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Showing posts with label Hollywood A Go-Go. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hollywood A Go-Go. Show all posts

Thursday, September 24, 2020

Hard Luck Angel: Part 2 of My Salute to
Underrated Blue-Eyed Soul Diva Evie Sands!



DOUBLE COLD OPEN!
CLICK TO START THE VIDEO NOW!


 "Take Me For A Little While" - Evie Sands 
 (Aug. 1965, highest chart pos. #114 Bubbling Under,  
 perf. on Oct. 9, 1965, ep. of Shivaree



 "I Can't Let Go" - Evie Sands 
 (Dec. 1965, uncharted, perf. on 
 Dec. 18, 1965 ep. of Shivaree

Welcome to Pt. 2 of my salute to Evie Sands!
Last time, in part one, you watched the New York based white soul
singer, songwriter and guitarist in appearances on the teen-oriented
music TV shows Hollywood A Go-Go and ShivareeAt the top of
this post you saw two more (and different) Evie Sands perfor-
mances on ShivareeNow here's a fifth rare clip of Evie on
 Hollywood A Go-Go. This song is the fab flip side of
"Take Me For A Little While." The excitement meter
is pegged as Evie Sands belts out--
"Run Home To Your Mama!"

 "Run Home To Your Mama" - Evie Sands 
 (B side of "Take Me For A Little While," perf. 
 on Oct. 9, 1965 ep. of Hollywood A Go-Go





Stateside Evie's career was stymied by a series of bad breaks,
but across the pond in Northern Soul dance clubs, her records
were played heavily. One of the most requested Evie slabs
is the Northern stormer "Picture Me Gone," a June 1966
single that failed to make the U.S. chart.

 "Picture Me Gone" - Evie Sands 
 (June 1966, uncharted) 







Evie Sands was the first
to record "Angel Of The
Morning," a song written
by Chip Taylor, younger
brother of Jon Voight,
star of the 1969 film
Midnight Cowboy.
Evie's "Angel Of
The Morning" 45
hit the street in
June of 1967.




Evie's original version of
"Angel Of The Morning"
deserved to be a hit, but
at the time of the single's
release, her record label,
 Cameo-Parkway, was
in the midst of a steady
decline and nearing bank-
ruptcy. Lacking adequate
promotion and distribution,
another great Evie Sands
record flopped and failed
to reach any of the charts.

 "Angel of the Morning" 
 - Evie Sands (June 1967, 
 uncharted) 



It didn't take long for another artist to release a version of the dramatic
ballad and eclipse Evie Sands' recording. It happened the following
summer when Merrilee Rush And The Turnabouts hit the top 10
on Billboard and the top 3 on Cash Box with their single.

 "Angel of the Morning" - Merrilee Rush And The Turnabouts 
 (June 1968, highest chart pos. #3 Cash Box/#7 Hot 100



The most successful version of "Angel" was recorded more than
a decade later by pop/country singer and songwriter Juice Newton.
In the spring of 1981 Juice's single reached the top 5 on the
Hot 100 and #1 on the Adult Contemporary chart.

 "Angel of the Morning" Juice Newton 
 (April/May 1981, highest chart pos. #2 Cash Box/#4 Hot 100, 
 Mar. 6, 1981, perf. on The Midnight Special








To conclude my tribute
to the music of Evie Sands,
I present two songs from
her 1970 album Any Way
That You Want Me. First
here is Evie's glorious
remake of one of her
signature songs "Take
Me For A Little While."

 "Take Me For A Little 
 While" - Evie Sands 
 (May 1970, from 
 album Any Way 
 That You Want Me



"But You Know I Love You" was a top 20 hit for Kenny Rogers and his group
The First Edition in 1969. Listen to the superb vocal and arrangement on Evie's
version. Released as a single in 1970, Evie's version merely Bubbled Under.
Shady sez a platter this pleasing should have peaked high in the Hot 100!

 "But You Know I Love You" - Evie Sands 
 (Mar./Apr. 1970, highest chart pos. #110 Bubbling Under
 from 1970 album Any Way That You Want Me




Evie Sands has more soul and more talent
than any hundred of today's dance-poppers.


The proof is in the wax.

Have a Shady day!

Saturday, September 19, 2020

Six Degrees of Evie Sands


 White soul artist Evie Sands was still in her teens 


 when she made her greatest recordings. 




The talented
Brooklyn born
singer, songwriter
and guitarist
deserved stardom,
but it eluded her,
thanks to a series
of career setbacks.





In this 2-part series I am proud to present what I think
are Evie Sands' greatest recordings, most of them
uncharted, along with worthy covers of her
originals made by other artists.

First, here's a rarity - Evie's first record released in June, 1963,
when she was only age 16. With the song slowed down to
popcorn tempo for use in Euro clubs, Evie sounds
 a little like Jackie Wilson as she introduces
a new dance called "The Roll."

 "The Roll" - Evie Sands (June 1963, uncharted) 





Signed to the Blue Cat subsidiary of Red Bird Records,
home to the hit girl group The Shangri-Las, Evie Sands
recorded a song entitled "Take Me For a Little While."
A test pressing fell into the wrong hands and was
shopped to Chicago's Chess Records where R&B
vocalist Jackie Ross waxed the song and released
her single a week before Evie's original hit the
street. Radio stations were split on which
version to play. As a result, neither
record became a hit. Here's the
excellent single released
by Jackie Ross.

 "Take Me For a Little While" - Jackie Ross 
 (Aug. 1965, uncharted) 



Three years later another version of "Take Me For a Little While" cracked
the top 40, this one by the psychedelic blue-eyed soul band Vanilla Fudge.

 "Take Me For a Little While" - Vanilla Fudge 
 (Oct. 1968, highest chart pos. #38 Hot 100/#46 Cash Box



Now, let's listen to the best version of "Take Me" - the original version,
the definitive version, the Evie Sands version - a single that unfortunately
merely Bubbled Under the Hot 100 peaking at #114, In this vintage clip,
Evie performs the song on the music TV show Hollywood A Go-Go.

 "Take Me For a Little While" - Evie Sands 
 (Aug. 1965, highest chart pos. #114 Bubbling Under
 Oct. 9, 1965, perf. on Hollywood A Go-Go






On the back side of Evie's
"Take Me" hides a genuine
killer B. This one starts out
sounding like Johnny Rivers'
version of "Memphis." It also
seems to borrow from R&B
singer Timmy Shaw's 1964
hit "Gonna Send You Back
To Georgia (A City Slick)."
Listen now to Evie Sands
as she rips it up and shouts
the rhythm & blues singing
"Run Home To Your Mama."

 "Run Home To Your Mama" 
 - Evie Sands (B side of  "Take 
 Me For A Little While") 



In April of 1966 the English group the Hollies brushed the American
top 40 and reached #2 on the UK chart with the song "I Can't Let Go."

 "I Can't Let Go" - The Hollies 
 (Apr./May 1966, highest chart pos. #42 Hot 100/#59 Cash Box






Many people didn't realize back
then and don't know now that
Evie Sands was first to record
the song. I've posted the rare
stereo mix of this sensational
blue-eyed soul classic, a slab
that somehow failed to reach
the chart - didn't even Bubble
Under! Listen now to Shady's
Pick to Click - Evie Sands with
backing vocals by (I believe)
The Jelly Beans as they do--
"I Can't Let Go!" 

 "I Can't Let Go" 
 - Evie Sands 
 (Nov. 1965, uncharted) 



Let's flip that Blue Cat platter and hear another soulful song by Evie
and see her in another exciting live television performance in 1965.
It's the week before Christmas and Evie is wowing the crowd
on Shivaree testifyin' -- "You've Got Me Up Tight."

 "You've Got Me Up Tight" - Evie Sands 
 (Nov. 1965, B side of "I Can't Let Go," 
 perf. on Dec. 18, 1965, ep. of Shivaree




 Stick around. Coming up in Pt. 2 
 you'll hear more great recordings 
 by Evie Sands and other artists 
 who covered her work. 

Have a Shady day!