had been released in Europe so far. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Syl Johnson (6843 South Aberdeen, Ph: 873-0159) was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi in 1938 but his family soon moved to Memphis where he stayed until he was 12 years old. Then he came to the south side of Chicago and studied at Drake Grammar School and Wendell Phillips High School. He learned how to play guitar and in 1956 felt proficient enough to back musicians like Eddie Boyd, Muddy Waters, Junior Wells and others, on stage.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1958, while appearing with Junior Wells, he started singing. The next year he got a contract with Federal Records where he stayed for 6 years and recorded circa 10 sides\/records. This included several fine songs like Teardrops \/ I Got Love \/ Please, Please, Please and my own favorite <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Resign. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There Syl delivers a perfect and very exciting tenor falsetto.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He started his own band, first only a four-man rhythm section which in 1965 had grown into a nine-piece band. They performed at The Club and other venues. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then he came to One-derful! Records and later to St. Lawrence, a Chess subsidiary, where he recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Do You Know What Love Is \/ Things Ain\u2019t Right <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> The Love I Found In You. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then followed Twilight Records (later renamed Twinight) and his so far biggest hit <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sock It To Me<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> which became a million seller and immortalized this catch phrase. The follow up <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Different Strokes,<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> another popular phrase, also did extremely well. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He toured all over USA and a couple of weeks later I met him in Memphis where he appeared at the Paradise Club. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Leroy Joyce, a friend of Johnny Sayles from the days when they were in the Five Du-Tones was also at the Bonanza. He lived at 1425 S. Trumbull (Ph: 762-0736). I continued my research and Leroy told me that the group which was formed in 1963 consisted of the following members: Johnny Sayles, Leroy Joyce, Willie Guest, Andrew Butler, Frank McCurrey. All took turns to sing lead. One-derful! gave them a contract and the first record was <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Flee. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The next one <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Cool Bird<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> launched the bird-dance. Leroy claimed that it was the first \u201cbird\u201d recording. Perhaps it was recorded before <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Bird Is The Word<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> by the Rivingtons which entered the charts at the same time. Leroy also said that he had the reputation of being the fastest bird dancer in the country. Their follow up <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shake a Tail Feather<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> entered the national charts in 1963 and has since become a classic.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1964 the Five Du-Tones toured Europe with the Harlem Globetrotters; a virtuoso basket ball team that featured gifted ball clowns. The group used to perform during the intermissions. The tour included the major cities in England, Germany and France. They also toured a lot in USA. But their follow ups sold poorly and in 1966 the group broke up and Johnny Sayles continued on his own. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Now, there were plans to start all over again because of the renewed interest in <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shake A Tail Feather<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, Leroy said. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">At the time it was included in the Ike &amp; Tina Turner Revue and Ray Charles brought it back in the first Blues Brothers movie (1980). The Bird had also reached England and I was taught the basics there in the summer of 1963. Sometimes in a party mood late at night I might even try to demonstrate it to others, and now I was talking to the fastest Bird dancer in the world. Amazing!\u201d <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Musically, The Five Du Tones sounded like other great groups such as the Contours (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Do You Love Me<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">) and the Rivingtons (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Papa Ooh Mau Mau<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">).<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The interview was almost finished when Leroy brought my attention to a short and perhaps even a little stout man with a fine pompadour and a briefcase in his hand who sat on a bar stool a short distance away. It was McKinley Mitchell or Mac, which his friends called him. I only had time to rush towards him, shake his hand and ask him not to leave when the Scott Brothers started playing.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Irene Scott sang her Aretha Franklin inspired set (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ain\u2019t No Way, Baby I Love You, After Loving You, Knock On Wood<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">) \u2013 songs that I had previously heard with her. Then the Scott Brothers did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Gotta Get A Groove <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">while James Bennett did a couple of songs I hadn\u2019t heard him do before like: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In The Midnight Hour<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Wilson Pickett), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Open The Door To Your Heart<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Darrell Banks) and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Something Is Wrong With My Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Sam &amp; Dave). On a couple of James Brown numbers he imitated the master\u2019s dance style. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This was a shortened version of the Scott Brother\u2019s Revue and now it was time for the head attraction Johnny Sayles. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny Sayles was a superb singer. A truly great screamer who in fact even equaled the master of gospel-soul shouting Wilson Pickett himself. He really had the audience in his hand. I understood that he had a very good reputation in Chicago\u2019s south side soul clubs. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I have never before or later been in the proximity of so many truly great soul singers (The only exception was when I, the year before, entered the Stax Volt tour bus for autographs and got signatures from Otis Redding, Sam &amp; Dave and Eddie Floyd. Arthur Conley was on the outside. I saw him dancing and disappear round the corner of the Konserthuset \u2026)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny Sayles invited Syl Johnson on stage and he delivered <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sock It To Me. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was the first time I heard this fine number. In fact it was so good that he almost outshone Johnny Sayles. Johnny put his arms around Syl and filled in the refrain.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This was part of Sayles repertoire this night:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Raise Your Hand<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Eddie Floyd), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You Keep Me Hanging On<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Joe Simon), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You\u2019re Looking Good<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Wilson Pickett), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Try A Little Tenderness<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Otis Redding). Plus <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Lillie Mae<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, his latest on Chess. The Scott Brothers were in top form too. The six members sounded almost as much as the ten-man orchestra led by Chuck-a-Luck Charles that had backed Sam &amp; Dave on their second visit to Stockholm in the fall of 1967. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny Sayles<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">was born in Dallas, Texas on February 9, 1937. Rather early the family moved to St. Louis. From his seventh year he sang with the Tranquill Baptist Choir. He sang with Ike Turner\u2019s Kings of Rhythm before Tina came in the picture. Since then he has toured and worked with Albert King, Freddie King, The Falcons (when they included Wilson Pickett and Eddie Floyd), Alvin Cash, Little Milton, the Fifth Dimension, Miles Davis etc. He also sang on <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shake A Tail Feather<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> with the Five Du Tones. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shortly after he moved to Chicago. In 1964 he was the first artist on the newly formed Mar-V-Lus \u2013 \u201cThey created that label for me.\u201d He recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Don\u2019t Turn Your Back On Me <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got You On My Mind. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1966 he came to St Lawrence, the Chess subsidiary, and in November 1966 recorded his greatest hit so far <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Never Let Me Go.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Then followed Minit Records (1967) and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Deep Down In My Heart<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Anything For You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. Then he came back to Chess with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Can\u2019t Get Enough Of Your Love <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and his latest <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Lillie Mae. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Both were produced by Monk Higgins. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny has toured all over USA and appeared at the leading theatres and Soul clubs. He came to Alaska in 1964. He was booked for six months, but had to stay in two years (1964-65) as the public didn\u2019t want to let him go. Then he was back in Chicago again. He was often booked together with Freddie King. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">At the back of the Bonanza room, music business people occupied two tables. I talked to a couple of DJs working at small soul stations. There were also record company people playing in the mid or lower divisions, like Bill Tyson (Ph: 225-8787). Robert Taylor was affiliated with Al-Teen Records at 8208 Stony Island Ave. We talked about <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">So Much Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that he had recorded on that label. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Buddy Scott (Ph:225-3954) was one of the ten brothers in the Scott family. He led the group Buddy Scott &amp; The Rib Tips which was the house band at the Pepper\u2019s Lounge. (I somehow misunderstood that he was a drummer with the band. I visited Pepper\u2019s lounge briefly and maybe he was sitting behind the drums then, but according to current info he played the guitar). He told me that Junior Wells appeared at Peppers occasionally. I was given promos of their latest record that also Bill Tyson was involved with. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">One of the topics of conversation was that Little Willie John had recently died. He had been incarcerated at the Walla Walla prison after killing a man in a bar room brawl. He was only thirty years old. The people round the table were saddened. I understood that John was greatly admired by other singers. That he could handle any singing challenge. James Brown made a tribute Lp to Willie - <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Few Nice Things.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I only had one record by John in my collection, but before leaving USA I bought his original of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Fever. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This song had been a big hit for Peggy Lee in Europe in the late 50s. With Willie John\u2019s passing perhaps the best black singer alongside Jackie Wilson was gone. Someone else remarked that Jackie Wilson had been shot by a jealous girlfriend. The bullet was still lodged close to his spine. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">When I later discussed this evening with George Leaner he said that those small radio stations had such a weak signal that they could only be heard one block away\u2026<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I felt that it had been a very successful night. Artists started coming who obviously wanted to talk to me. That was a big surprise, and extremely flattering as I admired some of them tremendously. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley promised to come to the One-derful! office the next day. I really wanted to talk more to him and take some pictures. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was also evident that his career had hit the bottom then. He talked about illness and marital problem and bad luck in general. He was certainly not a tough guy. In fact he seemed quite soft and sensitive. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">What did he have in his briefcase? I was never told but I think it must have been a record contract and that he wanted me to sign him.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny Sayles seemed more carefree and to be able to handle most of life\u2019s problems. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Syl seemed more contemplative and reflected about his career. He was thirty years old and he felt that it was old in his profession as a soul singer. He had no illusions that his success would last forever. Despite his two successes in the last year he knew how fast the public forgets.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny Sayles asked me if I wanted a lift to my hotel. He and a friend had gone by car from Gary, Indiana. This light blue coup\u00e9 with an open top was not new or even last year\u2019s model. Syl\u2019s car, that he later drove to Memphis with, was better. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">With his friend behind the wheel and Johnny in the front seat and me in the back seat I was soon back at my hotel while they continued to Gary. Johnny lived at 7557 So. Wentworth there and his Club, the M.C. Lounge, was at 1501 Adams. Johnny also handed me his phonenumber: 846-7164.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It had been a great night!<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This is what McKinley Mitchell (9322 S. Emerald, Ph: RA-3-8287) said when we met at the One-derful! office. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was born in Jackson, Mississippi on December 25, 1938. (George thought that the right date was more like 1933 while Wikipedia now gives 1934.) The family stayed there for 16-18 years when they moved to Springfield, Massachusetts and in 1960 came to Chicago. He started to sing gospel in the early 50-s; first with the Hearts of Harmony and then with the Mitchellaires, from Philadelphia, PA. In New York (1956) this group recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This Old World Is Passing Away <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">with McKinley singing lead. In 1957 he crossed over to R&amp;B and started singing with the Tiny Button Quintet. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1958 he came to Chicago for the first time and started appearing in local clubs like the Cheetah. In 1961 he got a contract with One-Derful!. His first recording <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Town I Love In <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">became a major hit. Many minor hits followed and he mentioned <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Bit Of Soul, It\u2019s Spring<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (\u201cthe only song I have not written myself\u201d, he said), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">All Over Sudden, You\u2019re Never Gonna Break My Heart, Darling That\u2019s What You Said , Watch Over me, <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> He\u2019s Ready.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Monk Higgins arranged and produced his One-derful! recordings. In 1967 he recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Playboy <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">for Chess, but was now back on One-derful!. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He\u2019s married and has two daughters twelve and nine years old. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">George Leaner said that McKinley for a while had been the top drawing local artist in Chicago. He used to be followed by a long tail of fans. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He had appeared on all the major R&amp;B theatres: Apollo, Regal, Uptown, Howard (Washington), Royal (Baltimore) and clubs like the Royal Peacock in Atlanta. And been on TV-shows hosted by Dick Clark, Jim Lounsbury and Lloyd Shafton. But right now his popularity had waned considerably. He was deeply disturbed over it, but seemed to lack strength to get back.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Today he would have received the clinical diagnosis of depression and received medical treatment with for example Prozac. He had a sinus(?) operation one and a half years ago and had not been able to sing for a long time. He was still troubled with headaches. It had forced him to cut performances short and walk off stage, and he had gotten the reputation of being a drug addict. The vibrato he used while singing had probably aggravated the sinus problem. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">That\u2019s what he told me and I also understood that his marriage was in trouble. He felt misunderstood and there were constant battles at home. His wife seemed to have gotten tired of him. Maybe he had neglected her when he was on top. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley was a first generation soul singer. He had a unique singing style, with a very heavy vibrato combined with a slightly vicious tone of voice. This was quite different from other soul singers like Wilson Pickett or James Brown who dominated the scene then.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Even politically he was out of touch. \u201cDon\u2019t talk about Black Power \u2013 Give me Green Power instead!\u201d he said, meaning green dollar bills. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The come back at One-derful! for this great soul singer never happened. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This night I went to the Checkmate, another leading soul club at 55<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and Calumet. It was oblong in contrast to the square Bonanza. I think they could house a similar number of attendants. I also recall that the stage was in the middle but it\u2019s hard to tell now as the place was packed. In retrospect I think they had fuller houses at the Checkmate. Their manager was nice but had a rather cynical attitude towards the music business. I also met a strange man who said that he was a detective and talked much about black power and that he had special connections among the Black Panthers. But more likely, he was just a talkative alcoholic. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The comedian tonight was Manuel Arrington whom I had already had seen at the High Chaparral. Then he had portrayed a urinoir scene and what can happen there with size comparisons and after-drip. Tonight he imitated Aretha Franklin and it was more fun. In the 1970s he often opened up for Tyrone Davis. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The mission of the comedian was also to present the artist and his show and give them a well deserved break and like a Master Of Ceremonies keep everything together. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The comical qualities in nightclubs were usually low. I never saw the next Lenny Bruce, Eddie Murphy, Redd Foxx or Moms Mabley. It was mostly simple sex jokes and perhaps some statements about racial relations. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The artists of the evening were Ruby Andrews and Garland Green and they were backed by the Exciters Orchestra, who were considered to be equal to the Scott Brothers. In the intermission I talked to both singers. First Garland said that he needed permission from his manager and that he was forbidden to talk. This was unusual. Otherwise all artists wanted to talk. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ruby Andrews (5229 Greenwood Ave) was a very charming, kind and nice looking woman. She was born in the south side of Chicago on the March 12, 1947. She still lived there. (It is not uncommon that an artist forget their roots. Ruby was in fact born in the (deep) south \u2013 in Mississippi before moving to Chicago.) First she sang solo in St John\u2019s Baptist Junior Choir. In 1960 she started singing R&amp;B and appeared at local school dances. She was popular enough to get a recording contract already in 1963 and she became a professional artist. But the company folded before any recordings were made (According to the discography there was one issue in 1965 under her birth name Ruby Stackhouse.) In 1967 she came in contact with Ric Williams and his Zodiac label (7447 Linder Ave, Skokie Ill.) which was distributed by Summit distributors. The first record <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Casanova<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> in June 1967 became a big hit selling 25,000 copies per week before she stopped counting. Then followed <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Hey Boy \/ I let Him Take Me \/Kinda Love I Need \/ Just Loving You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (her latest.) All sold well enough, but not as much as <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Casanova<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. Ruby neatly texted these titles to make sure that they were spelled right in an article. She also recorded the fine <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Just Don\u2019t Believe It.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">She also wrote down three numbers she was going to sing tonight: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Knock On Wood, Yours Until Tomorrow<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Casanova.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Her songs are composed by the Brothers Of Soul who have had a hit of their own with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Guess That Don\u2019t Make Me A Loser.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ruby was still unmarried but she confided that it was going to change when she became rich. Did she tell the truth? From where came the Andrews name?<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">She had toured all over USA and also appeared in the theatres Apollo, Regal, Uptown, Howard etc. and been on TV-shows in Philadelphia and Cleveland. She was hoping to come to Europe soon. Right now she was appearing in all of the clubs in Chicago, usually backed by the Exciters. (Their solo guitarist was an albino. Rumors said there were two albinos in the group but I only saw one.) This six-man group took their name in Chicago in 1961, but they came from Washington (There is no connection with the Exciters vocal group that recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Do Wah Diddy Diddy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">.) They used bongo drums on stage which was rather unusual then. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ruby who had both a deep and large voice sang that night:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Baby I Love You, Knock On Wood, Respect, I Heard It Through The Grapevine, Piece Of My Heart, Just Don\u2019t Believe It, Your Until Tomorrow<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, and of course <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Casanova.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was a good show, but it was difficult to make any notes in a standing, rather packed crowd. I had never heard Ruby before on record but she made a sympathetic impression both on and off stage without belonging to the very top of her game. I don\u2019t think her <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Casanova<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> had been released in Europe then. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Exciters set consisted of numbers like <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tell Her I\u2019m Not Home<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Chuck Jackson), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Respect<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Aretha Franklin) and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Try A Little Tenderness<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Otis Redding). <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Garland Green (Ph 643-5488) was another new name for me. He was born in Mississippi in 1942 and came to Chicago in 1960. Down in the delta he had been influenced by blues and soul singers like BB King and Little Milton. They are still his favorites as is Chuck Jackson. He sang lead in the gospel group Leland Aires and started working at The Place. His latest record was <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Girl I Love You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> \u2013 a Jerry Butler inspired song. He recorded for Revue Records \u2013 a subsidiary for Universal. This night he sang songs like:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Hold On I\u2019m Coming<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Sam &amp; Dave), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Dock Of The Bay<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Otis Redding), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Don\u2019t Want To Cry <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(Chuck Jackson), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Man Needs A Woman<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> which was sung in the best possible deep soul manner of James Carr. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">If I Had A Hammer <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">had been transformed into a medley and included <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Amen<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and his hit <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Girl I Love You.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Garland sang in a heavy, bluesy, deep soul style close to Otis Redding and James Carr.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Next year he had a massive hit with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Jealous Kind of Fella<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Upon leaving the Checkmate at closing time and following the stream of people I got next to a young man and his very pretty girlfriend. He was a little shorter than myself (I am 176 cm). He looked at me for a while and then introduced himself as Alvin Cash. I had already gotten his phone number (MV-4-5720) and we decided to get together as soon as possible. But this didn\u2019t happen unfortunately.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Saturday, June 22<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I was invited to dinner at the Leaners. I think George\u2019s wife was a classically trained opera singer. They lived in a fairly large house in Chicago\u2019s south side with a nice garden in peaceful surroundings. There were both very nice neighborhoods and run down slum districts in Chicago, almost side by side. After a fine meal, in fact the only hot meal I had in Chicago, because of my tight budget, the Leaner couple offered to drive me around to interesting parts of Chicago. I suggested the west parts where the riots had taken place. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Several blocks were burned down and areas as large as football fields were in ruins. There were several policemen in the streets\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 one was carrying a shotgun. But we cruised safely around in George\u2019s Cadillac. These types of neighborhoods had not yet been shown in countless detective TV series to follow. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Later George confided in me that his wife had rather shown me the Opera House and other landmark buildings of Chicago. But he felt that it was good that I had seen the misery instead.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Leaving the Leaners I managed to take the wrong train twice and being late the Bonanza was full of people when I arrived. I guess there were about 250-300 people there. Artists appearing tonight were Maurice &amp; Mac, Liz Lands and The Jackson Five. I have forgotten the backing group as I came too late. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Liz Lands was very light skinned. She had a unique voice, a combination of Uma Sumac and Nancy Wilson with an enormous vocal range plus jazz and soul feeling. Tonight she did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Since I Lost My Baby \/ I Almost Lost My Mind <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(Ivory Joe Hunter)<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> \/ Summertime <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and also a couple of her own hits in a sophisticated soul style far from Aretha Franklin and Tina Turner but still appealing.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">She was born in New York in 1938. She started singing in church as soon as she could walk. Already at five years of age she was a professional. In the early 1950s she had two gospel 78s out on the Mercury label: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Come In The Room<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Somebody Bigger Than You and I <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and continued her gospel career until she was nineteen years old. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1958 she married the comedian Tommy Brown who became her manager. He was the MC and comic at the Bonanza tonight. Newly wed they formed the T&amp;L label (= Tommy &amp; Liz) and she had hits like <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Don\u2019t Shut Me Out<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Let It Be Me<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. They sold well all over USA, said Liz. Flops were <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Echo In The Back Ground<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Keep Me.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Mercury later released a Liz Lands LP with jazzy songs that could be found in cut out LP shops in Stockholm. She had appeared all over America from Alaska to Florida and even in Bermuda. She had sung in Carnegie Hall and been a regular TV guest at for example Joe Bostic\u2019s show. She had recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Midnight Johnny<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on Motown. She was also chosen for the B-side<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> of I Have A Dream<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">We Shall Overcome<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">) of Martin Luther King Jr\u2019s spoken record: on a Gordy 45. It was probably available in most African American homes.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Liz had many favorites like Jesse Belvin, Mel Carter, O.C. Smith and Billie Holiday, but she emphasized that she was not influenced by anyone. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">While we were talking she wanted me to smell the glass of water (\u201cno alcohol!\u201d) she was holding in her hand. Maybe she had been accused in the Negro Press of drinking too much? <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">She was a very good friend of Aretha Franklin and maybe there had been articles about her being Aretha\u2019s drinking companion during Aretha\u2019s marital problems?<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">During intermissions Tommy Brown walked around and sold Liz T&amp;L records and his own comedy album. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I had already seen Maurice and Mac at the Regal eight days before. Now they did three Sam and Dave numbers in a row: <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Hold On I\u2019m Coming, I Thank You <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> When Something Is Wrong With My Baby. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">And Aretha\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Baby I Love You<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">And last but not least their own current hit recording of Billy Young\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You Left The Water Running.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Maurice and Mac were quite good but it was a bit disappointing to hear them do so many Sam and Dave songs and see them being so influenced by them in their stage act too. But in American soul clubs it was the current hits by the stars that mattered. So at best an artist could do their current recording and their old hits. But then they had to rely on other people\u2019s material. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Maurice was <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Maurice MacAllister and he was born on April 23, 1937. Mac was Green MacLauren. He was born in the deep south on the January 11, 1940 and moved to Chicago four years later. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">They had met as children twenty years ago when Mac was eight years old \u2013 first in the Mount Calvary Youth Choir that had recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Since My Heart Has Been Changed <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">on Savoy. Maurice also had spent time in The Greatest Harvest Church Choir. (He might be on their recording of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Steal Away<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, a negro spiritual.) <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1960 they formed the group the Radiants with Wallace Sampson, Elzie Butler and Jerome Brooks. In 1962 they got a contract with Chess Records. Their first release <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Father Knows Best, <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">which<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">sounds like early<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Miracles,<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> sold well. Then followed three more 45s including <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shy Guy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> before Mac was drafted into the army. At the same time Elzie and Jerome departed the group. Maurice McAllister and Wallace was left and together with Leonard Caster they formed the \u201cnew\u201d Radiants and recorded their biggest hit, the great Impressions inspired <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Voice Your Choice,<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">\u00a0one of the best ever soul group pop songs outside the Motown sphere.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Caster was in fact Leonard Caston Jr. and he was the son of Baby Doo Caston Sr. who played piano and sang in the Big Three Trio with Willie Dixon in the 1940s. In 1966 Mac was free again and he and Maurice quickly formed the duo and got a contract with Chess. The company had had limited success with another duo before; The Knight Brothers. Maurice and Mac\u2019s first record was <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">So Much Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that Ben E. King had recorded earlier and then followed <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You Left The Water Running<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. The follow up<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Why Don\u2019t You Try Me <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> was already released (Maurice called the song \u201cTry Me Tonight\u201d). Rick Hall produced them in Muscle Shoals.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">They had been touring outside of Chicago and even in the southern states. Mac said that Maurice was his foremost musical inspiration. Both stated that the Radiants were inspired by the Impressions. But right now it was all about Sam &amp; Dave and apart from the three Sam &amp;Dave songs they sang tonight, they also did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You Don\u2019t Know Like I Know. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I interviewed all artists in the dressing room and not in the bar as before, as it was too crowded outside. First I was talking to Mac and then Maurice entered the room and took over.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">While standing with my back towards the door a crowd of youngsters had entered. They sat at the short end of the room on a bench and stayed there while I was talking to Liz Lands and M&amp;M, with my back to the boys. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This group had made quite an impression before. Their act mostly consisted of James Brown numbers and their lead singer did every James Brown move to perfection. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Among the songs they did were: <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Got The Feeling<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (James Brown)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Security<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Otis Redding)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tobacco Road<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I think that they also did a Temptations number \u2013 probably <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My Girl<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Eddie Silvers composition <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Big Boy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> closed the show. Michael was incredibly apt in imitating James Brown.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I guess the Bonanza and other nightclubs had an age limit of 18 or 21 years to enter. The young and single women going to the clubs were of my age but many had one or two young kids at home. Very few had traveled around or even left their home town except to visit relatives. University studies were not common. Our lives didn\u2019t have much in common and there was plenty of room for misunderstandings. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The young women, who made up the largest portion of the crowd, went crazy seeing Michael and rushed to the stage. He looked like six years old. My first conclusion was that the group reminded them of their children at home and they started missing them after a few drinks. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But afterwards, I also realized that they were far more experienced and had seen many more groups to compare with than I. They saw immediately that this was not an ordinary boy band but a future superstar. Because it was the only time this summer I saw anybody rushing to the stage and threw coins or dollar bills at the performers or the lead singer. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My only boy-band comparison was Donny Osmond and the Osmond Brothers that I had seen on the Andy Williams TV-show.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In retrospect I also wonder what had happened if I had rented that film camera and been the first to film a performance with the Jackson Five? Maybe I hadn\u2019t even filmed them and concentrated completely on Maurice and Mac and Liz Lands. Because I didn\u2019t interview any members of the Jackson Five. Their career was too short. What can you ask a baby like Michael? What his favorite games and sweets were? I do recall that an older man entered the room briefly. It must have been Joseph, their father. No introductions were made. But he\u2019s the one I should have interviewed, of course. I remember that he looked at me rather sharply when he entered. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The disappointment of the evening was McKinley Mitchell. He was recognized from stage and invited to sing. He did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Cottage For Sale<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. Perhaps as a tribute to Little Willie John, who had recorded it, and to Billy Eckstine who was appearing elsewhere in Chicago that weekend. But McKinley\u2019s lack of timing really ruined this song. His voice was not suited to jazzy ballads. I really hoped to see him do something more suited to his style. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">We were mingling in the back of the Bonanza room and McKinley introduced me to soul blues singer Little Oscar. In the crowd around us was a leopard clad women in a very short skirt who knew Oscar and pronounced Oscar\u2019s name like \u201cOzzkar\u201d in a very sexy way. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sunday, June 23 <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Every year many churches had a special program and invited gospel artists and groups to perform. It was this type of church concert I was looking for. Posters were advertising the event and outside visitors were welcome. A regular church service seemed more private and it was difficult to find out if they had any gospel artists there. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I really didn\u2019t know what type of church I was looking for. Above the entrance there were words like Baptist \u2013 Church of God in Christ \u2013 Pentecostal \u2013 Holiness Temple \u2013 Methodist etc. I had no idea where the best music was and I never met or asked a gospel DJ for information and help. There was at least one gospel DJ at every soul station and there were a lot of gospel played there in the mornings (and sometimes in the afternoon). <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">On the Swedish radio in the 1950s Professor Johnson &amp; his Gospel Singers recording of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(Gimme That) Old Time Religion <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">was heard often. It must have been a strong European seller. Later in the 1950s Mahalia Jackson was also featured. In fact a couple of her records were in the family\u2019s record collection. And when Vee Jay became bankrupt their LP catalogue found its way to Sweden. I bought one with the Swan Silvertones. I had also bought James Cleveland\u2019s album \u201cPeace Be Still\u201d and last but not least an album with Archie Brownlee and the Blind Boys of Mississippi. But I knew very little about gospel music.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This Sunday afternoon I visited the Evening Star Baptist Church at 4235 Cottage Groove. I think I saw the poster in the record shop me and Howard Scott visited, or in the street nearby. The show started at 3:30 in the afternoon and I arrived in good time. In the door was an old man with a can of Coca Cola in his hand. He welcomed me with \u201cWere you not walking in these quarters about a week ago?\u201d His voice sounded like Leadbelly\u2019s. He was the priest there and after a short sermon he went around and encouraged and inspired the gospel groups with an <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Amen!<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> every once in a while, with tears streaming down his face.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I was the only white person there. I sat down to the left in the middle of the church which had a capacity of perhaps 300 persons and now was half full. I was discreet and didn\u2019t take any notes. Now, I only remember Harmonizing Four\u2019s name from the poster. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">First there were two fine male groups with circa five members each and a guitarist. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then came a group with older members (in their early forties). I think it was the Harmonizing Four. The leadsinger had lost a couple of front teeth in the upper jaw. The climax came when he led the members in a church walk down the aisle. They were walking in a line singing \u201cWhen the gates of heaven are open I\u2019ll come walking!\u201d and made dramatic gestures and fell on their knees while singing. They sang without microphones and the guitarist was still on stage (I guess his cord was not long enough to follow). But it was no problem to hear them as I sat only a few feet away. The atmosphere was very intense and people fell out screaming in the pews. And I guess I was not far from fainting myself. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In Sweden the Bureau of Health would have stopped the show long ago. It was simply too exciting and maybe even dangerous for faint heart and nervous systems. Here a nurse just fanned people bringing them a little breath of fresh, cold air. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Next group was led by a very handsome young man whose intensity had a great effect on the younger women. And after him a light skinned male leading a six-member group. He was sweating and screaming. A couple of women were shaking and screaming in the benches and the singer also came in ecstasy. Singing, screaming, preaching and speaking with tongues he continued for at least fifteen minutes. A man nearby lay fainted for several minutes. They had overdrawn the allotted time schedule. But he continued encouraged by the old priest. Finally the guitarist and drummer started packing up their instruments\u2026 <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was difficult to get gospel singers to stop singing when the holy spirit hit them. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Last was a female group and they also managed to electrify the audience.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It had been an extremely intense afternoon. My nervous system was overloaded. I could not go to a soul club that night, or visit the theatre in the center of Chicago that had advertised \u201cAn evening with Billy Eckstine.\u201d Or to the Regal Theatre that had a new program this week. At the bus stop near the church a female churchgoer in my own age asked me if I had enjoyed the service. I could only answer \u201cyes\u201d and then we took the same bus from there. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The two gospel concerts this week had given me food for thought. I had my eight grade scale for concerts and recorded music. Now I had to add nine and ten for a concert from where I was carried out unconscious because it was simply too exciting.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The African American music experience is not focused on youth and high strung and emotionally impressionable teenagers who scream and faint when they see their idols. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This was ordinary middle aged people of both sexes who might have tough working and social conditions. They didn\u2019t use drugs or alcohol. Once a week they recharged the batteries in church. They called it the Holy Ghost\/Spirit and we in the west talked about delusion and self hypnosis. But this type of experiences and background had brought forward some of the most exciting artists in the world. (Archie Brownlee, James Brown, Tina Turner and many others; perhaps even Elmore James.)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Monday, June 24<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the afternoon I went to 1507 S. Michigan Ave\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 The address of All State Distributors and their boss Howard Bedno. I had been given the address by Syl Johnson and All State carried some small labels like Twinight. But it was closed. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I continued walking happily unknowing that Bedno had been a partner in Cobra Records with Eli Toscano. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the evening I went to Pepper\u2019s Lounge (503 East 43<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">rd<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">) which lay circa 30 minutes walk from the Bonanza. It was around 7:30 in the evening. There were many prostitutes and other (questionable) people in the streets here. It was rough. The door to the club was open and I looked in. I saw a low platform for the musicians at the other end. The room was smaller than the other clubs I had visited. Buddy Scott was standing next to the stage. A few nights ago he had given me his latest single with Buddy Scott &amp; The Rib Tips.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This was Junior Wells\u2019 home stage. His James Brown inspired recording of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Up In Heah<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> had been released in Sweden with a picture cover. I liked that recording. His Blue Rock recording of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You\u2019re Tuff Enough<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> was probably selling well then too. Junior and his longtime friend Buddy Guy had made youthful impressions at the 1965-1966 American Folk Blues Festivals. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Junior was not due to appear tonight so I continued to the Bonanza and their Blue Monday night. Little Oscar had given me a little leaflet about the event and said that this was the only gig of importance that he\u2019s had for months. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Oscar sat in the bar and we \u201creconnected.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Little Nolan started the proceedings and sang backed by the King Edwards band: <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Keep Me Hanging On<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Next was either<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Say Thank You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Joe Tex) or <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Thank You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Sam &amp; Dave)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">An unknown song was probably called <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Egg and\/or the Hen.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was pretty good. He was dressed in a JB Lenoir like outfit\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 tiger striped or leopard-like\u2026<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There was never time for an interview. (I have since been told that he and King Edward are brothers and that he played bass with Lonnie Brooks.) <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley was here again. He was going to make an unannounced performance. He asked me if there were any special songs I\u2019d like to hear and I mentioned my favorites from his English President LP. \u201cNo problem\u201d he said. \u201cBut I have not performed <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Found An Angel<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> for years and I know that King Edward can\u2019t play it.\u201d <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Found An Angel<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> is perhaps more like a pop R&amp;B tune than a soul ballad. But it\u2019s great nevertheless.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I don\u2019t know if he could read my mind but he must have understood that I was not impressed with his performance of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Cottage For Sale<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> last week. Now he was going to set things right.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But first it was time for the fine guitarist King Edward and his orchestra backing Little Oscar, who did a couple of BB King numbers and then his fantastic soul blues <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Suicide Blues <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and his latest recording which was not near as good. Oscar was a good artist but his performance faded in comparison with what was to come. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Little Oscar Strickland (628 East 39<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> St, Ph: 373-0386) was born in Carol, Illinois in 1937. The family moved to Chicago but then back to (Greenwood) Mississippi in 1947 where they visited and stayed with relatives. Then they traveled via St. Louis until they finally were back in Chicago in 1951. Growing up he alternated between gospel and R&amp;B. But in 1954 he stopped singing gospel and started working in the Chicago clubs. It was a slow start and it took him 13 years to get a local hit with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Suicide Blues \/ Empty Bottles<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on Palos Records which was leased and distributed by the Leaner Brothers. The recorded version was one class better than his stage version was that night. It\u2019s a first class soul blues \u2013 a knockout song, really. Now he was waiting for his second record (produced by Double H) <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Two Foot Drag \/ Got To Make A Change<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on Toddlin Town to be released on the 28<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> of June. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Oscar showed me his recording contract to prove that he was telling the truth. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">While Oscar was singing McKinley disappeared to change clothes. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the intermission I interviewed King Edward (or King Edwards as I called him then).<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was very dark skinned and born in Rayner, Louisiana in 1937. In 1955 he started backing traveling musicians like Big Joe Turner, Roscoe Gordon, Clifton Chenier, Jimmy Wilson and Freddy King. In 1959 he moved to Seattle and in 1962 to Chicago. He had been guitarist in Bobby Bland\u2019s road band. In Chicago he had been a studio musician for One-derful! and also accompanied McKinley Mitchell, Otis Clay, Little Oscar and Tyrone \u201cWonder Boy\u201d Davis. His latest record was <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Change Is Gonna Come \/ Knock On Wood<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on the Discount label, a Bill Tyson company. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">On stage Edward did fine instrumental versions of Willie Mitchell\u2019s big hit <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Soul Serenade <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and his latest record <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Change Is Gonna Come<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Sam Cooke) and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Knock On Wood<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Eddie Floyd). When Edward heard that I was on my way to Memphis he recommended a visit to the Blue Velvet Club and Handy on Beale Street with its seventeen-piece band.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then McKinley entered the stage. He stood still during his performance. The only thing moving was one hand keeping the beat against his trousers. He was pumping out one great song after the other. His voice was perfect. There was no doubt who had been the king of the Chicago Clubs and in my opinion he still was.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the middle of the performance a strange older women came into the room. She was dressed in tails and a bowler hat and had a cane that she pointed towards McKinley from time to time. I thought that she was part of the Blue Monday show but she was probably only a confused fan of McKinley. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was a small crowd at the Bonanza tonight, no more than 50 people including staff, orchestra and vocalists. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">According to my notes McKinley sang:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Evil Woman (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">blues<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">), You Know I\u2019ve Tried, Let Me Love You Again, Along The Navaho Trail, A Cottage For Sale <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(which also tonight was his weakest number)<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, A Bit Of Soul, I\u2019ve Been Wrong So Long <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(Bobby Bland)<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">plus also longer or shorter versions of songs from the A-side of his President LP (UK) during his hour long set:<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Town I Live In, All Of A Sudden, Darling That\u2019s What You Said, Hand Full Of Sorrows, A Bit Of Soul, Tell It Like It Is, It\u2019s Spring.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> He also did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Running To The End Of The Rainbow<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> which I didn\u2019t then recognize but which must have been an early version of his later hit recording <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The End of A Rainbow<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on the Chimneyville\/Malaco label some ten years later. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">An extremely satisfying night and an 8+ concert and the best I had seen in Chicago along with Johnny Sayles and \u201cHarmonizing Four.\u201d <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Only a few months ago I had been sitting in my small one-room student apartment and listened to this album. Now the record had been exchanged to a live artist who was kind enough to sing my favorite songs.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There were very few people in the audience and he turned towards me all the time. It was like he was appearing in my small flat. He had a fine soul blues band behind him that were capable of recreating the hard soul sound that characterized Chicago\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 not streamlined and slick but very emotionally satisfying.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley once said that he thought he could measure up to Bobby Bland \u2013 I could only agree. He belongs to the top ten soul male singers and can be compared to Otis Redding, James Carr or OV Wright. He is one of the really great unknown soul singers like Geater Davis or Lee Moses. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tuesday, June 25 <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I went to George Leaner to say goodbye and thank him and tell him about my latest experiences in Chicago. We walked around in the building and ended up in the bottom floor where his brother Ernie and United Record Distributors was. There was also a young relative to George (or Ernie) who sat and listened to Alvin Cash on a tape recorder. It didn\u2019t sound that special. It was the same James Brown funky beat that everybody had at the time.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(It might have been <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Keep On Dancing <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">or its follow up on Ernie and his son Tony\u2019s new record company Toddlin\u2019 Town. Scott Brothers were the backing group.) It was strange that Tony (?) was sitting in a closet in the United Distributors warehouse and not in the empty One-derful! studios upstairs. Was there a rift between the brothers; or was George fed up with this type of soul music? <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I had not met Ernie or been in his warehouse before. He seemed to be more of an aggressive music business executive that the quieter, peaceful, philosophical and sometimes ironic George. But I guess the brothers were different\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 as in most families. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The lead singer of the Redemption Harmonizers dropped by to pick up a few promotional copies of their latest 45 on the Halo label, One-derful!\u2019s gospel subsidiary. He autographed a copy for me. \u201cHe\u2019s a good singer,\u201d George confided. \u201cI\u2019m trying to talk him into recording soul material in the future.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ernie followed George upstairs and there the two brother wrote me a list of important record business personalities I must meet on my round trip this summer.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Later Ed Cook, a well known radio DJ and personality from WVON dropped by. An animated discussion about opportunities for black people followed. Ed also promised to do a portrait about the brothers in the local Afro-American newspaper <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Chicago Defender. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The discussion drifted into the Curtom Agency (8541 S. Stoney Island Blvd; near the High Chaparral) owned by Curtis Mayfield and Eddie Thomas \u2013 the manager of Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions. With veneration they said that Eddie Thomas\u2019 father was none other than Big Maceo himself. (He recorded the classic Boogie Woogie \u201cChicago Breakdown\u201d in 1945.)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">George Leaner had a good reputation in Chicago. Otis Clay said that he looked up to him like a father. I was lucky to have met him! <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then I went to the Checkmate again. Holly Maxwell was appearing tonight. She was the beautiful woman with a blond Afro hair style who had been among the crowd at the Checkmate last Friday.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Holly Maxwell was born on the October 17, 1945 (Sorry, I never dared to ask for a phone number or address). She started studying classical music at the age of nine. And got the education to be a piano teacher and also sang opera. She (graduated) finished this schooling and had appeared in a couple of operas with an all black cast. But on the September 18, 1963 she quit the classical music. She was afraid to lose her slim figure and become fat like other classical singers she had seen.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">If Ruby Andrews seemed like the girl next door, Holly did everything to make an impression. Looks were important. She was married to her hairdresser and he had made her white wig. Her mother was a dress designer and both made Holly look good or even sensational on stage. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">\u201cI always try to be friendly, but still keep a distance to the public,\" she said. Probably quite necessary with her good looks. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Not until 1963 had she started listening to R&amp;B and gospel. Soul was her kind of music now.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1965 Constellation contracted her and she recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(Happiness Will Cost You) One Thin Dime \/ Only When You\u2019re Lonely.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> When Constellation folded she moved to Golden World (1966) where she had her greatest hit <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Philly Barracuda<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and later she recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Don\u2019t Say You Love Me Until You Do. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But Golden World also folded.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Holly also wrote songs but don\u2019t feel they suit her style. Recently she had met a very famous German violinist who was so impressed with her singing that he wanted to work with her. This have already been told in the tabloid press, said Holly, but she didn\u2019t want to tell me his name. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tonight she sang the following songs backed by her regular group The Jaguars: <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Yesterday, Love Slips Away, Since I fell For You, Ain\u2019t No Way, On A Clear Day, Misty, Goin\u2019 Out Of My Head, Ode To Billy Joe, What Now My Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (where she also added a few lines from the French original \u201cEt Maintenant\u201d).<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I must say that Holly brought life to these rather worn-out songs. It was a bit surprising that an ex-opera singer could put so much soul into what she did. Her best performances were Aretha\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ain\u2019t No Way <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Baby Baby Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. She was nice and in fact a good singer even if she spent so much time on her good looks. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Holly also recommended that I contact Howard Bedno (All State Distributors) who took part in her career.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">When I later heard some of the records she had cut around this time I think she only rarely succeeds. I think her strength is her stage performance. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">While Holly was a new name to me I had heard about Lonnie Brooks (4633 S. Drexel, Ph: 268-3033) before. He was in the audience, and a nice young man who seemed fit and alert. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was born in Louisiana in 1943 and moved to Port Arthur, Texas circa 1953 and to Chicago in 1956-7. Early on he started singing and playing the guitar. He got the nickname Guitar Junior.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He had never sung in church, but had backed artists like Jimmy Reed, BB King, Junior Wells, Otis Clay (1965), and McKinley Mitchell. In fact he had sat in on most Chicago blues and R&amp;B stars performances.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">His first recordings were on Goldband in 1958-59 and he had a huge hit with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Family Rules<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that sold \u00bd million copies. Even <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Crawl \/ Now You Know <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> sold well. In 1960-62 he recorded for Mercury, still under the name Guitar Jr.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> All Of My Life \/ Through The Days and Through The Nights \/ Love Me Love Me \/ The Horse<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (not the Cliff Nobles\u2019 hit).<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then he had a car accident and had to rest for a year. He did two more records for Mercury in circa 1964: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Train \/ My Girl \/ Figure Head Woman. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1965 he came to All State distributors and their Pillow label where he recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My Girl \/Figure Head Woman<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Train <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">from 1965, that he wrote, sold 200,000 copies. (Or was it the same Mercury Recordings that were re-released?)<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1967 he came to Chess. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Let It All hang Out,<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that he recorded in November 1967, sold well. While <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Good Soul Lovin\u2019<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on the Cherry label didn\u2019t sell. He might have recorded more, but this is what he remembered on his night off. He was in a good mood. He had lots of gigs and did well. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Wednesday, June 26<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The airline ticket had burned a big hole in my pocket and budget. Simple mathematics had shown that eating out was impossible. Most clubs in Chicago had a $1 fee at the door. Then followed the obligatory drink at $1. If you couldn\u2019t sip on it all night, one more drink was another dollar. My daily budget was $8.50 and included hotel, local travel, food, drink and clubs. Taxi was not possible. It was bus, tube and train but mostly walking. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I always chose the cheapest room in the cheapest hotel. The food was bread and canned food with pork and beans or ham and tap water with plenty of chlorine, to it. It was OK as long I didn\u2019t have to sacrifice the soul-clubs and entertainment. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Next stop was Memphis. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Postscript <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In April 1984 I got a letter from Robert Pruter, author of the book Chicago Soul. (This is a translation of my Swedish translation):<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He wrote: \u201cI know about your articles in the Blues &amp; Soul Magazine (1968). For some artists this was the first ever written about them and there were no other information available. I have always thought that it was great that someone as early as 1968 reported about Chicago artists like Syl Johnson, Johnny Sayles, Maurice &amp; Mac etc. You were a pioneer cutting out paths in the wilderness while I was a latter settler who asphalted those paths.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was very kind of Robert to write like this. I have also realized that perhaps I was the only one who made this kind of field trip from town to town visiting clubs and talked to record business people. I have tried to write as much as possible about what I saw and experienced at the Clubs that I still can remember and can find in my diary. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My stay in Chicago had been very pleasant. The weather was like in Stockholm during summer. It was warm enough during the days and the nights were refreshing. I cannot remember a single situation when I felt threatened. The war in Vietnam was distant. I only saw a one-legged visitor at the Bonanza who used to dance to the jukebox. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I avoided the west side and kept to the south side. The blocks around the Bonanza and Checkmate were pretty calm. Even if there were so many great artists in Chicago most seemed to lack faith in the future. Many were disappointed how their careers evolved. It was a big city but still only a local market. It was difficult to move on. If you were stuck in Chicago you had to work small clubs the rest of your life there. <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Perhaps that is why my arrival was caused so much attention. Some artists like Little Oscar and McKinley Mitchell even brought their recording contracts just in case I was there to sign them\u2026? <\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The record companies were in a crisis. The era of the pop soul artists like Major Lance, Jerry Butler, Gene Chandler, Dee Clark, Betty Everett was over. The hard soul companies like One-derful! were soon closing down and Chess sent their best soul artists, like Etta James, to Muscle Shoals, Alabama to record. My favorites among the more obscure Chess\/Checker artists like Sonny Warner, Tony Clarke, Mitty Collier, James Phelps and Cash McCall didn\u2019t make much noise.<\/span><\/p>\r\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The biggest Chicago soul hit that summer must have been <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Stay In My Corner<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> with The Dells.<\/span><\/p>","rendered":"<p xml:lang=\"sv-SE\">\n<p xml:lang=\"sv-SE\">\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">June 13 &#8211; 26, 1968<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The visit to Chicago was quite successful even if took some time to get to know the city. I made the mistake to arrive too close to the weekend and didn\u2019t have the opportunity to meet the right people to tell me what was happening. A couple of days were wasted when I ran around and never really found what I was looking for. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There were many artists from Chicago that I really wanted to meet and see in action. At least they recorded in Chicago but maybe lived elsewhere. I didn\u2019t know. The last couple of years a few great LPs had been released on the English President label. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley Mitchell and Alvin Cash had solo albums and then there was the collection with artists like Otis Clay, Johnny Sayles, Willie Parker, the Five Du-tones and last but not least Harold Burrage. There had been similar collections from the Chess\/Checker labels but this was the hard gospel based soul I liked best. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Of course I liked artists like Jerry Butler, whom I already had seen at the Apollo, or Betty Everett, Gene Chandler, Dee Clark and Major Lance, but my biggest favorite was still McKinley Mitchell. I had seen Howlin\u2019 Wolf, Little Walter, Jimmy Reed, Sonny Boy Williamson, Otis Rush, Junior Wells and Buddy Guy at the American Folk Blues Festivals. I had most records released in Europe with these artists. But many of them had obviously passed their peaks while many of the soul artists were at the height of their powers. And I wanted to see them. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Thursday, June 13<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was a rainy day in New York but the sun shone in Chicago when I left the plane. I had befriended Jim from Memphis on the plane. He had ridden for a while with the Hells Angels. The rate at the YMCA was $4 per night. It was too expensive for me and I started looking in the back streets. Jim tagged along, but I started to understand that he was not a great follower of Martin Luther King. He would only detain me in my research. On a parallel street to South Michigan Avenue lay The New Leonard (544 State Street) with the moderate price of $11.25 per week. It was integrated and most of their patrons were black. Jim left without a word when he realized this. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Signs on the walls said that it was forbidden to drink alcoholic beverages in the rooms, or have other visitors than the legal wife. In fact not unreasonable demands as the original rooms were divided into half with masonite walls thus making the rooms totally lacking sound protection. The pendant lamp was just a naked light bulb lit by a string.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My next door neighbor, however seemed to be constantly drunk and the paper basket in the communal toilet and shower-room was always filled with empty bottles of classic port-wine and muscatel brands like Hunts White Port. I started to use that too and my favorite was Georgia Peach Wine. Sometimes I had to step over a one legged war veteran from WWII or Korea who had passed out during his washing routine. His crutches and false teeth were on the floor. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A communal closet had a one flame gas stove for cooking. It lacked cooking utensils so once I put a can of pork and beans on it. When I came back after the shower it was missing. I cursed the dishonest patrons but eventually saw the exploded tin on the floor. The wall was full of beans and tomato sauce but it was not easy to spot among old stains already there \u2026<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The staff was very friendly and helpful. I especially remember the clerk in the reception. He had his larynx removed and talked with the help of a vibrator held on his Adam&#8217;s apple. Foreign tourists were rare here.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I checked the surroundings. Houses in the neighborhood were run down despite the closeness to the city center. The Lexington hotel at (South) Michigan Avenue nearby, had been Al Capone\u2019s headquarter. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Friday, June 14<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was time to get to work. My goal was to understand the whole picture of the Soul Music scene in Chicago by visiting clubs, record companies, recording studios and radio stations and meet artists, DJs and industry officials. My first stop was Chess Records at 2120 South Michigan Avenue. This address, which also was a title of a Rolling Stones\u2019 instrumental had stuck in my mind. But Chess had moved, with no forwarding address posted at the door. I walked by Vee Jay\u2019s closed doors at number 1449. They were bankrupt since a couple of years and the premises were later taken over by Dakar. Impulse had Gabor Szabo albums in their windows. A couple of ethnic companies were selling polka music. In the window of Bunky Records at 1421 were the cover of the Esquires&#8217; first album. Constellation Records had previously been a tenant there. (When I later met the Esquires, their base-singer Mill Edwards\/Evans told me that he was currently living at 627 East 87<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> in Chicago. I found Chess\u2019 new address and One-derful! Records in the yellow pages.) <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I started feeling disappointed and lost and asked people for help. They recommended a visit to the Regal theatre and to the entertainment district at the North Side of Chicago. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">First I checked the North side and found the Happy Medium (901 N. Rush Ph: DE 7-1000). The Younger Brothers&#8217; name in big letters was on their marque. I had heard a fast, harmonica instrumental with them in Sweden. At other establishments I found nothing of interest. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I went to 47<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Street and to 4719 S. Parkway and The Regal Theatre (Ph: AT 5-9585). It was a pretty rough neighborhood and had visible signs from the riots after the assassination of Martin Luther King three months earlier. It was in the afternoon. Children in dirty and raggedy clothes were playing outside. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I went directly inside when I saw the names on the marque:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Stevie Wonder\/Archie Bell and the Drells\/Jive Five\/Detroit Emeralds\/Jean Wells\/Maurice and Mac\/Shelley Fisher\/Soul Crusaders Orchestra.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The ticket price was around $2. The big room looked pretty worn down. I remember it as slightly smaller than the Apollo, but wider. Their chairs were more narrow and space for legs was less.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I took a seat to the left in the 5th or 6th row. The stage was pretty high up and my eyes almost at the same level sitting so close to it. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shelley Fisher opened and he sang two numbers on the first show: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">On A Clear Day<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Swing Low Sweet Chariot. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">At the second show he also did Lou Rawls classic about the tough life in Chicago\u00a0\u2013\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Dead End Street <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and also had the opportunity to dance a little. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I was not so impressed as his background was jazz and more for fans of Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole. But he didn\u2019t reach the heights of his inspirators. I later found a couple of records by him on VeeJay which were not very memorable either for a soul fan. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Maurice and Mac were next. They were Chicago\u2019s answer to Sam &amp; Dave. They had based their performance on them and Mac was a good enough dancer to almost fill the role. Maurice was a little hoarse that day and didn\u2019t really get a chance to show what a fantastic singer he is. Which everybody who has heard the Radiants recordings can hear. (But I was not yet aware of that both came from that group.) Their <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You Left The Water Running <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">was much heard on the radio then.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Jean Wells was at the second stop of her Chitlin\u2019 Circuit tour. Her performance was pretty identical to what she had done at the Apollo the week before (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Try Me And See<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Have A Little Mercy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">). Here she also did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Giving Up<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that Gladys Knight and the Pips made early in their career. Jean\u2019s interpretation of this outstanding number confirmed my impression that she was one of the very best soul singers in USA. I saw this rather short singer on three occasions but I never took the chance to interview her. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shout Magazine<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> in England later published an article that I wrote with Tony Cummings that had some biographical data; She was born in West Palm Beach, Florida on August 1, 1942. After the obligatory learning period in different church choirs she debuted on record in Philadelphia 1959. (Many of my favorite soul singers happen to be from Georgia and Florida.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Detroit Emeralds were a great group with four fine male singers that had not gotten so much big stage practice yet.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">First they did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Daytripper<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ode to Billy Joe<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and then they asked the audience: What time is it?!<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Before the audience had a chance to answer they themselves did: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Showtime!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Showtime <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">was a great song that referred to Wilson Pickett, James Brown and Otis Redding and their recording successes. They recorded for Ric Tic, one of Detroit\u2019s best soul companies. When I started buying their records I never found <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Showtime <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">despite the fact that it had entered Billboard\u2019s Hot 100 in March of 1968.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Jive Five had accompanied Jean Wells from the Apollo theatre and they again showed what a great group they were. Eugene Pitt sang lead on <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Cry Like A Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sugar Don\u2019t Take Away My Candy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and the group member with a shaved head (not so common then) sang lead on <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">No More Tears <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">which had been added since the Apollo show and was just as good as their other Musicor recordings; their record company then. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Archie Bell and the Drells never showed up. Their manager (Skipper Lee) later explained that it was a false group and that he had stopped them. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Now the curtain was closed. It was time for <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Stevie Wonder! (It was at this stage that he recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Fingertips <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">five years earlier<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">When the curtain was pulled aside he was sitting at his electric piano. He was one of the best Motown artists and his recordings were always of top quality. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">First he sang and played <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shoo-Be-Doo\u2014Be-Doo-Da-Day<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and one about <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Life of Jimmy Brown<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. He then stood up and did the best song of the show: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Was Made To Love Her<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. The excitement also mounted when he probably unintentionally almost tripped and fell over an electric cord. Stevie had brought his own musical director who also assisted him on stage. They walked to the drum set and Stevie did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. His drumming was much appreciated and he was taken back to the piano and did a number I think was called <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Soul Talk <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">where he played chromatic harmonica just like Toots Thielemans. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He closed the show doing <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Uptight <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">standing up behind the piano. Musically it had been quite satisfying but he was not a great performer and he was unable to connect with the audience like Ray Charles. He simply didn\u2019t seem comfortable on stage. I was slightly disappointed and he didn\u2019t do any better at the second show. I had probably seen the very first performances of this week at the Regal Theatre. Jean Wells and the Jive Five came directly from the Apollo where a new week also started on the Friday afternoon. The others had probably rehearsed the show yesterday and today. In fact the Soul Crusaders Orchestra seemed a bit tired. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My lasting impression was that the Apollo shows were slightly better. They focused more on the small details trying to make everything perfect. I guess the Regal show improved as the days passed. (The owners was later bankrupt and the Regal was closed in 1968 and the building was tore down in 1973.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Saturday, June 15<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I went to Chess Records new address at 320 East 21<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">st<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> St. It was closed on weekends but the reception was manned and there were a couple of people in the foyer. I was not able to get their attention and was only answered very briefly so I left.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I had found good soul music on station WVON at 3350 S. Kedze. It was my next stop but I got lost and never found it. I had also noted that the Ter-Mar studios where Chess recorded were at 2030 S. Calumet. But I never came there either. Instead I more or less wandered around aimlessly and found nothing of interest.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">What to do tonight? I was again recommended by someone in the street to go to the North Side. I found a club with a Louis Prima inspired trumpeter. His gift to musical history might have been playing on two trumpets simultaneously but it felt like a wasted day. Where were all soul artists? <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">On my way home on S. Michigan Avenue, near my hotel, there was a jazz club. The door was open but the orchestra had taken a break. I walked in and was almost immediately approached by a woman selling sex. So I left. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sunday, June 16<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Rather aimlessly I went out early looking for a black church. But the people standing outside seemed very well adjusted and middle class and for some reason I did not feel welcome or comfortable and I left. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I later found myself at an outdoor concert at South Parkway. It was not good enough for me to take any notes. At night I went to The Club (5523 State St).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I had seen a poster on the town and made an association to Little Milton singing <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Welcome To The Club<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (original by Lee Shot Williams). It was a jazz club with a small cocktail drinking clientele. The revue had a jazz combo, a couple of pretty sophisticated vocalists, a comedian and a couple of dancers. The night was hosted by the conferencier from the Regal Theatre and we talked a little. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">With audience sounds and icecubes in drinks it was as close I got that summer to Ramsey Lewis <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The In Crowd<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (or to similar music by the Young Holt Trio). <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I was not happy with this day either.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Monday, June 17<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">During my Sunday walk I had seen a poster about a gospel concert where The Mighty Voices of The Tabernacle and Professor Charles Taylor &amp; The Taylor Singers were the major attractions. It took place at Dunbar Vocational High School on 2900 South Parkway. Barbara Acklin and Bobby Rush had studied there before.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The school was located in a well-to-do district and the audience seemed affluent too. It was quite well dressed and many wore furcoats in the middle of summer.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Before the first part of the evening Father Hayes welcomed the audience and the artists and read from the bible. This was the first annual Pentecostal Musical there. Then Bob Weaver from radiostation WBEE took over. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Voices of the Cosmopolitan were first. This forty-member choir resided in Father Hayes church. Their lead soloist Cynthia Price sang like Aretha Franklin. She was quite good and if desired could be a fine soul singer. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Delois Barrett Campbell &amp; Barrett Sisters followed. They sounded fine and reminded me of the Soul Sisters that had records out on English Sue Records and a following there.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Professor Taylor sang and played the piano. Behind him stood a small group of female singers. And when the holy spirit filled him he rose up and danced \u2013 not unlike James Brown. A fine performance.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Mighty Voices of the Tabernacle from Detroit closed the first part of the show. Their leader and conductor (Charles Prey?) also danced around on stage. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">After a short break all artists did another set. But at the very end it was announced that a surprise guest was there. Charles Hayes walked forward to the end of the stage and pointed at a woman. It was Mahalia Jackson! Charles pretended that he was as surprised as we to see her there and after a little persuasion Mahalia walked on stage. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">When she started singing it was like an electric current had hit the audience and a hurricane hit the building. People rose up, clapped their hands and screamed. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My next seat neighbor, a conservatively dressed young man in his best suit and in my own age raised his hands in what looked like a black power salute. He rose up and started running but tripped on my feet and fell to the floor. Then followed what seemed like a grand mal epileptic fit. I was worried. 2-3 nurses were now running around helping people in the stalls. But I saw none in the balcony where I sat. Mahalia sang 2-3 numbers and finally my neighbor came through. He sat up with a smile on his face. He was certainly not a case for the medical sciences. He had been hit with a healthy dose of the Holy Spirit. And all the commotion and all the people who fell out in ecstasy had only increased this excitement. This was my first ever gospel concert or should I say school concert. The world\u2019s greatest gospel singer is there and sings. In fact the best female singer in all categories of the 20<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> century!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My luck had turned. I was on the right track. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tuesday, June 18<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The radio worked well all summer. Whenever hearing something worthwhile on the radio I wrote down the name of the artist and song and passed judgement in my 8<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">graded scale. The radio was always on when I was in my hotel room whether I corrected and rewrote my interviews or ate. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">WVON was the station I listened to most. And WGRT, which had slightly better music.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">These songs, that I heard in Chicago, were worth buying. My special favorites of these new discoveries have a *.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Working On A Groovy Thing<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Patti Drew<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Save Your Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Bobby Bland<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">What Is This &#8211; Bobby Womack (*)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Slip Away <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">&#8211; Clarence Carter<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Grazing In The Grass<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Hugh Masakela<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Love Makes A Woman<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Barbara Acklin<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Security<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Etta James (*)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Paying The Cost To Be The Boss <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">&#8211; BB King<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There Was A Time<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; James Brown<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Dark End Of The Street<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Little Milton (*)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(You Keep Me) Hangin On<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Joe Simon<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tuff Enough<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Junior Wells<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Never Give You Up<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Jerry Butler<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Turn On Your Love Light<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Bill Blacks Combo<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I\u2019m Getting Along Alright<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Raelets<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Here Comes The Judge <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">&#8211; Pigmeat Markham<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Know I Can <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">&#8211; Esquires <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You\u2019re Losing Me <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">&#8211; Barbara Lynn<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Satisfy My Soul<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; John Brown<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I\u2019m Sorry<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Delfonics<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Here I Am Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Marvelettes<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Soul Picnic <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">&#8211; Fifth Dimension<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He Don\u2019t Really Love You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Delfonics<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got To Have Money<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Bobby Welch<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Save Your Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Solomon Burke<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Wanna Know<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Jimmy Soul Clark<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">River Of Tears<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Gene Chandler<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It Should Have Been Me<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Gladys Knight &amp; The Pips<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tell Me The Truth<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Billy Stewart<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Stay in My Corner<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; The Dells<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Woman I Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; BB King<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My Kind Of Woman<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Jimmy McCracklin<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Yours Until Tomorrow<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Vivian Reed<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Two Can Make a Couple<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; \u201cJohnny Kirk &amp; Lily-Ann\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Working On A Groovy Thing<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> &#8211; Miss Danny Bruce<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Every tenth song on the radio was by James Brown. Aretha Franklin was very often heard too. There was a lot of Tamla Motown material and light weight soul. The deep, heavy, hard gospel styled soul was more of an exception. At every soul station you could hear songs not heard else where. In Chicago but not in other cities I heard for example John Brown, Bobby Welch, Johnny Kirk &amp; Lily Ann and Miss Danny Bruce.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Today I went directly to One-derful! at 1827 S. Michigan Avenue (ph: 225-0583). The office was a couple of kilometers from my hotel. Present there was Eddie Silvers, their musical leader, and after a while the owner George Leaner showed up. They seemed happy to see me and asked what had brought me there. I told them about the profound impact the records on their labels One-derfull!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and Mar-v-lus and M-Pac had made on me. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My own favorites were McKinley Mitchell, of course, and Harold Burrage, plus Otis Clay, the great Johnny Sayles and Willie Parker\u2019s fantastic <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got Your Finger In My Eye<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> etc. The blues recordings from Chicago in the mid-60s didn\u2019t have the same intensity as these artists.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Betty Everett, a great Vee Jay star, had done very well with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Your Love Is Important To Me<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on George\u2019s company. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Alvin Cash and the Crawlers (or Registers) with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Twine Time<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Alvin\u2019s Boogaloo <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">were just as good as \u2013 or even better \u2013 than Booker T. and the MGs. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">One-derful!\u2019s office and studio were on the first floor and below, on the ground floor were United Record Distributors office and warehouse. It was run by Ernie Leaner, George\u2019s brother.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Eddie Silvers showed me around. Their studio laid empty. It seemed no new recordings were planned. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">One-derful! became my headquarter in Chicago. George Leaner was always welcoming and liked to talk about black music and culture, even if my language skills were not always on the level that I could follow. In fact the staff was so nice that I didn\u2019t bother to go back to Chess, where both Johnny Sayles and McKinley Mitchell had tried their luck after One-derful!. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">When I told George about Mahalia Jackson he said that she\u2019s a very unhappy woman.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But at my first visit I wanted to know where I could see all these fantastic artists live. In fact all others singing in the same style. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Harold Burrage was dead. His heart had been weak. His recordings of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got To Find A Way<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Master Key<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> had made a big impression on me. McKinley didn\u2019t work much anymore but I got his phone-number and address. I also got the number to Willie Parker. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Otis Clay was not in town. George sounded sad when he told me that he had lost him to Cotillion records, a subsidiary to Atlantic Records. His first recording, Sir Douglas Quintet\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">She\u2019s About A Mover,\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> was getting airplay in the southern states during my continued travels. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Billy \u201cThe Kid\u201d Emerson only appeared at very small clubs. It was difficult to find out where he was, said George.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sometimes there were a drop of bitterness or sarcasm in his voice when George talked about the music business. He had stopped going to clubs. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley had been the biggest club draw in Chicago for a short while. Then the fans flocked whereever he appeared. George was born into show business. Artists like Billie Holiday stayed in the Leaner home while on tour. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He promised to try to get Alvin Cash and McKinley Mitchell to the office so I could interview them. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">George also recommended me to see his former right hand \u2013 a woman in her 30s\u00a0\u2013 who had opened her own business in the same block. She was getting ready to meet people in the business to launch her own record company and artist Bobby King.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">High Chaparral and the Scott Brothers Revue<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">That night I went to High Chaparral. One of three recommended Soul clubs. It was a very big place and could probably hold 1000 (seated and standing) customers. First I entered a room with tables and a big bar and then a staircase led to the dance floor. There tables were located around a square stage which looked like a boxing ring without ropes. This was the place that Bobby Bland used to appear at, and Sam &amp; Dave and even James Brown before they got too big. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Not many people were there. Only the tables directly around the stage were occupied. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Scott Brothers started the evening with Alvin Cash\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Keep On Dancing<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and Cliff Noble\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Horse<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Moaning And Groaning.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">During <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Horse<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> the Go Go Dancers Vickie &amp; Joy shook their hips energetically. Then Scott sister Irene Scott did Aretha Franklin\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ain\u2019t No Way<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and continued with Aretha\u2019s sister Erma\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Piece Of My Heart<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> plus <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">After Loving<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Knock On Wood. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Scott Brothers did a medley called <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got To Get A Groove <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">that gave Vickie &amp; Joy plenty of room. They were also called the two T-s and one was skinny and the other chubby. They didn\u2019t stand still in one place but walked back and forth along the sides of the square stage swinging their hips keeping time with the music. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The comedian Manuel Arrington gave the musicians a chance to rest during a comic interlude before he presented the members of the Revue as the \u201cDoctors of Soul.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then it was time for James Bennett, who like so many others that summer was an able James Brown imitator. But he declared that he was more comfortable with slow numbers.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He did:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sam &amp; Dave\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Soul Man<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Walter Jackson\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Speak Her Name<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">James Brown\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Lickin\u2019 Stick<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Lou Rawls\u2019 <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Love Is A Hurtin\u2019 Thing<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">,<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">James Brown\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There Was A Time<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The six members of the Scott Brothers deserve credit for a job well done this evening.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It had been enjoyable but without any extraordinary experiences. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Wednesday, June 19<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I tried to get hold of Willie Parker on the phone (815-723-6553) mornings and afternoons, but he never answered. Perhaps he was at work in Joliet, Illinois where he lived. I went back to One-derful! and interviewed Eddie Silvers and had a long talk with George Leaner. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Eddie Silvers was born in Kansas City 1928. He was a reed man playing saxophone and flute. He was married to Mary Brown born 1941 and one of the earliest members of the Ikettes. They had met when Eddie was playing with Ike Turner. But first he started with Big Joe Turner and then (1954-1956) was with Paul Williams and 1956-1959 with Fats Domino.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1959 he joined the Upsetters, Little Richards former backing group which continued on their own after Richard had quit show business. Then followed Ike Turner\u2019s Kings Of Rhythm during the time Ike &amp; Tina had a giant hit with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It\u2019s Gonna Work Out Fine.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Later Eddie worked with Bill Doggett, Jackie Wilson and Sam Cooke. He can be seen in the films <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Big Beat<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Girl Can\u2019t Help It.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He had also worked with Little Johnny \u201c<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Part Time Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">\u201d Taylor and was arranger and musician at Duke\/Peacock Records. For example on a session with the blind singer Clarence Carter, probably when he was a member of the duo Clarence and Calvin. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Nowadays he used to play with Mighty Joe Young during weekends. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">During his time with One-derful!\/Mar-V-Lus Eddie worked as an arranger for Alvin Cash and Otis Clay and others. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was also a song writer. He especially mentioned the song <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Big Boy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that he had arranged and written for the group The Jackson Five. I had never heard about them at this time. \u201cIt was their very first record,&#8221; Eddie said. \u201cA group of young boys and the leadsinger looks like eight years.\u201d (Later, I have always thought that Eddie was talking about \u201cI\u2019m A Big Boy Now\u201d which the Jackson Five recorded a little later for Steeltown. But an article in Washington post by Aaron Cohen in 2014 announces that the original <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Big Boy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> had been found in the One-derful! vaults. Wikipedia says that Ed Silvers is the composer.) <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Eddie also mentioned that many of his contemporary musicians had thought that they needed drugs like Charlie Parkers to be outstanding. I also wrote down the names of Miles Davis, Cannonball Adderley and Brother Jack McDuff. I guess that he had also played with them, or that they were among his favorite musicians. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I told him about the poor reception I had received at Chess Records. He suggested I contact Marshall Chess, the son of the Chess brothers or Ralph Bass there.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I always used to asked everybody I met about James Brown and Ike and Tina Turner. Ed simply said that Ike was a mean character. While George Leaner added that James Brown probably was much older than everybody thought. He was supposed to have appeared in a circus as a child as early as 1928. Now he was in his mid forties. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Eddie also wrote down names of recommended clubs to visit:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Bonanza Club (7640 Halstead)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Checkmate (at 55<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and Calumet)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Place (619 east 63<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">rd<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> ) Where the Mustangs resided<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">High Chaparral (7740 Stoney Island and busses 63-77)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Blue Flame (809 E. Oakwood),<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Packin\u2019 Room (71<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">st<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> east of Jeffery)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">On the West side, which is a rougher part of Chicago:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Mama Blues, Papa Blues, Silvios, Cheetah (4800 N. 900 W), Mr Fox.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">One of One-derful!\u2019s talent scouts, a man of circa 35 years, checked the list and made a couple of additions.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But when Eddie and George discussed whether there were any good shows in town they settled with Sarah Vaughn. The week after there was an evening with Billy Eckstine that they mentioned. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Later I knocked on George\u2019s door. He didn\u2019t seem to have much to do these days. He appeared to have lost interest in the music business. But he remarked, without being patronizing that my own interest bordered on religion. Which also was a nice way to say that I was a fanatic. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">His own family had been active in the music business since the early 1900s. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He knew a bit about Swedish Jazz, which he held in high esteem, and he mentioned baritone sax player Lars Gullin\u2019s name. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">George preferred the big picture rather than getting involved in the details. It was surprising that he\u2019d rather talk about black music\u2019s place in society in general than about his time as an assistant to Lester Melrose for example. His favorite word in these discourses was \u201cethnic.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But I understood that he had known Big Maceo and nowadays his son. But he never talked about Little Walter and the other blues artists that he and his brother Ernie had recorded for Parkway in 1950. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was quite frank when he talked about his own artists. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He seemed sincerely sorry to have lost Otis Clay. He felt that McKinley Mitchell was limited as a singer as he had no timing. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Wonder Boy?! &#8211; I will never forget his distorted facial expression and his sad and sarcastical laughter when he mentioned his name. I could understand that Wonder Boy had not fulfilled the promise George had had. That the picture Wonder Boy had of himself was not materialized in real life. Perhaps his facial expression also meant that he felt that Tyrone was too self-centered. It was evident that George felt that his stake on Davis had been wasted.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Still not long after this conversation Tyrone \u201cWonder Boy\u201d Davis became a national sensation and the biggest soul star in Chicago on the Dakar label.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He had great expectations on The Sharpees (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I\u2019m So Tired Of Being Lonely<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">). It was a very good vocal group that could have been the equals of the Temptations. But they fought among themselves and eventually he got tired of them. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He also felt that that Alvin Cash group should be named the Registers and not the Crawlers. George also talked about the promotional tours he had made to the south to sell their soul artists recordings.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Alvin Cash and McKinley had been contacted but they had not yet been at the office.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the evening I went to the Bonanza Club which was located on 7640 So. Halstead. (Ph: 846-8943). It was exciting to travel this way with the elevated train. It screeched its way on a wooden platform which from time to time felt unsteady. With every stop the number of black people increased. Imposing wooden apartment houses stood down yonder. They seemed to be created for musical house parties. I had a romantic view on life there. It must be a symphony of sensual pleasures with music, sex, liquor, drugs, gambling \u2013 every forbidden vice in fact. I daydreamed about it while the train slowly moved forward. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Outside the Bonanza a friendly guy introduced me to Pat. He said that he was working as a PR-man and talent scout for One-derful! records. (George didn\u2019t confirm or deny Pat\u2019s claim afterwards. They obviously knew each other.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Pat was something of a jack of all trades at the Bonanza but he was kept in a rather short leach by the club manager Mr Edward. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The club was owned by Rudy Howard. I asked Pat about McKinley Mitchell and Pat answered that he was at the High Chaparral and that he himself was going there later. I think the Bonanza was closed that night since the whole staff was going to High Chaparral. It was still daylight outside so I walked through pretty empty quarters. I always tried to look efficient and walk fast under those circumstances and not giving anyone the impulse to rob me. During third and fourth grade I had trained track running with classmate and later Olympic gold medal winner Anders G\u00e4rderud (1976; 3000 meter steeplechase) so I thought optimistically that I could run away from any perpetrator. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There were music coming out from the open windows. But most often it was Martin Luther King\u2019s speech <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Have A Dream.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Almost at my goal I walked through some rather disorderly business blocks. Suddenly a police car drove up by my side and I was asked what I was doing there. I tried to explain and the policeman said \u201cTake a taxi, these are dangerous streets to walk around all alone.\u201d I waited until the police car was out of sight and then continued on foot the last stretch of a highway-like road out to Stony Island Ave. It was dark outside now but the road was lit by good street lights.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">At High Chaparral I was welcomed with open arms and a couple of free drinks. Pat introduced me to the Scott Brothers, Reggie Soul, James Bennett and Joan, Bonanza\u2019s very attractive cocktail waitress. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Unfortunately, McKinley Mitchell was not there but I believe that Pat wanted me to get acquainted with the Scott Brothers, using McKinley as bait. The same thing happened again, especially in New Orleans. Manuel Arrington was the MC and comedian also this night and he introduced me from stage when the show was about to begin. I rose up and got a little sparse applause.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Scott Brothers Orchestra were:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Howard Scott (bass and vocal), Walter Scott (guitar), John Jackson (tenor sax), Bill McFarland (trombone), George Robinson (trumpet), Ira Gates (drums). <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Howard told me that the orchestra could be heard on such outstanding recordings as Otis Clay\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Don\u2019t Pass Me By<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and Alvin Cash\u2019s\u00a0<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Barracuda<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and also their latest release. They had worked with Monk Higgins and can be heard on many of his productions and have accompanied Tyrone \u201cWonder Boy\u201d Davis.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">They had produced Reggie Soul\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My World Of Ecstacy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on Capri Records. . <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">They were contracted to Mercury but planned to leave in a month when the contract expired. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In all there were ten brothers in the Scott family and all sing and play. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">During this night\u2019s set with the Scott Brothers Revue Irene Scott sang Aretha Franklin\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Baby I Love You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and James Bennett did Wilson Pickett\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You\u2019re Looking Good<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and James Brown\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Got The Feeling<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I also met the owner of High Chaparral who was dressed in a Hawaian shirt and a shell necklace and his friend Thurman Cooper who was working at the local union\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 the Chicago Federation of Musicians. Pat gave me some addresses and tips about what to do. He also suggested that I should film the weekend show at the Bonanza. But I said that I could not afford it. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">After the show I accompanied James Bennett and his girlfriend to the local train station. Both were very well behaved and sympathetic youngsters in my own age. James was waiting to record his first record on the Capri label with the Scott Brothers. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I never saw his name on a record label afterwards. (Unless he was for example managing LeJam Records in Jackson Mississippi.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">James was soft spoken and quiet and perhaps better suited to be behind the stage than a touring artist. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My budget didn\u2019t allow any taxi travel and I was often sitting at stations waiting for the morning train. There were no trains in the middle of the night. But the night air was cool and refreshing and I was so excited after these Chicago concerts that sleep was impossible anyway. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Thursday, June 20<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the morning I went to the local grocery store to buy food. Among products on a shelf lay a small pile of 45-records with the Upsetters on the Little Star label. Eddie Silvers had told me about his time with the group so I naturally bought one (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Valley Of Tears \/ Freedom Ride<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">). Later playing it, I was surprised to hear Little Richard singing on it. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I continued to call Willie Parker, but he never answered. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Pat had given me the address to WGRT (221 North La Salle, 5<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> floor) and also written the names of five disc jockeys. Eddie Morrison, Mr Vee, Daddo Daley, Bob or Mr Tucker and Lon Dyson, whose names I marked\u00a0\u2013 perhaps after I met him.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Pat signed his introductory note with: \u201cTell them Pat from the Bonanza sent you.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The radio station WGRT was located on the fifth <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">floor in a modern office building in the center of town. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Lyn Dyson was very welcoming, but surprised that I was so interested in the careers of obscure Chicago artists. He seemed both well educated and in good shape physically. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Outside the Bonanza this night, I bumped into the energetic and skinny leader of the Scott Brothers, Howard Scott. He brought me to a record shop nearby and borrowed the gramophone and played a couple of new records that he had produced. It was Fred Johnson\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Don\u2019t Leave Me Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on Shi Lush. Which was a fine Johnny Sayles styled effort. Reggie Soul\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My World Of Ecstacy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Capri 11712) was a more mediocre try in the pop soul genre. I was given copies of both records. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My stay in Chicago circled around the Bonanza, Checkmate and High Chaparral Clubs. In the middle were the Scott Brothers Orchestra. They had the reputation of being Chicago\u2019s top soul band. I think that this reputation was well deserved.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">To me they represent the local soul band with large ambitions. They try hard to get a regional reputation and then win success on the national scene. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">First and foremost it was about creating a solid stage show and engage good singers and instrumental soloists. And to enlarge the orchestra with more instruments and to launch the singers on their own record labels Shi Lush and Capri. And to work as studio musicians for other artists. And to write their own songs and get hit records. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Howard Scott had written songs like <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got To Get Over \/ I Resign \/ Do You Know What Love Is \/ Teardrops<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> for Syl Johnson and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ain\u2019t That Good Enough<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> for Ira Gates. He had also produced <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ode To A Soul Man<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I take The Girl With The Skinny Legs<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"ar-SA\">for Syl Johnson.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">His Orchestra had appeared in all possible places in Chicago and accompanied Maurice and Mac, Johnny Sayles, Liz Lands, Syl Johnson, Otis Clay, Alvin Cash, Chi-Lites, Bobby Johns, Junior Wells, Garland Green, and others. His Orchestra was good enough to appear at the High Chaparral, Chicago\u2019s biggest soul club, even if it was on days when few people were out. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tonight Johnny Sayles was going to appear at the Bonanza accompanied by the Scott Brothers Orchestra. The club was located on the corner of 76<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Street and Halstead. From the entrance followed a rather wide corridor; where the toilets were, to a large square sized room for patrons. The stage was at the opposite side (to the left) as was the small dressing room. And to the right was the bar. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The club was usually half full and you could sit in the bar and talk without getting too disturbed. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The clubs in USA were air-conditioned and well ventilated in contrast to English rock-clubs and Swedish very smoky cellar clubs.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Bonanza club manager mostly stayed in his office. We didn\u2019t have much contact. But I got in free and got a free drink every now and then. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I arrived early as usual and sat and talked with Pat when Joan asked me if I wanted to play a free record on the juke box. I chose my favorite <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Looking For A Fox<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> with Clarence Carter, and without any hidden intentions whatsoever. But I noticed a young man sitting at the bar. He didn\u2019t look happy and he was Joan\u2019s boy friend!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I was saved from making any more mistakes by the arrival of Syl Johnson. His name had been repeatedly mentioned the last days, by for example Howard Scott. But I had not heard any of his records. I don\u2019t think any had been released in Europe so far. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Syl Johnson (6843 South Aberdeen, Ph: 873-0159) was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi in 1938 but his family soon moved to Memphis where he stayed until he was 12 years old. Then he came to the south side of Chicago and studied at Drake Grammar School and Wendell Phillips High School. He learned how to play guitar and in 1956 felt proficient enough to back musicians like Eddie Boyd, Muddy Waters, Junior Wells and others, on stage.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1958, while appearing with Junior Wells, he started singing. The next year he got a contract with Federal Records where he stayed for 6 years and recorded circa 10 sides\/records. This included several fine songs like Teardrops \/ I Got Love \/ Please, Please, Please and my own favorite <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Resign. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There Syl delivers a perfect and very exciting tenor falsetto.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He started his own band, first only a four-man rhythm section which in 1965 had grown into a nine-piece band. They performed at The Club and other venues. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then he came to One-derful! Records and later to St. Lawrence, a Chess subsidiary, where he recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Do You Know What Love Is \/ Things Ain\u2019t Right <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> The Love I Found In You. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then followed Twilight Records (later renamed Twinight) and his so far biggest hit <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sock It To Me<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> which became a million seller and immortalized this catch phrase. The follow up <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Different Strokes,<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> another popular phrase, also did extremely well. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He toured all over USA and a couple of weeks later I met him in Memphis where he appeared at the Paradise Club. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Leroy Joyce, a friend of Johnny Sayles from the days when they were in the Five Du-Tones was also at the Bonanza. He lived at 1425 S. Trumbull (Ph: 762-0736). I continued my research and Leroy told me that the group which was formed in 1963 consisted of the following members: Johnny Sayles, Leroy Joyce, Willie Guest, Andrew Butler, Frank McCurrey. All took turns to sing lead. One-derful! gave them a contract and the first record was <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Flee. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The next one <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Cool Bird<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> launched the bird-dance. Leroy claimed that it was the first \u201cbird\u201d recording. Perhaps it was recorded before <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Bird Is The Word<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> by the Rivingtons which entered the charts at the same time. Leroy also said that he had the reputation of being the fastest bird dancer in the country. Their follow up <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shake a Tail Feather<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> entered the national charts in 1963 and has since become a classic.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1964 the Five Du-Tones toured Europe with the Harlem Globetrotters; a virtuoso basket ball team that featured gifted ball clowns. The group used to perform during the intermissions. The tour included the major cities in England, Germany and France. They also toured a lot in USA. But their follow ups sold poorly and in 1966 the group broke up and Johnny Sayles continued on his own. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Now, there were plans to start all over again because of the renewed interest in <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shake A Tail Feather<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, Leroy said. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">At the time it was included in the Ike &amp; Tina Turner Revue and Ray Charles brought it back in the first Blues Brothers movie (1980). The Bird had also reached England and I was taught the basics there in the summer of 1963. Sometimes in a party mood late at night I might even try to demonstrate it to others, and now I was talking to the fastest Bird dancer in the world. Amazing!\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Musically, The Five Du Tones sounded like other great groups such as the Contours (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Do You Love Me<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">) and the Rivingtons (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Papa Ooh Mau Mau<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The interview was almost finished when Leroy brought my attention to a short and perhaps even a little stout man with a fine pompadour and a briefcase in his hand who sat on a bar stool a short distance away. It was McKinley Mitchell or Mac, which his friends called him. I only had time to rush towards him, shake his hand and ask him not to leave when the Scott Brothers started playing.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Irene Scott sang her Aretha Franklin inspired set (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ain\u2019t No Way, Baby I Love You, After Loving You, Knock On Wood<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">) \u2013 songs that I had previously heard with her. Then the Scott Brothers did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Gotta Get A Groove <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">while James Bennett did a couple of songs I hadn\u2019t heard him do before like: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In The Midnight Hour<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Wilson Pickett), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Open The Door To Your Heart<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Darrell Banks) and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Something Is Wrong With My Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Sam &amp; Dave). On a couple of James Brown numbers he imitated the master\u2019s dance style. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This was a shortened version of the Scott Brother\u2019s Revue and now it was time for the head attraction Johnny Sayles. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny Sayles was a superb singer. A truly great screamer who in fact even equaled the master of gospel-soul shouting Wilson Pickett himself. He really had the audience in his hand. I understood that he had a very good reputation in Chicago\u2019s south side soul clubs. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I have never before or later been in the proximity of so many truly great soul singers (The only exception was when I, the year before, entered the Stax Volt tour bus for autographs and got signatures from Otis Redding, Sam &amp; Dave and Eddie Floyd. Arthur Conley was on the outside. I saw him dancing and disappear round the corner of the Konserthuset \u2026)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny Sayles invited Syl Johnson on stage and he delivered <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sock It To Me. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was the first time I heard this fine number. In fact it was so good that he almost outshone Johnny Sayles. Johnny put his arms around Syl and filled in the refrain.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This was part of Sayles repertoire this night:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Raise Your Hand<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Eddie Floyd), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You Keep Me Hanging On<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Joe Simon), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You\u2019re Looking Good<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Wilson Pickett), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Try A Little Tenderness<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Otis Redding). Plus <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Lillie Mae<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, his latest on Chess. The Scott Brothers were in top form too. The six members sounded almost as much as the ten-man orchestra led by Chuck-a-Luck Charles that had backed Sam &amp; Dave on their second visit to Stockholm in the fall of 1967. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny Sayles<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">was born in Dallas, Texas on February 9, 1937. Rather early the family moved to St. Louis. From his seventh year he sang with the Tranquill Baptist Choir. He sang with Ike Turner\u2019s Kings of Rhythm before Tina came in the picture. Since then he has toured and worked with Albert King, Freddie King, The Falcons (when they included Wilson Pickett and Eddie Floyd), Alvin Cash, Little Milton, the Fifth Dimension, Miles Davis etc. He also sang on <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shake A Tail Feather<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> with the Five Du Tones. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shortly after he moved to Chicago. In 1964 he was the first artist on the newly formed Mar-V-Lus \u2013 \u201cThey created that label for me.\u201d He recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Don\u2019t Turn Your Back On Me <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Got You On My Mind. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1966 he came to St Lawrence, the Chess subsidiary, and in November 1966 recorded his greatest hit so far <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Never Let Me Go.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Then followed Minit Records (1967) and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Deep Down In My Heart<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Anything For You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. Then he came back to Chess with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Can\u2019t Get Enough Of Your Love <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and his latest <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Lillie Mae. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Both were produced by Monk Higgins. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny has toured all over USA and appeared at the leading theatres and Soul clubs. He came to Alaska in 1964. He was booked for six months, but had to stay in two years (1964-65) as the public didn\u2019t want to let him go. Then he was back in Chicago again. He was often booked together with Freddie King. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">At the back of the Bonanza room, music business people occupied two tables. I talked to a couple of DJs working at small soul stations. There were also record company people playing in the mid or lower divisions, like Bill Tyson (Ph: 225-8787). Robert Taylor was affiliated with Al-Teen Records at 8208 Stony Island Ave. We talked about <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">So Much Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that he had recorded on that label. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Buddy Scott (Ph:225-3954) was one of the ten brothers in the Scott family. He led the group Buddy Scott &amp; The Rib Tips which was the house band at the Pepper\u2019s Lounge. (I somehow misunderstood that he was a drummer with the band. I visited Pepper\u2019s lounge briefly and maybe he was sitting behind the drums then, but according to current info he played the guitar). He told me that Junior Wells appeared at Peppers occasionally. I was given promos of their latest record that also Bill Tyson was involved with. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">One of the topics of conversation was that Little Willie John had recently died. He had been incarcerated at the Walla Walla prison after killing a man in a bar room brawl. He was only thirty years old. The people round the table were saddened. I understood that John was greatly admired by other singers. That he could handle any singing challenge. James Brown made a tribute Lp to Willie &#8211; <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Few Nice Things.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I only had one record by John in my collection, but before leaving USA I bought his original of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Fever. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This song had been a big hit for Peggy Lee in Europe in the late 50s. With Willie John\u2019s passing perhaps the best black singer alongside Jackie Wilson was gone. Someone else remarked that Jackie Wilson had been shot by a jealous girlfriend. The bullet was still lodged close to his spine. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">When I later discussed this evening with George Leaner he said that those small radio stations had such a weak signal that they could only be heard one block away\u2026<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I felt that it had been a very successful night. Artists started coming who obviously wanted to talk to me. That was a big surprise, and extremely flattering as I admired some of them tremendously. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley promised to come to the One-derful! office the next day. I really wanted to talk more to him and take some pictures. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was also evident that his career had hit the bottom then. He talked about illness and marital problem and bad luck in general. He was certainly not a tough guy. In fact he seemed quite soft and sensitive. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">What did he have in his briefcase? I was never told but I think it must have been a record contract and that he wanted me to sign him.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny Sayles seemed more carefree and to be able to handle most of life\u2019s problems. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Syl seemed more contemplative and reflected about his career. He was thirty years old and he felt that it was old in his profession as a soul singer. He had no illusions that his success would last forever. Despite his two successes in the last year he knew how fast the public forgets.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Johnny Sayles asked me if I wanted a lift to my hotel. He and a friend had gone by car from Gary, Indiana. This light blue coup\u00e9 with an open top was not new or even last year\u2019s model. Syl\u2019s car, that he later drove to Memphis with, was better. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">With his friend behind the wheel and Johnny in the front seat and me in the back seat I was soon back at my hotel while they continued to Gary. Johnny lived at 7557 So. Wentworth there and his Club, the M.C. Lounge, was at 1501 Adams. Johnny also handed me his phonenumber: 846-7164.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It had been a great night!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This is what McKinley Mitchell (9322 S. Emerald, Ph: RA-3-8287) said when we met at the One-derful! office. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was born in Jackson, Mississippi on December 25, 1938. (George thought that the right date was more like 1933 while Wikipedia now gives 1934.) The family stayed there for 16-18 years when they moved to Springfield, Massachusetts and in 1960 came to Chicago. He started to sing gospel in the early 50-s; first with the Hearts of Harmony and then with the Mitchellaires, from Philadelphia, PA. In New York (1956) this group recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This Old World Is Passing Away <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">with McKinley singing lead. In 1957 he crossed over to R&amp;B and started singing with the Tiny Button Quintet. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1958 he came to Chicago for the first time and started appearing in local clubs like the Cheetah. In 1961 he got a contract with One-Derful!. His first recording <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Town I Love In <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">became a major hit. Many minor hits followed and he mentioned <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Bit Of Soul, It\u2019s Spring<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (\u201cthe only song I have not written myself\u201d, he said), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">All Over Sudden, You\u2019re Never Gonna Break My Heart, Darling That\u2019s What You Said , Watch Over me, <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> He\u2019s Ready.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Monk Higgins arranged and produced his One-derful! recordings. In 1967 he recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Playboy <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">for Chess, but was now back on One-derful!. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He\u2019s married and has two daughters twelve and nine years old. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">George Leaner said that McKinley for a while had been the top drawing local artist in Chicago. He used to be followed by a long tail of fans. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He had appeared on all the major R&amp;B theatres: Apollo, Regal, Uptown, Howard (Washington), Royal (Baltimore) and clubs like the Royal Peacock in Atlanta. And been on TV-shows hosted by Dick Clark, Jim Lounsbury and Lloyd Shafton. But right now his popularity had waned considerably. He was deeply disturbed over it, but seemed to lack strength to get back.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Today he would have received the clinical diagnosis of depression and received medical treatment with for example Prozac. He had a sinus(?) operation one and a half years ago and had not been able to sing for a long time. He was still troubled with headaches. It had forced him to cut performances short and walk off stage, and he had gotten the reputation of being a drug addict. The vibrato he used while singing had probably aggravated the sinus problem. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">That\u2019s what he told me and I also understood that his marriage was in trouble. He felt misunderstood and there were constant battles at home. His wife seemed to have gotten tired of him. Maybe he had neglected her when he was on top. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley was a first generation soul singer. He had a unique singing style, with a very heavy vibrato combined with a slightly vicious tone of voice. This was quite different from other soul singers like Wilson Pickett or James Brown who dominated the scene then.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Even politically he was out of touch. \u201cDon\u2019t talk about Black Power \u2013 Give me Green Power instead!\u201d he said, meaning green dollar bills. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The come back at One-derful! for this great soul singer never happened. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This night I went to the Checkmate, another leading soul club at 55<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and Calumet. It was oblong in contrast to the square Bonanza. I think they could house a similar number of attendants. I also recall that the stage was in the middle but it\u2019s hard to tell now as the place was packed. In retrospect I think they had fuller houses at the Checkmate. Their manager was nice but had a rather cynical attitude towards the music business. I also met a strange man who said that he was a detective and talked much about black power and that he had special connections among the Black Panthers. But more likely, he was just a talkative alcoholic. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The comedian tonight was Manuel Arrington whom I had already had seen at the High Chaparral. Then he had portrayed a urinoir scene and what can happen there with size comparisons and after-drip. Tonight he imitated Aretha Franklin and it was more fun. In the 1970s he often opened up for Tyrone Davis. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The mission of the comedian was also to present the artist and his show and give them a well deserved break and like a Master Of Ceremonies keep everything together. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The comical qualities in nightclubs were usually low. I never saw the next Lenny Bruce, Eddie Murphy, Redd Foxx or Moms Mabley. It was mostly simple sex jokes and perhaps some statements about racial relations. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The artists of the evening were Ruby Andrews and Garland Green and they were backed by the Exciters Orchestra, who were considered to be equal to the Scott Brothers. In the intermission I talked to both singers. First Garland said that he needed permission from his manager and that he was forbidden to talk. This was unusual. Otherwise all artists wanted to talk. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ruby Andrews (5229 Greenwood Ave) was a very charming, kind and nice looking woman. She was born in the south side of Chicago on the March 12, 1947. She still lived there. (It is not uncommon that an artist forget their roots. Ruby was in fact born in the (deep) south \u2013 in Mississippi before moving to Chicago.) First she sang solo in St John\u2019s Baptist Junior Choir. In 1960 she started singing R&amp;B and appeared at local school dances. She was popular enough to get a recording contract already in 1963 and she became a professional artist. But the company folded before any recordings were made (According to the discography there was one issue in 1965 under her birth name Ruby Stackhouse.) In 1967 she came in contact with Ric Williams and his Zodiac label (7447 Linder Ave, Skokie Ill.) which was distributed by Summit distributors. The first record <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Casanova<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> in June 1967 became a big hit selling 25,000 copies per week before she stopped counting. Then followed <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Hey Boy \/ I let Him Take Me \/Kinda Love I Need \/ Just Loving You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (her latest.) All sold well enough, but not as much as <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Casanova<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. Ruby neatly texted these titles to make sure that they were spelled right in an article. She also recorded the fine <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Just Don\u2019t Believe It.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">She also wrote down three numbers she was going to sing tonight: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Knock On Wood, Yours Until Tomorrow<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Casanova.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Her songs are composed by the Brothers Of Soul who have had a hit of their own with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Guess That Don\u2019t Make Me A Loser.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ruby was still unmarried but she confided that it was going to change when she became rich. Did she tell the truth? From where came the Andrews name?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">She had toured all over USA and also appeared in the theatres Apollo, Regal, Uptown, Howard etc. and been on TV-shows in Philadelphia and Cleveland. She was hoping to come to Europe soon. Right now she was appearing in all of the clubs in Chicago, usually backed by the Exciters. (Their solo guitarist was an albino. Rumors said there were two albinos in the group but I only saw one.) This six-man group took their name in Chicago in 1961, but they came from Washington (There is no connection with the Exciters vocal group that recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Do Wah Diddy Diddy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">.) They used bongo drums on stage which was rather unusual then. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ruby who had both a deep and large voice sang that night:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Baby I Love You, Knock On Wood, Respect, I Heard It Through The Grapevine, Piece Of My Heart, Just Don\u2019t Believe It, Your Until Tomorrow<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, and of course <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Casanova.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was a good show, but it was difficult to make any notes in a standing, rather packed crowd. I had never heard Ruby before on record but she made a sympathetic impression both on and off stage without belonging to the very top of her game. I don\u2019t think her <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Casanova<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> had been released in Europe then. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Exciters set consisted of numbers like <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tell Her I\u2019m Not Home<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Chuck Jackson), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Respect<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Aretha Franklin) and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Try A Little Tenderness<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Otis Redding). <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Garland Green (Ph 643-5488) was another new name for me. He was born in Mississippi in 1942 and came to Chicago in 1960. Down in the delta he had been influenced by blues and soul singers like BB King and Little Milton. They are still his favorites as is Chuck Jackson. He sang lead in the gospel group Leland Aires and started working at The Place. His latest record was <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Girl I Love You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> \u2013 a Jerry Butler inspired song. He recorded for Revue Records \u2013 a subsidiary for Universal. This night he sang songs like:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Hold On I\u2019m Coming<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Sam &amp; Dave), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Dock Of The Bay<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Otis Redding), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Don\u2019t Want To Cry <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(Chuck Jackson), <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Man Needs A Woman<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> which was sung in the best possible deep soul manner of James Carr. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">If I Had A Hammer <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">had been transformed into a medley and included <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Amen<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and his hit <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Girl I Love You.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Garland sang in a heavy, bluesy, deep soul style close to Otis Redding and James Carr.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Next year he had a massive hit with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Jealous Kind of Fella<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Upon leaving the Checkmate at closing time and following the stream of people I got next to a young man and his very pretty girlfriend. He was a little shorter than myself (I am 176 cm). He looked at me for a while and then introduced himself as Alvin Cash. I had already gotten his phone number (MV-4-5720) and we decided to get together as soon as possible. But this didn\u2019t happen unfortunately.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Saturday, June 22<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I was invited to dinner at the Leaners. I think George\u2019s wife was a classically trained opera singer. They lived in a fairly large house in Chicago\u2019s south side with a nice garden in peaceful surroundings. There were both very nice neighborhoods and run down slum districts in Chicago, almost side by side. After a fine meal, in fact the only hot meal I had in Chicago, because of my tight budget, the Leaner couple offered to drive me around to interesting parts of Chicago. I suggested the west parts where the riots had taken place. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Several blocks were burned down and areas as large as football fields were in ruins. There were several policemen in the streets\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 one was carrying a shotgun. But we cruised safely around in George\u2019s Cadillac. These types of neighborhoods had not yet been shown in countless detective TV series to follow. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Later George confided in me that his wife had rather shown me the Opera House and other landmark buildings of Chicago. But he felt that it was good that I had seen the misery instead.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Leaving the Leaners I managed to take the wrong train twice and being late the Bonanza was full of people when I arrived. I guess there were about 250-300 people there. Artists appearing tonight were Maurice &amp; Mac, Liz Lands and The Jackson Five. I have forgotten the backing group as I came too late. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Liz Lands was very light skinned. She had a unique voice, a combination of Uma Sumac and Nancy Wilson with an enormous vocal range plus jazz and soul feeling. Tonight she did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Since I Lost My Baby \/ I Almost Lost My Mind <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(Ivory Joe Hunter)<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> \/ Summertime <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and also a couple of her own hits in a sophisticated soul style far from Aretha Franklin and Tina Turner but still appealing.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">She was born in New York in 1938. She started singing in church as soon as she could walk. Already at five years of age she was a professional. In the early 1950s she had two gospel 78s out on the Mercury label: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Come In The Room<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Somebody Bigger Than You and I <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and continued her gospel career until she was nineteen years old. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1958 she married the comedian Tommy Brown who became her manager. He was the MC and comic at the Bonanza tonight. Newly wed they formed the T&amp;L label (= Tommy &amp; Liz) and she had hits like <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Don\u2019t Shut Me Out<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Let It Be Me<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. They sold well all over USA, said Liz. Flops were <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Echo In The Back Ground<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Keep Me.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Mercury later released a Liz Lands LP with jazzy songs that could be found in cut out LP shops in Stockholm. She had appeared all over America from Alaska to Florida and even in Bermuda. She had sung in Carnegie Hall and been a regular TV guest at for example Joe Bostic\u2019s show. She had recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Midnight Johnny<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on Motown. She was also chosen for the B-side<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> of I Have A Dream<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">We Shall Overcome<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">) of Martin Luther King Jr\u2019s spoken record: on a Gordy 45. It was probably available in most African American homes.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Liz had many favorites like Jesse Belvin, Mel Carter, O.C. Smith and Billie Holiday, but she emphasized that she was not influenced by anyone. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">While we were talking she wanted me to smell the glass of water (\u201cno alcohol!\u201d) she was holding in her hand. Maybe she had been accused in the Negro Press of drinking too much? <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">She was a very good friend of Aretha Franklin and maybe there had been articles about her being Aretha\u2019s drinking companion during Aretha\u2019s marital problems?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">During intermissions Tommy Brown walked around and sold Liz T&amp;L records and his own comedy album. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I had already seen Maurice and Mac at the Regal eight days before. Now they did three Sam and Dave numbers in a row: <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Hold On I\u2019m Coming, I Thank You <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> When Something Is Wrong With My Baby. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">And Aretha\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Baby I Love You<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">And last but not least their own current hit recording of Billy Young\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You Left The Water Running.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Maurice and Mac were quite good but it was a bit disappointing to hear them do so many Sam and Dave songs and see them being so influenced by them in their stage act too. But in American soul clubs it was the current hits by the stars that mattered. So at best an artist could do their current recording and their old hits. But then they had to rely on other people\u2019s material. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Maurice was <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Maurice MacAllister and he was born on April 23, 1937. Mac was Green MacLauren. He was born in the deep south on the January 11, 1940 and moved to Chicago four years later. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">They had met as children twenty years ago when Mac was eight years old \u2013 first in the Mount Calvary Youth Choir that had recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Since My Heart Has Been Changed <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">on Savoy. Maurice also had spent time in The Greatest Harvest Church Choir. (He might be on their recording of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Steal Away<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, a negro spiritual.) <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1960 they formed the group the Radiants with Wallace Sampson, Elzie Butler and Jerome Brooks. In 1962 they got a contract with Chess Records. Their first release <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Father Knows Best, <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">which<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">sounds like early<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Miracles,<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> sold well. Then followed three more 45s including <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Shy Guy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> before Mac was drafted into the army. At the same time Elzie and Jerome departed the group. Maurice McAllister and Wallace was left and together with Leonard Caster they formed the \u201cnew\u201d Radiants and recorded their biggest hit, the great Impressions inspired <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Voice Your Choice,<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">\u00a0one of the best ever soul group pop songs outside the Motown sphere.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Caster was in fact Leonard Caston Jr. and he was the son of Baby Doo Caston Sr. who played piano and sang in the Big Three Trio with Willie Dixon in the 1940s. In 1966 Mac was free again and he and Maurice quickly formed the duo and got a contract with Chess. The company had had limited success with another duo before; The Knight Brothers. Maurice and Mac\u2019s first record was <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">So Much Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that Ben E. King had recorded earlier and then followed <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You Left The Water Running<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. The follow up<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Why Don\u2019t You Try Me <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> was already released (Maurice called the song \u201cTry Me Tonight\u201d). Rick Hall produced them in Muscle Shoals.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">They had been touring outside of Chicago and even in the southern states. Mac said that Maurice was his foremost musical inspiration. Both stated that the Radiants were inspired by the Impressions. But right now it was all about Sam &amp; Dave and apart from the three Sam &amp;Dave songs they sang tonight, they also did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You Don\u2019t Know Like I Know. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I interviewed all artists in the dressing room and not in the bar as before, as it was too crowded outside. First I was talking to Mac and then Maurice entered the room and took over.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">While standing with my back towards the door a crowd of youngsters had entered. They sat at the short end of the room on a bench and stayed there while I was talking to Liz Lands and M&amp;M, with my back to the boys. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This group had made quite an impression before. Their act mostly consisted of James Brown numbers and their lead singer did every James Brown move to perfection. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Among the songs they did were: <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Got The Feeling<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (James Brown)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Security<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Otis Redding)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tobacco Road<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I think that they also did a Temptations number \u2013 probably <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My Girl<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Eddie Silvers composition <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Big Boy<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> closed the show. Michael was incredibly apt in imitating James Brown.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I guess the Bonanza and other nightclubs had an age limit of 18 or 21 years to enter. The young and single women going to the clubs were of my age but many had one or two young kids at home. Very few had traveled around or even left their home town except to visit relatives. University studies were not common. Our lives didn\u2019t have much in common and there was plenty of room for misunderstandings. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The young women, who made up the largest portion of the crowd, went crazy seeing Michael and rushed to the stage. He looked like six years old. My first conclusion was that the group reminded them of their children at home and they started missing them after a few drinks. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But afterwards, I also realized that they were far more experienced and had seen many more groups to compare with than I. They saw immediately that this was not an ordinary boy band but a future superstar. Because it was the only time this summer I saw anybody rushing to the stage and threw coins or dollar bills at the performers or the lead singer. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My only boy-band comparison was Donny Osmond and the Osmond Brothers that I had seen on the Andy Williams TV-show.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In retrospect I also wonder what had happened if I had rented that film camera and been the first to film a performance with the Jackson Five? Maybe I hadn\u2019t even filmed them and concentrated completely on Maurice and Mac and Liz Lands. Because I didn\u2019t interview any members of the Jackson Five. Their career was too short. What can you ask a baby like Michael? What his favorite games and sweets were? I do recall that an older man entered the room briefly. It must have been Joseph, their father. No introductions were made. But he\u2019s the one I should have interviewed, of course. I remember that he looked at me rather sharply when he entered. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The disappointment of the evening was McKinley Mitchell. He was recognized from stage and invited to sing. He did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Cottage For Sale<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. Perhaps as a tribute to Little Willie John, who had recorded it, and to Billy Eckstine who was appearing elsewhere in Chicago that weekend. But McKinley\u2019s lack of timing really ruined this song. His voice was not suited to jazzy ballads. I really hoped to see him do something more suited to his style. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">We were mingling in the back of the Bonanza room and McKinley introduced me to soul blues singer Little Oscar. In the crowd around us was a leopard clad women in a very short skirt who knew Oscar and pronounced Oscar\u2019s name like \u201cOzzkar\u201d in a very sexy way. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Sunday, June 23 <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Every year many churches had a special program and invited gospel artists and groups to perform. It was this type of church concert I was looking for. Posters were advertising the event and outside visitors were welcome. A regular church service seemed more private and it was difficult to find out if they had any gospel artists there. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I really didn\u2019t know what type of church I was looking for. Above the entrance there were words like Baptist \u2013 Church of God in Christ \u2013 Pentecostal \u2013 Holiness Temple \u2013 Methodist etc. I had no idea where the best music was and I never met or asked a gospel DJ for information and help. There was at least one gospel DJ at every soul station and there were a lot of gospel played there in the mornings (and sometimes in the afternoon). <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">On the Swedish radio in the 1950s Professor Johnson &amp; his Gospel Singers recording of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(Gimme That) Old Time Religion <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">was heard often. It must have been a strong European seller. Later in the 1950s Mahalia Jackson was also featured. In fact a couple of her records were in the family\u2019s record collection. And when Vee Jay became bankrupt their LP catalogue found its way to Sweden. I bought one with the Swan Silvertones. I had also bought James Cleveland\u2019s album \u201cPeace Be Still\u201d and last but not least an album with Archie Brownlee and the Blind Boys of Mississippi. But I knew very little about gospel music.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This Sunday afternoon I visited the Evening Star Baptist Church at 4235 Cottage Groove. I think I saw the poster in the record shop me and Howard Scott visited, or in the street nearby. The show started at 3:30 in the afternoon and I arrived in good time. In the door was an old man with a can of Coca Cola in his hand. He welcomed me with \u201cWere you not walking in these quarters about a week ago?\u201d His voice sounded like Leadbelly\u2019s. He was the priest there and after a short sermon he went around and encouraged and inspired the gospel groups with an <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Amen!<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> every once in a while, with tears streaming down his face.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I was the only white person there. I sat down to the left in the middle of the church which had a capacity of perhaps 300 persons and now was half full. I was discreet and didn\u2019t take any notes. Now, I only remember Harmonizing Four\u2019s name from the poster. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">First there were two fine male groups with circa five members each and a guitarist. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then came a group with older members (in their early forties). I think it was the Harmonizing Four. The leadsinger had lost a couple of front teeth in the upper jaw. The climax came when he led the members in a church walk down the aisle. They were walking in a line singing \u201cWhen the gates of heaven are open I\u2019ll come walking!\u201d and made dramatic gestures and fell on their knees while singing. They sang without microphones and the guitarist was still on stage (I guess his cord was not long enough to follow). But it was no problem to hear them as I sat only a few feet away. The atmosphere was very intense and people fell out screaming in the pews. And I guess I was not far from fainting myself. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In Sweden the Bureau of Health would have stopped the show long ago. It was simply too exciting and maybe even dangerous for faint heart and nervous systems. Here a nurse just fanned people bringing them a little breath of fresh, cold air. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Next group was led by a very handsome young man whose intensity had a great effect on the younger women. And after him a light skinned male leading a six-member group. He was sweating and screaming. A couple of women were shaking and screaming in the benches and the singer also came in ecstasy. Singing, screaming, preaching and speaking with tongues he continued for at least fifteen minutes. A man nearby lay fainted for several minutes. They had overdrawn the allotted time schedule. But he continued encouraged by the old priest. Finally the guitarist and drummer started packing up their instruments\u2026 <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was difficult to get gospel singers to stop singing when the holy spirit hit them. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Last was a female group and they also managed to electrify the audience.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It had been an extremely intense afternoon. My nervous system was overloaded. I could not go to a soul club that night, or visit the theatre in the center of Chicago that had advertised \u201cAn evening with Billy Eckstine.\u201d Or to the Regal Theatre that had a new program this week. At the bus stop near the church a female churchgoer in my own age asked me if I had enjoyed the service. I could only answer \u201cyes\u201d and then we took the same bus from there. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The two gospel concerts this week had given me food for thought. I had my eight grade scale for concerts and recorded music. Now I had to add nine and ten for a concert from where I was carried out unconscious because it was simply too exciting.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The African American music experience is not focused on youth and high strung and emotionally impressionable teenagers who scream and faint when they see their idols. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This was ordinary middle aged people of both sexes who might have tough working and social conditions. They didn\u2019t use drugs or alcohol. Once a week they recharged the batteries in church. They called it the Holy Ghost\/Spirit and we in the west talked about delusion and self hypnosis. But this type of experiences and background had brought forward some of the most exciting artists in the world. (Archie Brownlee, James Brown, Tina Turner and many others; perhaps even Elmore James.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Monday, June 24<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the afternoon I went to 1507 S. Michigan Ave\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 The address of All State Distributors and their boss Howard Bedno. I had been given the address by Syl Johnson and All State carried some small labels like Twinight. But it was closed. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I continued walking happily unknowing that Bedno had been a partner in Cobra Records with Eli Toscano. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the evening I went to Pepper\u2019s Lounge (503 East 43<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">rd<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">) which lay circa 30 minutes walk from the Bonanza. It was around 7:30 in the evening. There were many prostitutes and other (questionable) people in the streets here. It was rough. The door to the club was open and I looked in. I saw a low platform for the musicians at the other end. The room was smaller than the other clubs I had visited. Buddy Scott was standing next to the stage. A few nights ago he had given me his latest single with Buddy Scott &amp; The Rib Tips.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">This was Junior Wells\u2019 home stage. His James Brown inspired recording of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Up In Heah<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> had been released in Sweden with a picture cover. I liked that recording. His Blue Rock recording of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">You\u2019re Tuff Enough<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> was probably selling well then too. Junior and his longtime friend Buddy Guy had made youthful impressions at the 1965-1966 American Folk Blues Festivals. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Junior was not due to appear tonight so I continued to the Bonanza and their Blue Monday night. Little Oscar had given me a little leaflet about the event and said that this was the only gig of importance that he\u2019s had for months. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Oscar sat in the bar and we \u201creconnected.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Little Nolan started the proceedings and sang backed by the King Edwards band: <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Keep Me Hanging On<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Next was either<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> Say Thank You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Joe Tex) or <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Thank You<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Sam &amp; Dave)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">An unknown song was probably called <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Egg and\/or the Hen.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was pretty good. He was dressed in a JB Lenoir like outfit\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 tiger striped or leopard-like\u2026<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There was never time for an interview. (I have since been told that he and King Edward are brothers and that he played bass with Lonnie Brooks.) <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley was here again. He was going to make an unannounced performance. He asked me if there were any special songs I\u2019d like to hear and I mentioned my favorites from his English President LP. \u201cNo problem\u201d he said. \u201cBut I have not performed <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Found An Angel<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> for years and I know that King Edward can\u2019t play it.\u201d <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I Found An Angel<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> is perhaps more like a pop R&amp;B tune than a soul ballad. But it\u2019s great nevertheless.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I don\u2019t know if he could read my mind but he must have understood that I was not impressed with his performance of <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Cottage For Sale<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> last week. Now he was going to set things right.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But first it was time for the fine guitarist King Edward and his orchestra backing Little Oscar, who did a couple of BB King numbers and then his fantastic soul blues <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Suicide Blues <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and his latest recording which was not near as good. Oscar was a good artist but his performance faded in comparison with what was to come. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Little Oscar Strickland (628 East 39<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> St, Ph: 373-0386) was born in Carol, Illinois in 1937. The family moved to Chicago but then back to (Greenwood) Mississippi in 1947 where they visited and stayed with relatives. Then they traveled via St. Louis until they finally were back in Chicago in 1951. Growing up he alternated between gospel and R&amp;B. But in 1954 he stopped singing gospel and started working in the Chicago clubs. It was a slow start and it took him 13 years to get a local hit with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Suicide Blues \/ Empty Bottles<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on Palos Records which was leased and distributed by the Leaner Brothers. The recorded version was one class better than his stage version was that night. It\u2019s a first class soul blues \u2013 a knockout song, really. Now he was waiting for his second record (produced by Double H) <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Two Foot Drag \/ Got To Make A Change<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on Toddlin Town to be released on the 28<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-6\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">th<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> of June. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Oscar showed me his recording contract to prove that he was telling the truth. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">While Oscar was singing McKinley disappeared to change clothes. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the intermission I interviewed King Edward (or King Edwards as I called him then).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was very dark skinned and born in Rayner, Louisiana in 1937. In 1955 he started backing traveling musicians like Big Joe Turner, Roscoe Gordon, Clifton Chenier, Jimmy Wilson and Freddy King. In 1959 he moved to Seattle and in 1962 to Chicago. He had been guitarist in Bobby Bland\u2019s road band. In Chicago he had been a studio musician for One-derful! and also accompanied McKinley Mitchell, Otis Clay, Little Oscar and Tyrone \u201cWonder Boy\u201d Davis. His latest record was <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Change Is Gonna Come \/ Knock On Wood<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on the Discount label, a Bill Tyson company. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">On stage Edward did fine instrumental versions of Willie Mitchell\u2019s big hit <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Soul Serenade <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and his latest record <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">A Change Is Gonna Come<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Sam Cooke) and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Knock On Wood<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (Eddie Floyd). When Edward heard that I was on my way to Memphis he recommended a visit to the Blue Velvet Club and Handy on Beale Street with its seventeen-piece band.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then McKinley entered the stage. He stood still during his performance. The only thing moving was one hand keeping the beat against his trousers. He was pumping out one great song after the other. His voice was perfect. There was no doubt who had been the king of the Chicago Clubs and in my opinion he still was.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In the middle of the performance a strange older women came into the room. She was dressed in tails and a bowler hat and had a cane that she pointed towards McKinley from time to time. I thought that she was part of the Blue Monday show but she was probably only a confused fan of McKinley. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was a small crowd at the Bonanza tonight, no more than 50 people including staff, orchestra and vocalists. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">According to my notes McKinley sang:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Evil Woman (<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">blues<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">), You Know I\u2019ve Tried, Let Me Love You Again, Along The Navaho Trail, A Cottage For Sale <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(which also tonight was his weakest number)<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">, A Bit Of Soul, I\u2019ve Been Wrong So Long <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(Bobby Bland)<\/span> <span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">plus also longer or shorter versions of songs from the A-side of his President LP (UK) during his hour long set:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Town I Live In, All Of A Sudden, Darling That\u2019s What You Said, Hand Full Of Sorrows, A Bit Of Soul, Tell It Like It Is, It\u2019s Spring.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> He also did <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Running To The End Of The Rainbow<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> which I didn\u2019t then recognize but which must have been an early version of his later hit recording <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The End of A Rainbow<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on the Chimneyville\/Malaco label some ten years later. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">An extremely satisfying night and an 8+ concert and the best I had seen in Chicago along with Johnny Sayles and \u201cHarmonizing Four.\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Only a few months ago I had been sitting in my small one-room student apartment and listened to this album. Now the record had been exchanged to a live artist who was kind enough to sing my favorite songs.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">There were very few people in the audience and he turned towards me all the time. It was like he was appearing in my small flat. He had a fine soul blues band behind him that were capable of recreating the hard soul sound that characterized Chicago\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 not streamlined and slick but very emotionally satisfying.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">McKinley once said that he thought he could measure up to Bobby Bland \u2013 I could only agree. He belongs to the top ten soul male singers and can be compared to Otis Redding, James Carr or OV Wright. He is one of the really great unknown soul singers like Geater Davis or Lee Moses. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tuesday, June 25 <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I went to George Leaner to say goodbye and thank him and tell him about my latest experiences in Chicago. We walked around in the building and ended up in the bottom floor where his brother Ernie and United Record Distributors was. There was also a young relative to George (or Ernie) who sat and listened to Alvin Cash on a tape recorder. It didn\u2019t sound that special. It was the same James Brown funky beat that everybody had at the time.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(It might have been <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Keep On Dancing <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">or its follow up on Ernie and his son Tony\u2019s new record company Toddlin\u2019 Town. Scott Brothers were the backing group.) It was strange that Tony (?) was sitting in a closet in the United Distributors warehouse and not in the empty One-derful! studios upstairs. Was there a rift between the brothers; or was George fed up with this type of soul music? <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I had not met Ernie or been in his warehouse before. He seemed to be more of an aggressive music business executive that the quieter, peaceful, philosophical and sometimes ironic George. But I guess the brothers were different\u00a0\u00a0\u2013 as in most families. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The lead singer of the Redemption Harmonizers dropped by to pick up a few promotional copies of their latest 45 on the Halo label, One-derful!\u2019s gospel subsidiary. He autographed a copy for me. \u201cHe\u2019s a good singer,\u201d George confided. \u201cI\u2019m trying to talk him into recording soul material in the future.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ernie followed George upstairs and there the two brother wrote me a list of important record business personalities I must meet on my round trip this summer.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Later Ed Cook, a well known radio DJ and personality from WVON dropped by. An animated discussion about opportunities for black people followed. Ed also promised to do a portrait about the brothers in the local Afro-American newspaper <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Chicago Defender. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The discussion drifted into the Curtom Agency (8541 S. Stoney Island Blvd; near the High Chaparral) owned by Curtis Mayfield and Eddie Thomas \u2013 the manager of Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions. With veneration they said that Eddie Thomas\u2019 father was none other than Big Maceo himself. (He recorded the classic Boogie Woogie \u201cChicago Breakdown\u201d in 1945.)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">George Leaner had a good reputation in Chicago. Otis Clay said that he looked up to him like a father. I was lucky to have met him! <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then I went to the Checkmate again. Holly Maxwell was appearing tonight. She was the beautiful woman with a blond Afro hair style who had been among the crowd at the Checkmate last Friday.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Holly Maxwell was born on the October 17, 1945 (Sorry, I never dared to ask for a phone number or address). She started studying classical music at the age of nine. And got the education to be a piano teacher and also sang opera. She (graduated) finished this schooling and had appeared in a couple of operas with an all black cast. But on the September 18, 1963 she quit the classical music. She was afraid to lose her slim figure and become fat like other classical singers she had seen.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">If Ruby Andrews seemed like the girl next door, Holly did everything to make an impression. Looks were important. She was married to her hairdresser and he had made her white wig. Her mother was a dress designer and both made Holly look good or even sensational on stage. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">\u201cI always try to be friendly, but still keep a distance to the public,&#8221; she said. Probably quite necessary with her good looks. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Not until 1963 had she started listening to R&amp;B and gospel. Soul was her kind of music now.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1965 Constellation contracted her and she recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">(Happiness Will Cost You) One Thin Dime \/ Only When You\u2019re Lonely.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> When Constellation folded she moved to Golden World (1966) where she had her greatest hit <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Philly Barracuda<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> and later she recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Don\u2019t Say You Love Me Until You Do. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">But Golden World also folded.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Holly also wrote songs but don\u2019t feel they suit her style. Recently she had met a very famous German violinist who was so impressed with her singing that he wanted to work with her. This have already been told in the tabloid press, said Holly, but she didn\u2019t want to tell me his name. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Tonight she sang the following songs backed by her regular group The Jaguars: <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Yesterday, Love Slips Away, Since I fell For You, Ain\u2019t No Way, On A Clear Day, Misty, Goin\u2019 Out Of My Head, Ode To Billy Joe, What Now My Love<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (where she also added a few lines from the French original \u201cEt Maintenant\u201d).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I must say that Holly brought life to these rather worn-out songs. It was a bit surprising that an ex-opera singer could put so much soul into what she did. Her best performances were Aretha\u2019s <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Ain\u2019t No Way <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">and <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Baby Baby Baby<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. She was nice and in fact a good singer even if she spent so much time on her good looks. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Holly also recommended that I contact Howard Bedno (All State Distributors) who took part in her career.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">When I later heard some of the records she had cut around this time I think she only rarely succeeds. I think her strength is her stage performance. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">While Holly was a new name to me I had heard about Lonnie Brooks (4633 S. Drexel, Ph: 268-3033) before. He was in the audience, and a nice young man who seemed fit and alert. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He was born in Louisiana in 1943 and moved to Port Arthur, Texas circa 1953 and to Chicago in 1956-7. Early on he started singing and playing the guitar. He got the nickname Guitar Junior.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He had never sung in church, but had backed artists like Jimmy Reed, BB King, Junior Wells, Otis Clay (1965), and McKinley Mitchell. In fact he had sat in on most Chicago blues and R&amp;B stars performances.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">His first recordings were on Goldband in 1958-59 and he had a huge hit with <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Family Rules<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that sold \u00bd million copies. Even <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Crawl \/ Now You Know <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> sold well. In 1960-62 he recorded for Mercury, still under the name Guitar Jr.<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> All Of My Life \/ Through The Days and Through The Nights \/ Love Me Love Me \/ The Horse<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> (not the Cliff Nobles\u2019 hit).<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Then he had a car accident and had to rest for a year. He did two more records for Mercury in circa 1964: <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Train \/ My Girl \/ Figure Head Woman. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1965 he came to All State distributors and their Pillow label where he recorded <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My Girl \/Figure Head Woman<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The Train <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">from 1965, that he wrote, sold 200,000 copies. (Or was it the same Mercury Recordings that were re-released?)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In 1967 he came to Chess. <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Let It All hang Out,<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> that he recorded in November 1967, sold well. While <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Good Soul Lovin\u2019<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> on the Cherry label didn\u2019t sell. He might have recorded more, but this is what he remembered on his night off. He was in a good mood. He had lots of gigs and did well. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Wednesday, June 26<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The airline ticket had burned a big hole in my pocket and budget. Simple mathematics had shown that eating out was impossible. Most clubs in Chicago had a $1 fee at the door. Then followed the obligatory drink at $1. If you couldn\u2019t sip on it all night, one more drink was another dollar. My daily budget was $8.50 and included hotel, local travel, food, drink and clubs. Taxi was not possible. It was bus, tube and train but mostly walking. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I always chose the cheapest room in the cheapest hotel. The food was bread and canned food with pork and beans or ham and tap water with plenty of chlorine, to it. It was OK as long I didn\u2019t have to sacrifice the soul-clubs and entertainment. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Next stop was Memphis. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Postscript <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">In April 1984 I got a letter from Robert Pruter, author of the book Chicago Soul. (This is a translation of my Swedish translation):<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">He wrote: \u201cI know about your articles in the Blues &amp; Soul Magazine (1968). For some artists this was the first ever written about them and there were no other information available. I have always thought that it was great that someone as early as 1968 reported about Chicago artists like Syl Johnson, Johnny Sayles, Maurice &amp; Mac etc. You were a pioneer cutting out paths in the wilderness while I was a latter settler who asphalted those paths.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">It was very kind of Robert to write like this. I have also realized that perhaps I was the only one who made this kind of field trip from town to town visiting clubs and talked to record business people. I have tried to write as much as possible about what I saw and experienced at the Clubs that I still can remember and can find in my diary. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">My stay in Chicago had been very pleasant. The weather was like in Stockholm during summer. It was warm enough during the days and the nights were refreshing. I cannot remember a single situation when I felt threatened. The war in Vietnam was distant. I only saw a one-legged visitor at the Bonanza who used to dance to the jukebox. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">I avoided the west side and kept to the south side. The blocks around the Bonanza and Checkmate were pretty calm. Even if there were so many great artists in Chicago most seemed to lack faith in the future. Many were disappointed how their careers evolved. It was a big city but still only a local market. It was difficult to move on. If you were stuck in Chicago you had to work small clubs the rest of your life there. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Perhaps that is why my arrival was caused so much attention. Some artists like Little Oscar and McKinley Mitchell even brought their recording contracts just in case I was there to sign them\u2026? <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The record companies were in a crisis. The era of the pop soul artists like Major Lance, Jerry Butler, Gene Chandler, Dee Clark, Betty Everett was over. The hard soul companies like One-derful! were soon closing down and Chess sent their best soul artists, like Etta James, to Muscle Shoals, Alabama to record. My favorites among the more obscure Chess\/Checker artists like Sonny Warner, Tony Clarke, Mitty Collier, James Phelps and Cash McCall didn\u2019t make much noise.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"Normal\" xml:lang=\"sv-SE\"><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">The biggest Chicago soul hit that summer must have been <\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-5\" xml:lang=\"en-US\">Stay In My Corner<\/span><span class=\"CharOverride-3\" xml:lang=\"en-US\"> with The Dells.<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":9,"menu_order":3,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[],"contributor":[],"license":[],"class_list":["post-25","chapter","type-chapter","status-publish","hentry"],"part":3,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/25","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/chapter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/9"}],"version-history":[{"count":5,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/25\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":120,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/25\/revisions\/120"}],"part":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/parts\/3"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/25\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=25"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=25"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=25"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/pressbooks-dev.library.yorku.ca\/soulodyssey\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=25"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}