Danny Mansolino sent these newsletters, business cards and other clippings to me. Enjoy!
4 Classics card featuring Rick, Dan and Mike (all later of Myddle Class) with Kurt on guitarearly business card featuring Rick, Dan & “Myke”, plus Doug on sax and Kurt on bassearly business card featuring Rick, Dan & Mike, plus Doug on sax and Kurt on bassThe King BeesSummit High December 11, 1965 The first public performance of the Velvet UndergroundMyddle Class newsletter #2reverse of newsletter #2the infamous pitchfork photo – scanned from a photocopyMyddle Class Newsletter Issue 4, January 1966
Great photos by John E. Lynch – maybe he has some of the other bands that night?
The Blues Project, The Myddle Class and Richie Havens at the Cafe Au Go Go, March and April, probably 1966Plainfield Courier News May 19, 1966The Myddle Class, The Shadows & The Forty Fingers, May 20, 1966 Summit Junior HighNewark Sunday News, June 19, 1966The Myddle Class, the Dougboys and Renaissance Fair Springfield, July 15, 1967Undated flyer for the Myddle Class at Unganoscartoon of Danny Mansolinohand drawn card for Dennis Mansolino’s band the Jazzmasters with Steve and Mick. Dennis was Dan’s younger brother
Thank you to Dan Mansolino for his help.
If anyone has photos, flyers, the other newsletters or any other material on the Myddle Class please contact me.
Below is an incomplete discography of Jean Alford’s Alear Records label from Winchester, Virginia.
Most of the disks are country, except the Don Dupree is supposed to be doo wop backed by a girl group. Only the Smacks are garage rock as far as I know.
Publishing is usually either Alear Music or Pamper Music.
incomplete – any help would be appreciated
45s: Alear no #: Don Dupree & Palisades “Phyllis” (Petty & Greer) / “Power of Love” (R4KM-2381, 665A-2381, early 1964) Alear A-103: Teenie Chenault “I’m So Alone” (Chenault & Tipton) / “It’s a Big Old Heartache” (Chenault & Overman) (R4KM-8016/7, early ’64) Alear A-105: Carroll Bridgeforth “Next Fool in Line” (Jean Alford) / “The Magician” (RK4M-7356, second half of 1964) Alear A-106: Teenie Chenault “Make Me Laugh” / “Forgetting” Alear A-108: Jean Alford “First Man on the Moon” (Harvey Price, Jean Alford) / “The Great Society) (SoN-24015) Alear A-109: Smacks “I’ve Been Fooling Around” / “Say You’ll Be Mine” (SK4M-0953, Oct. 1965) Alear A-111: Dean Greer “I Can’t Throw the Ashes Away” (Curley Putnam, Don Wayne) / “I’ve Got a Hold on You” (Jean Alford, Harvey Price) (T4KM-5063/4, March 1966) Alear A-112: Teenie Chenault “She Tried Hard To Love Me” (Lee Emerson) / “Pushed In The Corner” (Jean Alford) (T4KM-5066, April 1966) Alear A-113: Vicki Day “Another Hurt” / “Don’t Wake Me” Alear A-114: J. D. Dawson – “I’ve Got A Hold On You” / “I’m Number One (With My Mary)” Alear A-116: Smacks “Reckless Ways” / “There’ll Come a Day” Alear A-117: Tommy Lake “Out of the Dark” / “(If You Want Some Lovin’) Get It From Me” (Jean Alford) (T4KM-2355/6, 655A-7355) Alear 665A-117: Teenie Chenault “Where Happiness Ends and Heartbreak Begins (Fred Carter) / “(You’re No Inspiration Gracie for) A Hit Song” (Jean Alford) (U5KM-4601/2, first half of 1967) Alear A-118: Tommy Lake “The Magician” / “Don’t Wake Me” Alear AL-121: Lone Star “Assumed Love” / “I Write This Letter” (820748) (need confirmation of this one) Alear A-202: Al Hogan “The Key That Fits Her Door” / “He Didn’t Become Famous For His Song” Alear A-221: Frank Darlington “You’re My Girl” / “Have a Little Patience” (July, 1969) Alear A-222: Jim Miller “If You Can Eat The Cake” / “The Other Lover” Alear A-350: Dave Elliott “You’re Gonna Miss Me When I’m Gone” / “Other Lover”
Alear 665-??: Ned Davis “Organtar” / “Jungle Fog” (piano & pedal steel instrumentals)
Alear AL-108 – Gloria Jean Megee – “This Woman” (Megee) / “Slightly Used” (1978, Alford/McCoy production credit)
LPs: Alear ERS-517: Teenie Chenault & the Country Rockers Alear SLP 198: Leroy Eyler & the Carroll County Ramblers – Mr. Bluegrass Here’s to You Alear SLP 200: Leroy Eyler & the Carroll County Ramblers – Sing Gospel
Gloria Jean Megee songbird photo, 1977
Gloria Megee wrote to me about her Alear single from 1978, “This Woman”, “Jim McCoy Studios, Buddy Charlton, steel; Roy Justis, fiddle; and John Kaparakis, guitar. It was well received on Big K [WKCW] when the old Tom Cat played it.”
Gloria Jean Megee live in Wheeling, 1978
Thanks to Max Waller, Graham, Dale from 45cat, Bob Perry, and Gloria Jean Megee for their help with the Alear discography.
A partial discography for Showcase shows the styles and production credits to be all over the map, with soul, folk, and even show tunes. Mop Top Mike wrote to me “The S400 series was the 1965 release numbering for Showcase. They switched it to 98xx in 1966; 99xx in 1967.”
S-401 – Gary Burghoff – As I Am / Rainbow S-402 – Little Freddie & the Gents – Betty / Push, Kick & Shout (group from Ft. Lee, New Jersey) S-403 – The Wouldsmen – What’s The Use Of Crying (Adler-Ross, pub. by George Paxton, Inc., ASCAP) / Summer’s Over S-404 – Shan Dels – Please Stay / Treat Me Like a Man
9800 – Mat Matthews – Milk and Honey / Shalom 9801 – ? 9802 – Sonny Stevenson – Night Stroll (parts 1 and 2) 9803 – ? 9804 – ? 9805 – Beverly Ann – Great Pretender / We Got Trouble 9806 – Adam & Eve – The Game of War / Hang Me From The Highest Tree 9807 – Johnnie Shepherd – Coming Home / Mr Weather Man 9808 – ? 9809 – The Parris Mitchell Voices featuring Chips Murphie – We Need a Little Christmas / Mame 9810 – Henry the IX – Don’t Take Me Back, Oh Nooo! / Don’t Take Me Back (part 2) (Beducci) 9811 – Lost In Sound – You Can Destroy My Mind / Stubborn Kind Of Fellow (August 1966) 9812 – Yesterday’s Children – Feelings / Wanna Be With You (September 1966) 9813 – Larry Benson – I Do, I Do / Together Forever 9814 – Don Goldie – Popcorn / Summertime
9901 – Maurice Bower – What’s More American / America The Beautiful 9902 – Beechnuts – Nature’s Company / My Iconoclastic Life
The Beech-Nuts (not the Lou Reed group the Beachnuts – even though he did plenty of work for Pickwick) cut their Showcase 45 at Majestic Studios in Manhattan, a studio also used by the Lovin’ Spoonful. I’ve read the Beechnuts record was bootlegged years ago.
There were at least two other Showcase labels, unrelated to the Pickwick one. Davie Gordon writes, “The 2500 series was from Nashville … the label changed its name to Sound Stage 7 and became Monument’s R&B subsidiary. There was another Showcase label using a 10xx series but it has no connection to the others. It’s from the early sixties.”
2500 – Barbara Grindstaff – Have Mercy (Mr. Lonely) / Where the Red Roses Grow 2501 – Delcos – Arabia / Those Three Little Words (Distributed by Monument Records, Nashville)
Sources include: Beech-Nuts info from Beyond the Beat Generation. Special thanks to Mop Top Mike and Davie Gordon for help making sense of the Showcase release numbering, and to Rich, Max Waller and Ad Z. for their help.
I’ve had this 45 for years but am only now getting around to covering it. I don’t recall ever reading about the band in any detail.
“I’m Grounded” is a well-known psychedelic classic written by Timmy Phelan (Jitters Music, BMI), but originally it was the b-side to “If You Can Put That In a Bottle” written by Billy Meshel for Meager Music, BMI.
The record was released on Tower 372 in October of 1967. The band came from Wantaugh, Long Island but other than that I don’t know anything about the group, nor have I seen a photo of them.
I don’t believe there’s a connection to a release by the Minimum Daily Requirement (singular) on Mercury, “Free the People” / “I Do Believe the Sun Will Shine”.
This site is a work in progress on 1960s garage rock bands. All entries can be updated, corrected and expanded. If you have information on a band featured here, please let me know and I will update the site and credit you accordingly.
I am dedicated to making this site a center for research about '60s music scenes. Please consider donating archival materials such as photos, records, news clippings, scrapbooks or other material from the '60s. Please contact me at rchrisbishop@gmail.com if you can loan or donate original materials