Category Archives: Label

The Venetian Blinds on Grudge

Venetian Blinds Grudge 45 Just Knowin' You Love MeThe Venetian Blinds released a great double-sided record in August, 1967, “Just Knowin’ You Love Me” and “Quit Your Belly Achin’ Baby”.

The band came from Atlanta, Georgia.

Members were Ric Jansen, Steve Abstance, Lance Adams, Mike Nolen, and Bill Allen.

On November 11, 1967, the Atlanta Constitution ran a short profile of the band headlined “‘Venetian Blinds’ Are Rolled Out”, written by Charlie Burks.

DJ Don Rose came up with the band’s name on his WQXI show when he said “The Doors, The Electric Prunes, The Strawberry Alarm Clock … Next it’ll be The Chairs or The Tables or The Venetian Blinds.”

The article mentions a second recording, “Bad News Girl” / “What’s His Face” and says “it has psychedelic overtones and should hit the charts.” I wonder if these songs exist on acetate or tape.

The Grudge Records label has an address of 470 Springwood in San Antonio, Texas. I don’t know why the group had their single released with an obscure Texas label. The article has no mention of Texas. That San Antonio address led to some confusion. Doug Hanners and Dave Shutt listed the band in the 2nd edition of Journey to Tyme, and the Eva label included “Quit Your Belly Achin’ Baby” on Texas Punk From The Sixties (vol. 2), released in 1985.

Venetian Blinds Grudge 45 Quit Your Belly Achin' BabyRic Jansen wrote both songs, with arrangement help by Mike Nolen on “Just Knowin’ You Love Me”. Neither name shows up on other records in either Atlanta or San Antonio, to my knowledge, nor have I found another release with “A Ric Jansen Production” credit.

The publisher, Margie Music was associated with Atlanta Sound Recording Studios and the Gaye label, like the Mondels, Red Beard & the Pirates, etc. Furthermore, though this may have been a Rite account, the deadwax includes NRC for the National Recording Corporation, an Atlanta pressing plant.

The article mentions the Venetian Blinds appeared on a local TV show, and that Merv Griffin showed interest in featuring the band on his show.

Anyone have a photo of the group?

The Lorey’s of Sparta, Ohio

The Lorey’s (or Lorries) came from Sparta, Ohio, a small town northeast of Columbus.

Original members included:

Ted Fuller – vocals
John Boston – lead guitar
Murv Mast – rhythm guitar
Ernie Duncan – keyboards
Larry Roades – bass (replaced by Bob Steinbrink)
John Hinkle – drums

The group competed at the Northland Shopping Center 3rd Annual Battle of the Bands in 1967, and though they did not place in the competition, their song “Don’t You Dare” appears on the album.

The lineup changed often, eventually replacing every member but the rhythm section of Steinbrink and Hinkle:

Steve Baker – vocals
Aaron Kerns – lead guitar
Herb Sample – rhythm guitar
Ed Hartman – keyboards
Bob Steinbrink – bass
John Hinkle – drums

Loreys Cathay 45 Goin' DowntownSteve Baker wrote two original songs, “Goin’ Downtown” / “Ready to Go” which found release on Cathay Records. Both songs were registered for copyright in February, 1969.

Cathay was named after Kathay Whitney, who was president and manager of Monte Verde Publishing. Billboard listed Monte Verde with a South Charleston, West Virginia address in 1969, then a Watsonville, CA address in 1970 and ’71.

The Loreys release on Cathay has an address of Rimrock Records in Concord, Arkansas, but most others on the label list Nashville and at least one notes Flint, Michigan. It was primarily a country label.

Anyone have a photo of the group?

Info on the Lorey’s from Buckeyebeat.com

The Fabulous Chevelles “I Want a Girl for My Birthday”

Fabulous Chevelles Flip 45 I Want a Girl For My Birthday

The Fabulous Chevelles cut this one record in the spring of 1965. The singer on “I Want a Girl for My Birthday” asks for a girl who “is on the ball” and “on the square”; he’s even willing to let his mother choose the girl for him.

On the flip, “She Loves Me”, he pleads that his girl is faithful, despite reports to the contrary.

Fabulous Chevelles Flip 45 She Loves Me

Copyright registration from April, 1965 shows James Frederick Brumfiel and Ed Breeden wrote both songs.

I can find both Jim Brumfiel and Ed Breeden listed in the National Road Traveler newspaper of Cambridge City, Indiana, but no mention of the Fabulous Chevelles. Cambridge City is 15 miles west of Richmond, Indiana, and an hour’s drive east of Indianapolis.

It looks like the band released the single on their own Flip Records 45-100 with a terrific cartoon logo.

Edwood Music published the songs, and Edwood Publishing still exists in Cincinnati. BMI’s database lists “I Want a Girl for My Birthday” as by Deacon Brumfield, but I believe that is a mistake, as Deacon was a bluegrass Dobro guitar player and certainly older than the teens who made this record.

I’m not familiar with Parker Records, Dist. of Richmond, Indiana.

Jim Weatherly “I’m Gonna Make It”

Jim Weatherly Cash Box March 5, 1965
Cash Box March 5, 1965
I have to thank Lee Bryant for tipping me on to Jim Weatherly’s stomping single, “I’m Gonna Make It” on 20th Century Fox 565.

Jim Weatherly 20th Century Fox 45 I'm Gonna Make ItJ.D. Lobue and Leland Russell wrote “I’m Gonna Make It”. Jim Weatherly wrote the B-side, the Elvis-sounding “Wise Men Never Speak”, which he copyrighted in April, 1964.

Lobue and Russell had a band with Jim since their days at the University of Mississippi, where Jim Weatherly was a star quarterback. After college they moved to Los Angeles to try to succeed in the music business.

On March 5, 1965, Cash Box announced “The grid star kicks off his disk career with a driving rocker”. It would be three years before any further releases, or any press would mention Jim Weatherly or his group, who would eventually be named the Gordion Knot.

In February, 1968, Cash Box reported the Gordian Knot had signed to Verve for four singles and an album. A short article in Record World in April listed the Gordian Knot’s members as: Pat Kincade, guitar; J.D. Lobue, organ; Leland Russell, bass; Dulin Lancaster, drums; and Jim Weatherly, piano. I am not sure if Pat Kincade and Dulin Lancaster also played on the 20th Century Fox single, but the article notes notes the band “have been working together for five years” and that John Babcock was their manager.

There were a number of songs copyrighted that do not seem to have been recorded and/or released:

Weatherly and Pat Kincade published “Just Another Day” in March, 1964.

In June of 1966, Jim Weatherly registered eight songs with a solo writing credit, none of which were on the Gordion Knot album, Tones: “I Can’t Be Hurt Any More”, “Mama, Your Daddy’s Come Home”, “The Morning After Rain”, “She Belongs to Yesterday”, “Sorrow’s Child”, “Turn Him Away”, “Waiting For the Day”, and “You Were Never Mine”, all published by Vivace Music.

The only song registered in June of 1966 that would show up on the Gordian Knot LP was “It’s Gonna Take a Lot” by Weatherly and Pat Kincade.

The Gordian Knot pursued a lighter pop direction on their two singles and album; “The Year of the Sun” (written by Leon Russell) is a good example of their sound. The flip, Jim Weatherly’s “If Only I Could Fly” is one of their more rocking songs.

In retrospect, “I’m Gonna Make It” is a very good single, and it’s surprising how little known it is. The single also seems to be rare now. I wonder if there are other recordings from the early days of the band that would show their development or directions they didn’t pursue.

Jim Weatherly of course would go on to have a long career as a hit songwriter and performer, but that is covered in depth elsewhere.

This is not the same Jim Weatherly who recorded with the Mozark Music Makers on the Mozark label of Springfield, Missouri.

Anyone have a photo of the group before they became the Gordion Knot?

Gordian Knot Record World April 20, 1968
Record World April 20, 1968

The Nomads on Kelly DiCianni’s Kel label

Nomads article Oshkosh Daily Northwestern Mar 25 1966
Oshkosh Daily Northwestern, March 25, 1966
Nomads Kel 45 You Come Around

The Nomads came from Oshkosh, Wisconsin and cut only this one single, “You Come Around” / “Don’t Come Runnin to Me”.

This is the first release on Kelly DiCianni’s Kel label.

Released as Kel No. 1000, with “A Kelas Production” on the label. Kelly and Sally DiCianni wrote both songs.

An article in the Oshkosh Daily Northwestern from March 25, 1966 gives the background for the single:

“Don’t Come Running to Me” and “You Come Around” are the two songs written by Kelly and Sally DiCianni. Kelly supplies the music and his wife, the lyrics.

The 45 rpm single is the first production under the “Kel” label. It was recorded in Oshkosh following three weeks of rehearsal.

The Nomads are four Oshkosh men who have been performing for 3 1/2 years. Three are in college and one is now in the Marines. They have appeared throughout Wisconsin and in Illinois.

Members of the aggregation and their musical assignments included: Michael Yanke, piano; Larry Wolff, drums and vocal; and Jack and Joseph Litjens, the first of whom plays lead guitar while the second plays the bass.

Kelly DiCianni is well-known as a piano instructor in the Neenah-Menasha area.

Nomads Kel 45 Don't Come Runnin to MeIn his essential reference, Do You Hear That Beat, Gary E. Myers states that Jack Litjens and Joe Litjens were indentical twins from Holland.

Gary also notes that Larry Wolfe would join the Friends, a long-lasting group who released “Jane” / “Can’t Make It Without You” on Night Owl in 1970. I’m not sure if Larry Wolfe was in the Friends at the time of that single.

Kel would release three singles by the Sunstone Lollypop, who included Kelly DiCianni’s two sons, Keith DiCianni and David DiCianni, plus drummer Steve Marks. The Sunstone Lollypop is a group I’d really like to interview for this site.

The Shandells “Caroline” and “Mary, Mary”

Shandells IL photo
The Shandells, from left: Sean Ryan, Joe Stanley, Tom Nyquist, and Tom Blomquist

The Shandells came from Mount Prospect and Arlington Heights, Illinois, adjacent suburbs about 20 miles northwest of Chicago. The Shandells cut one treasured record, “Caroline” / “Mary, Mary” on Sizzle SS-5130 in August, 1965. The label reads “That Fabulous Four Sean, 2 Toms, Joe”. Members were:

Joe Stanley – lead guitar
Sean Ryan – bass
Tom Nyquist – guitar
Tom Blomquist – drums

Crypt Records included “Caroline” and “Mary, Mary” on Back from the Grave volumes 3 and 6, respectively.


A feature in the Chicago Tribune on August 5, 1965 includes three photos of the group in the studio (which goes unnamed, unfortunately), and even quotes a verse of “Caroline” a little different to what was on the record:

The last time I saw her she said to me
She’d be mine if I wanted her t’ be
I said ah-Hey! Hey! Hey!
Hey! Hey! Hey! Hey!
YA-A-A-OWWW!

The band downplay rock music in the article, presenting a wholesome image.

Shandells Chicago Tribune August 5, 1965

An article from Arlington Heights Herald notes how they would regularly fill the Knights of Columbus Hall. It goes on to say that Sean Ryan was leader of the group and primary writer of their original songs, and that he was an Irish citizen. He was a senior at Prospect High School.

Joe Stanley also wrote for the group, was a sophomore at St. Viator High and “has a B average.”

Tom Blomquist was class president at Arlington High School, wrote “Caroline”, and also averaged Bs in school.

Tom Nyquist is “lead rhythm guitarist” and a sophomore at Prospect High School.

When they cut their single, the group were 15 years old, except for Sean who was 17.

Thank you to Mikael for alerting me to the photo of the group, and to Mike Markesich for pointing out the articles.

Shandells Arlington Heights Herald August 12, 1965

Paul Allen “Cash for Your Trash”

Paul Allen E&M 45 Cash For Your TrashHere’s a great rocker from Paul Allen. According to his daughter, Paul Allen was born in Kansas City, Missouri and grew up in Little Rock. He later moved to Malvern, Arkansas.

“Cash for Your Trash” has a great wild sound, and the guitar break is top-notch.

The flip is a recitation, “From Viet Nam With Love”, telling his mother not to worry.

This was recorded in Little Rock, Arkansas, the base for the E&M Recording Company, which had a studio there. E&M put out close to 20 singles, including one by the Light Brigade. Rain Music published much of the original songs out of Little Rock, including songs by the Romans.

I notice there sounds like a jump in the track about 40 seconds into the song. I’ve heard it on both this video and also my copy of the 45, so it may be a flaw in the original tape or mastering.

Paul Allen contacted me in 2023, sending me an account of his career, which I’ll excerpt here and answering my questions about the record.

Paul Allen:

I guess you can say it all started on July 4th, 1957. That was the day I traded my horse, “Rex”, along with my saddle to my cousin for a Buescher True Tone, silver alto saxophone. It was a sax that my grandfather had purchased for my uncle in 1926. I played that wonderful 92 year-old sax until I retired completely in 2018.

My grandfather, who had purchased the sax for my uncle Jim, was a true cowboy from the old west who used to help drive herds of cattle to Dodge City, Kansas. He and my grandmother had lived in Osage County, Oklahoma before moving to Kansas City, Missouri.

1957 was also the year that I met the love of my life, Joyce. I was only sixteen and she was only fifteen but knew after knowing her only a couple of weeks that she was the one I would spend my life with.

I played cornet in the high school band so getting started with the sax was pretty easy. Our school band was very small and only had one saxophone player. It wasn’t long before I was playing sax in the band.

I was contacted by Chuck Brooks who had a band called Chuck Brooks and the Sharpies. He had a record out: “Spinning My Wheels” and “You Make Me Feel Mean” on the Dub label. Chuck asked me if I would be interested in playing for him. I was thrilled and, of course, the answer was yes.

I asked him when he wanted me to start.  This was on a Wednesday and he wanted me to start that Friday night.  He wanted a tenor sax player. I didn’t have a tenor sax; in fact I had never played one. No problem – I borrowed one from the high school and played my first job that Friday night.

Later, I formed a band of my own, “The Fortunes”. The Fortunes consisted of myself, sax, trumpet and vocals; Tommy Taylor, piano and organ; Kenny Davis, guitar; and Pat Gibson, bass and guitar.

We played all over the region. We played the major places like Little Rock Air Force Base, The Top of the Rock, the Skyway Room and others.
We moved to the Chicago area where I played on the south side until Joyce and I decided we would be better off to move back south. Sometimes, I played seven nights a week for seven and a half hours each night. I always said, “The only way to have a better edge on your horn than playing six nights a week is playing seven nights a week.”

We lived in the Chicago area during the Viet Nam War. To do something in support of our troops, I wrote a recitation called “From Viet Nam With Love”. I needed a “B” side for the record so I used “Cash For Your Trash”. I had written it after taking some songs to publishing companies in Nashville. It was futile and it seemed to me that they were only looking for trite trash.

The Fortunes were not the musicians on the record. Chuck Brooks played bass on the record. I don’t remember who the other musicians were.

Earl Fox, owner of E & M records had a small recording studio in Little Rock. The song was recorded there and Earl wanted to put it on his label. 

When we left Chicago, we moved to Nashville, Tennessee and it wasn’t long before I was working with a group. I was playing a regular “house band” job at the Derby Club. We went next door to audition at the Embers Gourmet Room which was one of the finest establishments in Nashville.

I played several tunes for Bob Carney who was the manager at the Embers and they hired me on the spot. They got me into the Nashville Musician’s Union and made me buy clothes to perform in that cost more than the car I drove to work. I soon found myself doing three shows a night with Roy Hamilton, a recording superstar who was Elvis Presley’s idol.

I also held down a daytime job as Chief Programmer at the Mid South Baptist Medical Center in Nashville. Joyce and I had four wonderful and very young daughters. I quit the job in Printer’s Alley and gave up a pretty sure shot at “stardom”. I have never regretted it for one second. I thank God for helping me realize that I already had everything I needed.

For over fifty years, I went to work with my three tools: my Buescher alto, my Selmer Paris tenor and my trumpet. Commercially, the three horns were an advantage. Musically, I would have been better off to have chosen one and concentrated on excelling with it.

Paul Allen


Thank you to Paul Allen for sending me the account of his career in music.

The Steps Beyond “Go on Your Way, Girl”

The Steps Beyond came from Rosebud, Texas, a small town east of Temple. The group cut one signle on Mark VII D-1021 in late 1967 or early 1968. Their version of “Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Crying” has a relaxed moodiness to it. The flip is an original song, “Go on Your Way, Girl”, by Holtman, Surovik, Holtman, published by Ramsgate Music.

Steps Beyond Rosebud News June 22, 1967

Steps Beyond Rosebud News October 19, 1967One member of the Steps Beyond was James Holtman, and the other Holtman on the credits may have been his younger brother Tommy Holtman.

Surovik turns out to be Bruce William Surovik who drummed for Kenny & the Kasuals among others, and who passed away in November, 2006.

An April 11, 1968, a Rosebud News page profiling local teens notes James Michael Holtman “now plays second, or rhythm guitar, in the Steps Beyond, who, by the way, recorded a record a few months ago.”

However, almost a year before, in May of ’67, the Rosebud News wrote “Ray Welch, Alan Pelzel, Steve Slovacek and Fred Borden (The Steps Beyond) made the long trip to Lake Texoma last Saturday to play at a dance”.

To make things confusing, a clipping from April 4, 1968 includes Alan Pelzel and Fred Borden among a list of teens who went to hear the Steps Beyond at the Catacomb Teen Club in Cameron. So were Pelzel and Borden out of the band by the time the group recorded their single?

As Mikael points out in his comment below, it seems the Rosebud News made a mistake, and that Welch, Pelzel, Slovacek and Borden were actually in the Gestures, not the Steps Beyond. The only mention of the Gestures comes from a Waco paper, and I don’t believe they recorded.

Steps Beyond, C.J. and the Jewels, Roy Robinson and the Availables, Wullables Ltd, Rosebud News March 23, 1967
The Steps Beyond first news notice, a Hootenanny in March, 1967, with C.J. and the Jewels, Roy Robinson and the Availables, and the Wullables Ltd

The earliest mention of the Steps Beyond I can find is from March of ’67, when they play a “Hootenanny” at the Rosebud school gym with Roy Robinson and the Availables, C.J. and the Jewels and the Wullables, Ltd.

I can find several ads for other Steps Beyond appearances, including June 24, 1967 at the Westphalia Hall, at a Christmas Dance on December 23, 1967 on Main St., and on March 1 and 8, 1968 at the D. Brown Library.

If you have any photos or info on the Steps Beyond other local Texas bands of the ’60s, please comment below or contact me.

Steps Beyond Rosebud News December 21, 1967

Steps Beyond Rosebud News February 29, 1968

Steps Beyond Cameron Herald, March 28, 1968
At the Katacomb Teen Club on 1st and Houston in Cameron, TX

Steps Beyond Rosebud News April 4, 1968

Steps Beyond Rosebud News May 18, 1967

The Fugitives on Alamo Audio, San Antonio TX

Fugitives, Spidels and Laughing Kind, McCreless Shopping City, May 27, 1967

Fugitives David Walker San Express and News July29, 1967

The Fugitives are a San Antonio band that recorded two singles. Their first, I believe, is “Louie Go Home” backed with an original by Fugitives guitarist David Fisher, “You Know She’s a Woman”, recorded at Alamo Audio and released in the spring of 1967 on Alamo Audio 45-108. “Louie Go Home” made #28 in KTSA’s Top 30 of May 6, 1967.

An article on teens working summer jobs profiled David Fisher as a guitar & banjo teacher at Platter Palace. I don’t know who else was in the group.

The Fugitives had a second single, also from 1967, “Till The End Of The Day” / “Ferry Cross The Mersey” that I haven’t heard yet. Produced by Fisher – Alexander for release on Roun Soun Records 69/70-FK, with the address 5506 Keystone, San Antonio. There was a Roun Soun label out of Houston, but that seems like a different company.

I found an ad for the Fugitives at a “Teen’s Day Dance” at the McCreless Shopping City on May 27, 1967 with the Spidels and Laughing Kind, and also a June ’67 “rock and roll show and dance” at Turner Hall in Yoakum, about 100 miles to the east of San Antonio, with DJ Ricci Ware and a few other bands: the Laughing Kind, the Configurations, the Mad Mods and the Burbons (Bourbons).

Anyone have a photo of the group, or good scans of the Roun Soun single?

More info on the Fugitives or other local bands would be appreciated.

Fugitives KTSA San Antonio Express and News May 6, 1967
“Louie Go Home” reaches #28 in KTSA’s Top 30, May 6, 1967

Omnibus “Take Your Only Chance” from Lancaster, PA

Omnibus Pot 45 Take Your Only ChanceOmnibus came from Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The psychedelic styling on the B-side, “Take Your Only Chance” led me to think this single was from about 1970, but it seems to come a few years later, 1973 or 1974.

Omnibus members were:

Dan Glasse – vocals and percussion
Jeff Morrison – lead guitar
Jimmer Pontz – bass, guitar and vocals
Kenny Kaye – keyboards, guitar and vocals
Biair King – drums and vocals
Gail King – vocals and hand percussion

A good summary of the band come from Blair King’s Youtube channel:

Central Pennsylvania’s Omnibus had its origins in 1970, while Jeff Morrison and Jimmer Pontz formed a band called San Juan Hill, playing throughout their sophomore years at Hempfield High School, Kenny Kaye was touring with Store Records’ Geoffrey Stoner Band supporting a regional hit with a reinterpretation of The Bee Gee’s “To Love Somebody” and Blair King, a sophomore at JP McCaskey High, was performing with another local favorite “Exit”.

In February of 1972 the high school musicians were asked to audition for a new band in its infancy. Founded by keyboardist Kaye it also had vocalist Dan Glass, a recent transplant from Nashville, and Gael King, King’s folkie sister.

The band recorded it’s only single “Surprise, Surprise, Surprise” b/w “Take Your Only Chance” on the POT label out of Philadelphia, taping at Virtue Studios under the helm of Central Pennsylvania producer and Pee Vee Records label owner, Pancho Villa.

Omnibus Pot 45 Surprise Surprise SurpriseOmnibus was to be the last act to be signed to the Pee Vee label before the company moved to Delaware in 1974. The 45 single … was a minor regional hit and afforded the band the opportunity to tour in their funky converted delivery truck gigging from Fort Lauderdale, FL to Lowell, MA.

Dan Glass’s name is spelled Glasse on the label of the single. I’ve also seen Blair King as Blaine King, and Gail King instead of Gael, so maybe someone could clear up the correct spellings.

Kaye and Morrison wrote “Surprise, Surprise, Surprise”, which includes harmonica and was designated the A-side. I prefer the flip, “Take Your Only Chance”, written by Glasse and Morrison. Released on Pot Records P-100, a “Farr-Vil Promotion”; it seems to be rare now.

Both songs published by Pan-Vil Music BMI.

Kenny Kaye wrote “Let’s Go Steady” for the Shaynes, who were produced by Pancho Villa (Charles Miller), like Omnibus, but I don’t believe he was ever in the Shaynes.