Daniela

Daniela released two EPs in Yugoslavia singing in Serbian. She made the one pictured above with the band Plamenih Pet (The Flaming Five) around 1967. This low-fi EP has competent covers of I Got You Babe and These Boots Are Made for Walking sung in English.

The real gems are on the b-side, Dan Je Divan Dan (on web translators the title comes up as “Presently Had Wondrous Light”!), written by G. Aber and V. Olear, and Ja Nekog Želim (“I Someone Desires”), written by V. Olear and Daniela herself.

I haven’t heard the other Yugoslavian EP, pictured to the right, but the track list is Hippy Hippy Shake, Things We Said Today, Detroit City, and O Flamingo.

I knew almost nothing about Daniela, but after posting this last week, a very nice person named Freddy sent me some information along with scans and other mp3s of her career in Germany.

Daniela’s real name was Danica Milatovic. She was born in Munich, Germany on December 13th, 1949, and her parents had come from Yugoslavia some years before. In 1960 she recorded her first 45. Between 1965 and 1973 there were 12 more 45s and two LPs with German songs. Her biggest hit was “Im Jahre 2002” (“In the Year 2002”).

Most of her German work is very pop oriented ( visual example here) but I’ll post a couple of the more uptempo numbers, Sag mir nicht Good Night (Don’t Say Good Night) and Ich bin wie Wachs in deiner Handen (I’m Like Putty in Your Hands).

Les Harmonicos

Les Harmonicos

A group in Montreal called Les Harmonicos recorded this 45 in 1968 to give away as a souvenir at “Canada Family Day.” There is absolutely no information as to who was in the group or wrote the song on the sleeve and labels. The only info is “Production Son Illimité (de Montreal) Inc.” on the label. Reverse side of the sleeve is blank. I read that the group were air cadets, but as I later found out, that is not correct.

The single was not distributed in stores. “Les Oiseaux Mecaniques” / “The Flying Sound” starts off with a funky drum break and catchy riff, then come the jet sound-effects!

A nod to Canada’s bilingualism, each side has the same backing with vocals sung in French on one side and in English on the other. I think the song sounds better in French.

I found out nothing new about this single until guitarist Serge Verreault wrote to me in February, 2015:

First, let me mention that I was a founding member of the group, and contrary to what it says on the page, we never were air cadets. The group was created by five guys that met in school around 1965. Four members lived in Varennes at the time, and one in Longueuil. They were Pierre Savaria, drummer, Jean-Paul Jodoin, guitar, Marcel Colette, bass guitar, Serge Verreault, guitar and Gerard Cormier, lead singer.

When we first started, it was just for the fun of hanging around together, but very quickly, we developed a talent to play all sorts of music and started to get hired for weddings, dance halls, or various other fund raising activities. Before long, we had over 250 songs or instrumentals that we could play.

In 1967, we got hired to play at Expo 67, in front of crowds of over 15,000 people. In 1968, United Aircraft was having a Family Day for all its employees, and being one of them, I was asked to write a song, French and English, and to record it on a 45 RPM to be handed out to all the visitors.

So within a week, I wrote the music, and some lyrics in both languages, rehearsed it with the group and recorded it. At the last minute, the lyrics were changed by someone from the company, who thought my lyrics were not specific enough to the company. So we had to use those new lyrics for the recording, and since our singer could not speak a word of English, and he did not have time to learn them phonetically, I had to sing the English version.

Les Harmonicos Photo
a picture of the final version of the group
Later, the group had some modifications, due to various reasons, mainly to adjust to work constraints by different members. So the final version of the group added a new bass player (Jean Savaria), a new keyboard player (Jean Racine), and a new singer and leader of the group (me).

Our group recorded an LP of instrumental dance music in late 1969. We had signed for a three record contract, but since the producer never delivered his part, we closed the deal and it was the end of our recording career. And judging from the results of the recording, we all tried to forget we ever got to record it.

Our activities lasted until 1971, when we all decided to put an end to it and went our different ways.

Serge Verreault

The Outsiders

The Outsiders from Cleveland, Ohio were famous for the nationwide hit, “Time Won’t Let Me”.

Here I’m featuring their fifth single, the classic “I’m Not Trying to Hurt You” (which my band the Trip 9’s used to cover) with the uptempo flip “I’ll Give You Time (to Think It Over)”. Both songs were written by guitarist and leader Tom King with Chet Kelley and Bob Turek.

Tom King’s brother, Don produced another Ohio band on Capitol, the Turfits.

The Bondsmen

I remember how knocked out I was by the Bondsmen’s version of “I See the Light”, which I played over and over after taping it off of WNYU’s Mod Monday radio show when I was in high school.

I had the song on the tape but didn’t know who it was at the time, having missed the dj’s rundown of the songs he played. (If anyone has a tape of this show, please let me know; I do know “I See the Light” was followed by the Q65’s “I Got Nightmares”, which I also played endlessly.)

For years after I lost the tape I searched out who this could be, and was even disappointed (initially) by the Five Americans’ original version when I heard it. Finally I picked up a copy of Tobacco a Go Go vol. 1, and there it was, the opening track! By pure coincidence I later got in touch with the compiler of that lp, Ken Friedman, who provided me with this copy of the 45 and some information about the North Carolina garage scene.

Compared to the Five Americans, the Bondsmen’s version of “I See the Light” is faster, with a fuller sound to the organ. “Our Time to Try” is an ambitious psychedelic track, with thick forbodeing fuzz, and good drum and organ work. The vocalist does a great job on both songs, and the guitarist has a particularly fine solo on “I See the Light”.

The sound and plea for open minds on “Our Time to Try” dates the release to about 1968. The record has a dense production to it which makes it hard to hear the lyrics, and is that a horn I hear at times during “Our Time to Try”?

The Bondsmen came out of Durham, North Carolina, but recorded at Justice Records in Winston-Salem (“I Love You, Yes I Do” / “Out of Sight” on Justice 1003) and AMH Productions out of Chapel Hill. I recently heard from Gene Galligan, who filled me in on some of their story. I had heard that their drummer was Phil Lee, so I asked him about that too.

I am Gene Galligan, keyboard (organ) player for the Bondsmen. This AMH 45 of Our Time To Try and I See the Light was the result of us winning a Battle of the Bands at the baseball stadium in Durham. We did another 45 before this as the Bondsmen, two James Brown songs, Outasight / I Love you Yes I Do. I do not have any copies, however, Ken Heywood told me recently in a phone conversation that he has a box of them somewhere, he just has to find it.

Vocals: Archie Thomas
Bass: Jim Bowen
Drums: Philip Pearson
Trumpet: Tim Hutchinson
Organ: Gene Galligan
Guitar: Ken Heywood

Just a tidbit about my part on I See the Light. I used to play a Vox Super Continental (Dual manual Black keys were white, white keys were black). But on that recording I used an organ that was in the studio … it was like an Allen Theatre organ which is why it has that skating rink sound!!

Yes that was trumpet on Our Time to Try.

Philip Pearson was our only drummer … I don’t know what Philip did later… I was told some 30 years ago that he was in California.. so I don’t know perhaps Phil Lee was a stage name.

John Santa just published a book.

Anyone have a photo of the group?

The Road Runners

Denver Cross of the Road Runners playing in Bakersfield in 1977.
Denver Cross playing in Bakersfield in 1977. Photo courtesy of Diane.

Updated 2014

The Road Runners were a great band from Fresno, California who released seven songs on four singles in a short period between August of 1965 and April of 1966.

Band members on the 45s were Denver Cross guitar, Dale Samuelian keyboards, Bob Trippell sax, Randy Hall lead vocals and bass, and Steve Heitkotter drums. Other members of the band at various times included Ozzie Georgener, Larry Karagozian, and Dave Mendoza and Bruce Conte on guitars.

Their first single is my favorite, “I’ll Make It Up to You” / “Take Me” on Miramar from August of 1965 (released nationally on Reprise in September).

Randy Hall’s original song “Goodbye” was released in Jan. 1966 with red labels on yellow vinyl with “Tell Her You Love Her” on the flip side. I’ve seen one copy with beautiful flaming yellow and red vinyl, also with red labels, and one with almost all red vinyl. Second pressings were on black vinyl.

Road Runners Morocco 45 Pretty Me“Pretty Me” was released twice in 1966, once with a slow, bluesy cover of “Baby Please Don’t Go”, and later as the b-side to another Randy Hall original, “Sleepy Friend”.

The Morocco label was located at 1415 W. Scott in Fresno, and judging by label numbers seems to have put out 20 or so records, but I don’t know of any other releases. Dig the different spelling of Morocco between the first release and the later!

Road Runners Morocco 45 Sleepy Friend“Pretty Me” was written by the band’s drummer, Steven Heitkotter, who a few years later recorded a free-form psychedelic jam LP that has been reissued first by Time-Lag and then by Now-Again. Steven was institutionalized by 1972 and remains so today. See Greg Youngman’s blog for the full story on Steve Heitkotter’s album.

There are also a few unreleased studio recordings, and a well-recorded live set. Randy Hall had a solo 45 on a purple Morocco Records label, his original song “Don’t Stop Now” b/w “Baby Please Don’t Go” also from 1966. Judging from the release numbers (M-124/M-121), “Baby Please Don’t Go” is probably the same take as the Road Runners release. If anyone has clips of this release please let me know.

Randy Hall performing at the West Hills Music Club Variety Show in 1977
Xian (who left a long comment below) sent this photo of Randy Hall taken in 1977 when Randy performed at the West Hills Music Club Variety Show.

Discography:

Randy Hall Morocco 45 Don't Stop NowMiramar 116 – “I’ll Make It Up to You” / “Take Me” (August 1965, also released on Reprise 0418 in September)

Morrocco 001/002 – “Goodbye” / “Tell Her You Love Her” (December 1965)

Morocco 120/121 – “Pretty Me” / “Baby Please Don’t Go” (1966, yellow labels)

Morocco 120/122 – “Pretty Me” / “Sleepy Friend” (April 1966, purple labels)

Morocco 121/124 – “Baby Please Don’t Go” / “Don’t Stop Now” (credited to Randy Hall, 1966, purple labels)

Poster for The Cindermen and the Road Runners with MAG Light Show, Rainbow Ballroom, Fresno, October 28, 1966. Photo courtesy of Thomas Barrett

Road Runners Morocco 45 Baby Please Don't Go

The Charms

The Charms were one of the top acts in Greece in the mid-1960s. The Popular release is one of their first 45s, if not the very first, featuring two instrumentals, “Charming Hully Gully” and the phenomenal “Shake with Charm”, which has a fast, stripped-down rhythm that reminds me of the Monks!

Like other bands of the era, by 1966 they stepped away from instrumentals and started singing, but the music still has a jerky instrumental flavor to them on the early Music Box releases. All their early vocals are in English.

Their first Music Box 45 has the great garage sound of “See You on Sunday” on the B-side, with Animals-influenced organ chording, and “Mr. Goose” on the A-side.

Their next 45 on Music Box may be even better. “I’m Coming Back (to Stay)” has a repetitive horn riff and a good performance from the group. “The Count Game” is my personal favorite by this band, with a rhythm something like ska led by the organ, a great vocal and nice bluesy guitar fills.

After these releases the band lineup changed and their later output is more pop, and more often sung in Greek, and I’ve heard very little of it. Their cover of the Animals’ “It’s My Life” which isn’t bad, but definitely lacks the fire of the others. Known as a great live band, they were featured in several movies at the time, but I haven’t seen any clips of them performing yet.

The Popular 45 has no song writing or production credits. Song writing credits go to Nick Mastorakis and the Charms on Music Box 586, and to Nick Mastorakis, P. Polatos, M. Rozakis on Music Box 606. I assume Nick Mastorakis is the producer.

The following list of band members is adapted from an autotranslation of a good list of 60’s bands in Greece.

Kostas Karydas: Vocals (-1965)
Spyros Karakoytas: Bass (-1965, + Maik Rozakis: Bass, Vocals)
Giorgos Mpalaskas: Guitar (-1964, + Alekos Glykas -1964, + Kostas Njkolopoylos)
Giorgos Stratis: Drums
Teris Jeremjas: (+ 1965), Organ, Vocals
Petros Pollatos: (+ 1965), Saxophone

Κώστας Καρύδας: Τραγούδι (-1965)
Σπύρος Καρακούτας: Μπάσο (-1965, +Μάϊκ Ροζάκης: Μπάσο, Τραγούδι)
Γιώργος Μπαλάσκας: Κιθάρα (-1964, +Αλέκος Γλύκας -1964, + Κώστας Νικολόπουλος)
Γιώργος Στρατής: Ντραμς
Τέρης Ιερεμίας: (+1965), Όργανο, Τραγούδι
Πέτρος Πολλάτος: (+1965), Σαξόφωνο

The Charms featured in plenty of movies from the time. A couple of notable ones: they back Erica and Margarita Broyer on “Little Kiss” from the 1965 movie Teddy Boy Agapi Mou, and they do a fine Greek version of Del Shannon’s “Keep Searching” and an English version of Sam Cooke’s “Wonderful World” in O Gampros Mou o Prikothiras from 1967.

I don’t think I can list a full filmography for the band, but I know of a couple film appearances in color: the band playing “Fige” in the background of O Daskalakos Itan Leventia from 1970 and “Xwris Esena” and “Ela Pali Ela” from O Trelopenhntarhs in 1971.

 

The Vi Dels

Lou Fargo started the Fargo label in 1957, recording doo-wop acts for the most part.

The last record released on the label was in 1964, which sounds about right as a date for “Walking Down the Street”, this frantic slice of r&b by the Vi Dels.

This was an unknown 45 up til now. No songwriting credits on either side of the 45, but as Euphonic points out in his comment below, Sebastian Zimmardo and Vito Ingoglia wrote the A-side, “Ya, Ya, Ya, Ya”, and Joseph A. DeAngelis and Zimmardo wrote “Walking Down The Street” for Instant Music Co. – Casgol Pub, BMI.

The Fargo label had offices on Broadway in New York City, but I don’t know where the Vi Dels came from.

I don’t know if there is any connection with an earlier vocal group called the Videls who released the doo wop single “Be My Girl” / “Place in My Heart” backed by the Frank Spino Orchestra on the Rhody Records label. M. Bouchard and P. Andreoli were the song writers for that disk, published by Starfire-Peer, BMI.

The Turfits

The Turfits
Robert “Whitey” Gwinup was guitarist in a group from Fremont, Ohio called the Vandaliers whose members included Wayne Van Doren on drums and Harry Kerr. The Vandaliers had been playing together since 1962, and recorded a demo, If “It’s Love You Want” on September 2, 1965 at Cleveland Recording.

Meanwhile in Findlay, Ohio was the American Way, with members Roger Hilty drums, Gary Reddick organ, Kenny Turner bass and Bob Peeler lead guitar. Whitey Gwinup left the Vandaliers on July 9, 1966 and took Bob Peeler’s place on lead guitar. This new lineup changed their name to the Other Ones, and later changed it again to the Turfits.

They based themselves in Xenia, at a nightclub the band half-owned called The Castaways. They also played often at a club called the Capitol in nearby Dayton.

Gwinup brought “If It’s Love You Want” with him when he joined the Turfits, who recorded their own version at Cleveland Recording in 1967. Although the original version was written by Gwinup and Harry Kerr of the Vandaliers, writing credits on the label list all the members of the Turfits.

Gwinup also wrote “Losin’ One”, but as with “If It’s Love You Want”, all the Turfits’ names were listed on the songwriting credits (with Gwinup’s name misspelled as Gwinep).

Capitol Records had done very well with the Cleveland band the Outsiders and Youngstown’s the Human Beinz, so Capitol were willing to take a chance on other local Ohio acts. The Turfits didn’t reach the charts like those other groups, but “Losin’ One” has a classic garage sound – mumbled self-pitying lyrics and a high-pitched organ behind a restrained garage solo.

Production was by Don King – not, as I originally thought, the future boxing promoter (though that Don King was producing soul and gospel records in Cleveland at the same time as an investor in Way Out Records), but the brother of Tom King, singer for the Ohio group the Outsiders, who hit big with “Time Won’t Let Me” and cut the garage classic “I’m Not Trying to Hurt You”.

Thanks to BuckeyeBeat for some of the background information about the Turfits. Be sure to check out BuckeyeBeat’s site dedicated to Ohio garage. Additions and corrections were made from contact with Jaremy Hilty, son of Turfits drummer Roger Hilty, and by Wayne Van Doren and Whitey Gwinup.

Pattie Bersaudara

I found this Indonesian lp by Pattie Bersaudara on the Mutiara label a couple years ago, but had no info about it until Steve from Australia wrote in:

Pattie Bersaudara is not a person, it’s the two ladies who appear on the album cover. They were also known as the Pattie Sisters. The one with the blue top is Nina Pattie and the lady next to her is her younger sister Silvy Pattie (Sometimes recorded also as Nena and Selvy). They started singing together about 1961 and remained popular into the 1970s. It seems they always sang together and avoided doing solo work. I saw a newspaper report from 2006 that Nina died a few years ago. The sisters were born in Yogyakarta, Java, but their family was from Ambon and they recorded songs in the Ambonese dialect as well as standard Indonesian, Dutch and English.

Most of the tracks are in a local pop style like “Rudjak Ulek”. “What Am I Supposed to Do” is a cool soul/garage tune, and “Pura Pura” has some good organ and guitar. “What Am I Supposed to Do” is the only song on the lp sung in English. It sounds like a cover, but if so I can’t determine who did the original. Click to view full-sized scans of the front cover and back cover.

Thank you Steve for the info!

The Chaen Reaction

A group out of Salem, Oregon, the Chaen Reaction recorded this one 45 around 1968.

Members were Larry Carroll guitar, Craig Gunter drums, Lee Gunter keyboards, Lane Weinberg bass and Jim Burris vocals. Earl Chipley seems to have been the maven behind this distinctly uncommercial venture, co-producing and releasing the 45 on his own Earl label, a “division of Royalty Records.”

“Sometimes I Think About” was written by the Blues Magoos and included on their first lp. A good song, but it’s a bit of a downer no matter who performs it. It was also covered by Delaware’s Fabulous Pharoahs who must have realized its lack of hit potential and threw it on the b-side of their great Reprize 45, “Hold Me Tight”.

The flip “Chain Reaction” is even less commercial but far cooler, featuring distorted guitar and a heavy organ and drum pounding over a collage of screams and crowd noise. The vocals are buried in the mix and almost unintelligible, but seem to have a very trippy bent. Hard to believe anyone but the band really wrote this ditty, but Chipley gives himself sole credit. It was produced by Earl E. Chipley, and Clayton Caughill was the engineer who put this all together.

Thanks to Lee for correcting the group lineup and to Bonnie W. for the photo.

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