The Teeny Titans “Don’t Cry Girl” on Amber

Teeny Titans Amber 45 Don't Cry GirlThe Titans came from the Denver area, releasing only one single, the very cool “Don’t Cry Girl” b/w “”Don’t Miss the Boat” on Amber 218-DCG in 1968 as the Teeny Titans.

The Titans were about 14 years old at the time of the single and had been together about two years with this lineup:

Dave Feager – guitar
Mark Siegert – guitar
Cheryl Justice – keyboards
Greg Schriener – bass
John Justice – drums

Mark Siegert wrote “Don’t Cry Girl” with two names I’m not familiar with, Wyant and Tarvin.

I’m not sure how they ended up on the New York City based Amber Records label, but their B-side “Don’t Miss the Boat” had been the A-side of one Amber singles by the Zephyrs. Writing credits for “Don’t Miss the Boat” go to Fuller and Bruce.

Last Exit “The Fast One” on Wildwood

Las tExi t Wildwood 45 The Fast OneLast Exit came from western Ohio, perhaps Montgomery County, near Dayton. The only name I have is K.K. Petty, who wrote both sides.

“The Fast One” gives the lead guitarist plenty of time to solo. “The Slow One” is, as the title suggests, a ballad, with lines like “The best foundation for true love is simply a little trust / But the whole thing can be shattered, with a sudden burst of lust”!

The band cut their single at Wildwood Sound Productions in Brookville, where the Centrees, and Captain Crunch and the Crew also recorded.

Gene Turner’s Gene O Music published the songs but I cannot find registration for either. It is a Rite pressing, account # 1850, from 1967.

Fat Daughter

 

Fat Daughter, late 1969. Left to right: Ian Miller, Phil Hearn, Mike Reed (obscured), Pete Hicks and Dennis Lascelles. Photo: Ian Miller

Ray Edwards (lead vocals)

Ian Miller (lead guitar) 

Dennis Lascelles (Hammond organ) 

Steve Fields (bass) 

Del Coverley (drums) 

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Pete Hicks (lead vocals) 

Phil Hearn (bass/vocals) 

Mike Reed (drums) 

Formed around March/April 1969, this group from the Bexleyheath area of southeast London included some notable individuals in its ranks during its short tenure together.

Del Coverley had started out with school band The Millionaires in 1963 and then progressed on to The Scimitars before joining The Big Wheel in late 1965. After working in Switzerland with The Big Wheel, Coverley joined Carl Douglas & The Big Stampede in October 1966 but left in late July 1967 to join the final incarnation of The Fenmen, who gigged as Kindness (reuniting with keyboard player/singer Andy Clark from The Big Wheel).

When Kindness split in late 1967, Coverley reformed The Big Wheel with original members, Del Grace (guitar), Barry Nicholls (bass) and Mike Manners (keyboards) plus new singer Pete Hicks.

Photo: Melody Maker, December 1968

In late 1968, Coverley left The Big Wheel to reunite with Andy Clark and his new collaborator guitarist Mick Hutchinson (both ex-Sam Gopal Dream and Vamp) in the short-lived Dogs Blues. Barry Nicholls who’d recently worked briefly with Pete Hicks in Promise joined the outfit but in January 1969 he was replaced by American Jerome Arnold (ex-Paul Butterfield’s Blues Band) and guest tabla player Sam Gopal.

Photo: South East London Mercury. Dogs Blues, January 1969
Dogs Blues featured in South East London Mercury, 28 January 1969

However, the group split in early February when Arnold formed his own group and Andy Clark and Mick Hutchinson decided to continue as a duo and record their debut LP.

Coverley then joined a reformed version of The Royalists with guitarist Ian Miller, keyboard player Dennis Lascelles (who had briefly played with Del Grace in The Rifle) and bass player Steve Fields, who had previously worked with local bands The Kinetics and The Abstracts. The band’s singer was Lascelles’ cousin Ray Edwards.

Herbie & The Royalists. Left to right: Ian Miller, Steve Fields, Herbie Hunte and Brian Cooper. Photo: Ian Miller

As Miller explains, The Royalists had started out as a soul band around 1966 with singer Herbie Hunte from Barbados. Originally known as Herbie & The Royalists, the group also included Dennis Lascelles, Steve Fields and drummer Brian Cooper. The band’s equipment was supplied by South Eastern Entertainments in Catford.

Herbie & The Royalists gig (1968). Photo: Ian Miller

Herbie & The Royalists released a rare LP Soul Of The Matter on Saga Records in 1968, which Miller says was recorded on four-track over two Sundays in a studio in Finchley. However, by the time the LP was released, Lascelles and Miller were pushing for a more progressive rock sound and so Herbie Hunte departed around December 1968. Lascelles brought in his cousin Ray Edwards as a replacement but by February 1969 Brian Cooper had also departed.

The reformed Royalists, circa March 1969. Left to right: Del Coverley, Ray Edwards, Steve Fields, Dennis Lascelles and Ian Miller. Photo: Ian Miller
The reformed Royalists gig (1969) shortly before becoming Fat Daughter. Photo: Ian Miller

With Del Coverley taking Cooper’s place, the band gigged as The Royalists before adopting the name Fat Daughter. However, not long after the band’s singer departed.

In Ray Edwards’s place, Del Coverley brought in singer Pete Hicks who had started out in 1965 fronting The Down & Outs. In 1966, he joined The South East London Blues Band who played a few times at Happening 44 in central London.

When that group split in 1968, Hicks worked with Coverley in Big Wheel (bringing in Alan Fuller from The Down and Outs to replace Mike Manners during the year) and then joined the band Promise.

During this period Miller remembers the band playing alongside Jon Hiseman’s Colosseum at Erith Polytechnic.

Promise with Pete Hicks (centre) and Barry Nicholls (far right)

Around early June 1969, Del Coverley and Steve Fields departed Fat Daughter and subsequently joined forces with Andy Clark and Mick Hutchinson in Clark-Hutchinson after they had cut their debut LP.

Before he hooked up with Clark-Hutchinson, Coverley briefly worked with Rust who had just recorded an LP in Germany called Come With Me. The only surviving member from the LP was John Thomas and other new members were guitarist Eric Lindsey and bass player Alex Alexander.

Miller remembers Coverley leaving Fat Daughter to help Carl Douglas on a tour, so this would have been his first job before playing with Rust.

Fields, who changed his name to Stephen Amazing, also spent a brief time with The Skatalites, which may have been just before Clark-Hutchinson. Amazing played in Upp (who featured Jeff Beck as guest guitarist on their LPs) in the Seventies but later died.

Bass player Phil Hearn, who had worked with Coverley in his early 1960s bands The Millionaires and The Scimitars, and drummer Mike Reed both joined at this point and their first gig was opening for Fleetwood Mac.

Photo: Melody Maker, 1969

Later that year, the group opened for Alexis Korner (at Eel Pie Island) and Free (most likely Dartford Grammar School) among others.

Fat Daughter are uncredited for this support gig in late 1969. Photo: Melody Maker
Photo: Melody Maker, 1969

Miller says the band played at Eel Pie Island a few times. He also remembers gigs at the Scotch of St James in Mayfair, the Marquee on Wardour Street, central London and the Black Prince Hotel in Bexley.

Fat Daughter gig (1969). Photo: Ian Miller

He also recalls playing at Mildenhall USAF Airforce base with Kenny Ball & His Jazzmen, Avery Hill Teachers Training College with The Peddlers and Bromley College of Technology with Pink Floyd (most likely 26 April) where Syd Barrett joined his former band.

Fat Daughter, Black Prince Hotel, Bexley, late 1969. Left to right: Ian Miller, Phil Hearn, Mike Reed (obscured) and Pete Hicks. Photo: Ian Miller

 

Fat Daughter late 1969. Left to right: Ian Miller, Phil Hearn, Mike Reed and Pete Hicks. Photo: Ian Miller
Dennis Lascelles, late 1969. Photo: Ian Miller

When Hicks and Lascelles departed in early 1970, Hearn brought in a singer called John and a Hammond organist called Alan from his previous group Isis.

However, the new band didn’t last long and Phil Hearn and Mike Reed reunited with Pete Hicks in a new version of southeast London band Justin Thyme alongside guitarist Tony Pearman and organist Geoff Hurrell. That band’s original drummer Dave Neal went on to join Suzie Quatro.

Phil Hearn, who later moved to guitar, remained with Justin Thyme throughout the Seventies. He then became a sound engineer and worked with The Who, Aerosmith, Captain Beefheart, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and Michael Jackson among many others.

Original keyboard player Dennis Lascelles later became a noted artist and lives in Brighton. Mike Reed later ran his own entertainment agency named Mike Reed Promotions.

Thanks to Phil Hearn, Pete Hicks, Ian Miller and Del Coverley for information

 

The James Set

Members of The James with fans. Photo: Phil Hearn

Andy Tyler (lead vocals) 

Allen Berry (guitar) 

Richard Holdaway (guitar) 

Phil Hearn (bass/vocals) 

Tony ? (drums) 

When The Scimitars split in late 1965, Phil Hearn was invited to join another Bexleyheath area group, The James Set with the above line-up.

During 1966, Ian Mingham replaced the original drummer and keyboard player Derek Johnson succeeded Richard Holdaway. The band shortened their name to The James and played regularly in the local area with some gigs further afield.

Sometime around 1968, Phil Hearn left to form a group called Isis and later played with Fat Daughter.

Thanks to Phil Hearn for photo and information

The Scimitars

Photo: Phil Hearn

Mike Inkster (guitar/vocals) 

Phil Hearn (bass/vocals) 

Derek Taylor (guitar/vocals)

Del Coverley (drums)

Hailing from the Bexleyheath area in southeast London, Phil Hearn and Del Coverley had started out in 1963 with school band, The Millionaires alongside guitarists Ron Cochrane and Stuart Robinson.

One of Hearn’s friends, Mike Inkster was looking for a bass player and drummer to replace outgoing members and invited Hearn and Coverley to join.

According to Hearn, the group mainly played youth clubs and social gatherings in Bexleyheath and the surrounding areas. However, they did play the famous 2 I’s coffee bar in Compton Street, Soho before they split up in late 1965.

Coverley joined The Big Wheel and subsequently played with Carl Douglas & The Big Stampede, Kindness (the final incarnation of The Fenmen) and later Clark-Hutchinson.

Hearn meanwhile joined The James Set.  Both Coverley and Hearn played with Fat Daughter (albeit at different times) in 1969.

Thanks to Phil Hearn for photo and information

The Downbeats “Trying to Get Through” on Kanwic

Best-known lineup of the Downbeats: Marty Ford, Dave Gaston, John Bowman, Don Sailing, Gary Bolen, and Lann Gaston

The Downbeats came from Wichita, Kansas, and released one single “1-2-3” / “Trying to Get Through” on Kanwic HFCS-137 in early 1968

The Downbeats were active from 1964 until 1970, with the horns added in 1966. Members were:

Gary Bolen – lead guitar and lead vocals
Marty Ford – bass
Don Sailing – organ
John Bowman – drums
Dave Gaston – sax
Lanny Gaston – trumpet

Gary Bolen and Marty Ford composed “Trying to Get Through”. It’s a stomping soul performance, with a steady beat, funky rhythm guitar and bursts of horns. A scratched copy is audible on youtube:

Early lineup of the Downbeats, from left: Marty Ford, Jim Holmes, John Bowman, Gary Bolen, and Barry Sigars

Early members included guitarist Barry Sigars, vocalist Jim Holmes, John Clampitt on organ and Mike Brittain on bass. Later members included Wayne Avery, Mike Musick and Gary Heitz

Rob McKnight managed the band, and co-produced the single with Don Clyne.

There’s also video of the band performing “1-2-3” live on the All American College Show, and a half-hour tape of the group doing covers of the day live in the studio at KFDI.

The Downbeats with their 1937 Cadillac La Salle hearse
The Downbeats in the Beacon, February 14, 1968

While looking into the Kanwic label, I found the news feature on the band above, Downbeats Pick Up Pace by Cathy Henkel, from the Wichita Beacon of February 14, 1968:

Working at High Fidelity Recording, Inc., the band has done radio jingles, and acted as a studio band for other singers.

For more info on Kanwic, an item from the Wichita Eagle & Beacon Magazine on December 12, 1965:

A Wichita recording firm, High Fidelity Recording, Inc, at 445 N. Oliver, has issued its first album under the Kanwic label…

High Fidelity has been in operation for about a year. It is owned and operated by Raymond Creely and Jim Strattan, both natives of Wichita.

The company, which has issued previous recordings under other labels, makes its own tapes and handles promotion and distribution for its recording artists. The pressing of the albums and jacket production is done by other companies. There are no pressing firms in this part of the country.

First photo of the Downbeats after Don Sailing joined: Marty Ford, Don Sailing, Mike Brittain, John Bowman, and Gary Bolen

In July, 2022, Don Sailing wrote to me with an update, and sent photos of the group:

We weren’t able to make any other recordings, but I remember making several commercial jingles … one really good one for Uhlik Music.

In 1999, after almost thirty years after we disbanded, we had a wonderful reunion at Marty Ford’s place in Lampe, Missouri. To have all six of us “brothers” together again was surreal!

After a great weekend of playing music again, and thinking we were getting “old” at around 50 years of age, we made the decision to get the band back together. After many months of rehearsals and hard work in Missouri and Wichita, we booked a two night debut show at Ahoys in Kimberling City, Missouri in August of 2000. It was an unbelievably awesome gig!

After a few more gigs in Missouri, we all decided we had reached a pinnacle that few old bands are blessed to experience, and we decided to hang it up.

Sadly, only four of us remain today. We lost Marty Ford about nine years ago, and we lost Lanny about five years ago. The four of us remaining have all been married to our first wives, and we all have grown kids and growing grandkids!

Downbeats reunion, from left: Gary Bolen, Lanny Gaston, Dave Gaston, Marty Ford, Don Sailing and John Bowman.

The Rain “Love Me and Be Glad” on Webb Records

The Rain, from left: Owen Evans, Jim Bond, Ron Hall and Steve Croucher

Rain was a quartet from Osage City, Kansas. The members were:

Steve Croucher – lead guitar and vocals
Owen Evans – keyboards and vocals
Ron Hall – bass
Jim Bond – drums and vocals

Rain Webb Records 45 Love Me and Be GladIn August 1967 they traveled about a half hour southwest to Emporia to cut a record in the basement of 15 year old engineer Tom Webb.

“Love Me and Be Glad” is a great soulful number with lead vocals by Owen Evans and Steve Croucher. “Little Boy Blue” is a gentle song sung by Steve Croucher. Both are originals by the group.

The single was released on Webb Records No. 5667A, with dead wax L-270-1/2.

From right to left: Steve Croucher with headphones, Tom Webb “fingering the control panel”, Jim Bond seated next to him, Owen Evans, Bill James and Ron Hall.

Amazingly one of their recording sessions was documented by the Emporia Gazette on Thursday August 31, 1967:

Young Emporians Doing Record Business

Webb Records, named for the senior partner, Tom Webb. Fifteen years old. A student at Roosevelt Junior High School … Tom has been playing around with tape recording as a hobby for about a year…

Headquarters for him and for Webb Records is the basement of his family’s home…

…the truly impressive sight lines fully half of one wall. It is a large handmade electronics control panel, sporting built-in tape recorder, gauges, flashing lights, tone controls and several trays of toggle switches. On one side of the control panel is a work table, buried beneath an avalanche of printed order forms, contracts and information sheets … On either side of the whole squat huge speakers.

Tom’s partner in Webb Records is Bill James … Bill keeps a sharp eye on the company finances while Tom wears the earphones and flips toggles at the control panel…

Here recently a rock-and-roll band from Osage City came to set up its equipment for a recording session.

The band goes by the moniker, “The Rain.” All four members are young, in their teens, not unusual for today’s rock combos. “The Rain,” however, is no ordinary back-yard garage band … Last spring, when they still went under the name, “The Imperials,” they carried off top honors from a marathon “battle of the bands” held in Topeka. Just before their last recording session with Tom Webb, they had completed their first extended tour, a three-week trip that included Garden City, Pratt, Hutchinson, Dighton and a thrust on up into Nebraska.

Although Tom has done recording work with a number of young bands – the “Red Dogs” from Lawrence, the “Ides of March” from Kansas City, the “Coachmen” from Oklahoma City, the “Intruders and the “Esquires” in Emporia, for example, he has spent most of the summer concentrating on “The Rain.”

“Love Me and Be Glad”

The hit record that has been Webb Records’ main claim to fame so far was cut by “The Rain.” The 45-rpm disc features a big beat song called “Love Me and Be Glad,” with “Little Boy Blue” on the flip side. The record has been plugged on several radio stations … in Topeka, Osage City and Emporia. Tom has a list of 16 stations he has been working with.

The manager and lead guitarist for “The Rain” is Steve Croucher, a quiet, reserved chap who even wears his brown hair short. Even more reticent is the bass guitarist, Ron Hall. Owen Evans, the heavy-set, long-locked organist, pounds out chords and beams all over … The fourth band member … is Jim Bond, a short mop-topped extrovert who lays into his drums like they were going out of style. Owen, Steve and Jim handle most of the vocal roles.

The system Tom and Bill have set up is simple and efficient. Occasionally Tom moves his recording equipment to the band, as he did with the “Red Dogs” (their organ was too large to squeeze into the Webb basement)…

When the jam session finally chruns out a good tape, Tom takes it to Audio House in Lawrence. There the tape is used as a master to cut a record on a metal disc covered with acetate. Up to 25 copies are made this way, Tom says, but because acetate records are expensive – $4 each – larger quantities are pressed.

Up to Listeners

After the records are cut, Audio House ships them to Tom, who then makes the rounds of radio stations, leaving a free record at each station…

Once the song goes out on the air, Tom’s fortunes rest with the listeners. If they like the song, they will go downtown to their friendly local record store – where they will be told the disc is not stocked … The retail dealer then contacts the distributor, who in turn contacts Tom. Webb Records then ships the disc directly from Tom’s basement…

“I sure would like to get my own cutting machine,” Tom remarks, adding with a crestfallen expression, “but they cost around $40,000 … But say, if I had my own equipment, I could turn out records for only about two cents each.”

Circa early 1969, the Kanwic label out of Wichita would release a single by Rain, “I’m Free” / “London” on Kanwic HFCS-151. Publishing was by Doree, Johnny & Bill Music.

I believe this may be an entirely different band. The two songwriters, Larry Ulin and Mike Carney, were not in the Rain who recorded on Webb. Also, the sound is much different on “I’m Free”, featuring driving lead guitar without the organ and sweetness of the earlier single.

Wichita is about 100 miles from Emporia, and further from Osage City, though it was not unusual for bands to travel long distances to record.

As for Webb Records, in 1968 Tom Webb would produce a single by Friar Tuck & the Monks on Webb 5668, featuring an original song “Escape” (by Ron Bowell) with a slowed-down cover of “Help”, vocals by Ron Bowell and Rich France. I don’t know if Tom Webb and Bill James continued in music after that.

The Honey Band

Norman Warren (lead vocals)

Maggie Yorke (lead vocals) 

Brian Balcombe (lead guitar) replaced by Brian Brockie 

Steve Stills (bass) 

Geoff Rich (keyboards) 

Jim Caley (alto sax) 

Keith Fidge (tenor sax) 

Mick Henley (baritone sax) 

John Wilkins (drums)                     

The Honey Band began life in 1965 as Lo Limit, a successful semi-pro band based in Northfleet in Kent, fronted by singer Norman Warren from Aveley in Essex.

Some band members wanted to break free from the constraints of local pub work and drafted in some like-minded personnel to achieve their ambition.

In early 1967, the renegade section of Lo Limit comprising Geoff Rich (keys), Steve Stills (bass), Keith Fidge (tenor) and Brian Balcombe (guitar) and led by the aforementioned ‘Whizzy’ Warren recruited drummer John Wilkins from Peckham; female vocalist Maggie Yorke from Newcastle; and the multi-talented Mick Henley, who, at that time, had just completed his degree at the Army’s music academy, Kneller Hall, Twickenham.

The newly created Honey Band recorded a couple of unreleased singles, but it was their live performances that were attracting attention with great reviews. However, they were still seeking a bigger live sound and this goal was accomplished when alto sax player Jim Caley was ‘poached’ from local competitors Beathoven’s Soul Band.

A short time later, lead guitarist Brian Balcombe decided that a full-time music career was not for him and Brian Brockie, also a Beathoven’s Soul band man, was invited to replace him.

Following a series of intensive rehearsals in the ballroom of the now demolished Darenth Park Hospital, the band hit the road to play a hectic schedule of gigs between June ‘67 and February ‘68 across the UK, Germany, Austria, Belgium and Holland.

Part of the Scottish tour, June-July 1967

After a tour of northern Scotland, the band began to make occasional appearances at renowned London venues, including the Flamingo in Soho, the Ram Jam in Brixton and Billy Walker’s Uppercut in Forest Gate.

Much of this work was due to the influence of the band’s American manager Bill Berry, an ex-Radio England DJ, who also arranged for the musicians to support headline chart acts, including The Nice, Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick and Tich, as well as US soul star Madeline Bell; the group performed as her backing band on two theatre shows after just one hastily arranged rehearsal. Madeline went on to form chart toppers Blue Mink.

Following a successful audition at Kennington Granada in September ’67, the band were selected to become the live backing band for Pye recording artiste David Garrick whose previous supporting band had been the Iveys (later Badfinger). Garrick had a huge following in Europe, and in 2021 his 1966 hit “Mrs Applebee” weighed in at No 48 in the top 2,500 records in Holland between 1966 and 2000.

As a result, Maggie Yorke and Norman Warren quit and singer Gary Williams from east London stepped in.

However, the band was unable to sustain the level of work required to keep an ‘eight piece’ outfit fed and watered. Despite having forward scheduled gigs into the spring, after a succession of financial and logistical problems, the band split in March 1968.

Only guitarist Brian Brockie continued in the music industry professionally and joined The Button Hole Band (see their page on this site). He went on to play in a succession of bands and continues to do so at the start of 2022.

Thanks to Brian Brockie for providing all of the photos and the text for this article.

St John’s Wood

L to R: Top, Colin Pierce, Dave Shaw (on the stool), Colin Fox, Ray Harper. Left sitting down, Paul Dunn and Rod Pittam

Dave Shaw (lead vocals) 

Colin Pierce (guitar) 

Colin Fox (vocals, guitar) 

Ray Harper (bass) 

Rod Pittam (keyboards) 

Paul Dunn (drums) 

As Colin Fox recalls, “The formation of St John’s Wood started when two local Eastbourne groups, Spooks and 4-Bidden got together.

“I was in Spooks, and in 1966, the drummer, John Atkins, decided to join the RAF; the bass player Chris Putland decided to move to London and eventually became an accountant; and the guitarist, John Brooker, emigrated to New Zealand. That left singer Dave Shaw and me.

“4-Bidden were a four piece band whose lead guitarist wanted to leave, so they asked me to join. I said I would if Dave could also join as singer and they agreed.”

Fox adds that the band brought in a keyboard player and decided to change their name because there were now six musicians in the group.

1967 gig. Sussex Express (Newhaven ed)
1967. Sussex Express (Newhaven ed)
1967. Sussex Express (Newhaven ed)

“About that time there was a band called The Scots of St James, a nightclub in London by the same name. So, we thought, ‘What other parts of London are there?’ We came up with St John’s Wood.”

The guitarist notes that 1969 marked the 50th anniversary of the first flight across the Atlantic by Alcock and Brown and the band was approached by a guy who asked if they would be interested in recording a song called “Alcock and Brown”, which was written by Blakely and Howard.

“As they had had many top ten hits, we of course said yes,” says Fox. “We went into the studio and recorded the song. The first Saturday in May 1969, Simon Dee had a special programme commemorating the 50th year anniversary of the first flight. Blakely and Howard were there and wanted us to change our name to Balloon Busters. I found the whole thing embarrassing, the song and the name, but we went ahead and appeared on the Simon Dee show.”

After leaving the studio, the band reverted to the name St John’s Wood and on the Monday left for a three-week tour of Denmark.

The band’s first gig was at the Tivoli Gardens in Copenhagen. During August, the band held down a month-residency at the Carousel Club in Copenhagen, supporting by local Danish bands.

“The agent who sent us there told us there would be plenty of bookings waiting for us when we got back but unfortunately they never materialised and I left the band a couple of months afterwards.”

Fox says that he was approached by lead singer Tony Kenward from another local Eastbourne band called Road.

Road. Photo: Colin Fox

“I knew that Ray Harper was also dissatisfied with St John’s Wood having no work so I agreed if he could join as well.

“Over the next few years we changed our name to Lyzander and finally Performance. We became quite popular on the circuit for our four/five-part harmonies. In the following years, I did go out in a duo, a trio and also a band with four members. I retired to Spain in 2004, and played some bars and clubs in a duo, but that’s another story.”

Thanks to Colin Fox for information and photos about the band

The Souncations “Exit” by Jerry Rojas

Souncations Head 45 ExitThe Souncations made only one single, a version of “Respect” with a fine original song “Exit” by Jerry Rojas on the B-side, released on Head 1001 in 1967.

“Exit” features organ dominating the melody, but there’s a fine guitar solo and t he vocalist drawls his lines something like Jagger.

Earl Slocom produced, and the address 844 Pilot Dr, Dallas may have been his home. Usually spelled Earl Slocomb, he had been bassist with the Big Beats, who had cut instrumentals for Columbia, Liberty and other labels going back to 1957.

Souncations Audiodisc Acetate 45 ExitDespite the Kendall Pub. credit I cannot find a registration of copyright on “Exit”.

The origin of the Souncations is unknown, but I can find two notices on a guitarist named Jerry Rojas from Corsicana, TX, about 60 miles south of Dallas.

Both concern Navarro Junior College talent shows. The first show on December 2, 1965 is described:

Carol Kennermore was featured twice – singing … “Summertime,” and dancing to the strains of “Malaguena.”

Jerry Rojas on guitar, Danny Espedal on organ, and Roger Ballew on bass accompanied her song. The shaggy-maned Rojas himself later belted out a rock tune.

The second on March 24, 1966 notes:

Jerry Rojas, accompanying himself on his electric guitar, dipped into modern jazz for vocalizations of “Run for Your Life,” “Tombstone Blues” and “Ballad of a Thin Man.”

But so far I have no confirmation this is the same Jerry Rojas, or that the group actually came from Corsicana.

Thank you to Michael Robinson for alerting me to the Audiodisc acetate of the single.

Souncations Audiodisc Acetate 45 Respect

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