Lovelites story

Terry_ClubbupTerry_Clubbup 833 Posts
edited February 2006 in Strut Central
By Peter MargasakJanuary 28, 2000Voices from the VaultThree years ago a bootleg compilation called Divas of the 70s began popping up in south-side record stores, and among its contents were three tracks by a Chicago soul group called the Lovelites. The female vocal trio had caused a minor stir in 1969 with a sweet, catchy midtempo tune called "How Can I Tell My Mom and Dad," in which lead singer Patti Hamilton wondered how to break the news to her folks that she was pregnant. That single, produced by an up-and-comer named Clarence Johnson, sold 55,000 copies locally and 400,000 nationally, peaking at number 15 on Billboard's soul chart and landing the group a deal with Uni Records, a division of MCA.When Johnson, who's now 58 and still works as a producer in the area, heard about the bootleg, he set about getting his due. "I found out who was doing it, where they were doing, and I talked to my attorney," he says across the desk in the office of his Chi-City Productions, in an Alsip strip mall. "He said if I wanted to do something about it I should just put it out myself." So last month he released a 20-song CD, The Lovelite Years, on Lovelite Records, an imprint he briefly used in the early 70s. At the moment it's available only in Chicago and mostly on the south and west sides???though the north-side specialty shop Dusty Groove is also selling it via the Web???but Johnson is looking for distribution in the U.S. and Europe.Hamilton's pretty, exuberant teenage vocals and the close harmonies of her bandmates are swaddled in lush strings, bright brass, and slinky grooves???a sound along the lines of the one developed by Chicago producers like Carl Davis and Curtis Mayfield???and though she was only 15 at the time, she showed promising talent as a songwriter. Unfortunately, "How Can I Tell My Mom and Dad," with the line "Oh, he made me mother-to-be," was considered too risque for pop radio, and the group never made another record of the same magnitude???although "My Conscience," from 1970, came close. But though the Lovelites may be only a footnote in the Billboard version of music history, the new CD is significant for a couple reasons. First, it's yet more proof of the astounding depth of talent this city boasted in the 60s and 70s. And second, although countless vintage soul reissues have been turning up in this country, few of them are made here. Japanese and especially British companies (including Sequel and Westside, Edsel, Goldmine, and Charly) have cornered the market in the last decade, reissuing loads of material from old Chicago greats like Gene Chandler, Barbara Acklin, the Artistics, the Chi-Lites, Otis Clay, Harold Burrage, and Tyrone Davis as well as far more obscure acts. Even Johnson, who produced only a handful of certified hits, has licensed 158 of the tracks he produced in that era???including the Lovelites' only full-length album, With Love From the Lovelites, in its entirety???to the Japanese reissue label P-Vine over the last decade, and has worked with a variety of British labels, including the UK division of BMG. Johnson started out as a doo-wop singer in the 50s; he recorded with the Chaunteurs and was in the earliest incarnation of the Chi-Lites. He heard the Lovelites singing at a talent show near the Altgeld Gardens housing project, where the girls lived, and auditioned them at Hamilton's home a few days later. Satisfied, he rushed them into the studio to cut "How Can I Tell My Mom and Dad," which he cowrote with Hamilton, for Lock Records, a label in which he had part ownership. The group became huge in the Chicago area, but they were still in high school, so touring opportunities were limited. (Eventually someone capitalized on this situation by touring the midwest under the group's name and performing their hit songs. Johnson made sure there were pictures of the singers on the next record.) The Uni album flopped, and in 1972, the group recorded its last singles for the Atlantic subsidiary Cotillion.Typical for the time, Hamilton and her fellow singers???her sister Rozena and Ardell McDaniel, later replaced by Joan Berlmon and Rhonda Grayson???knew nothing about publishing rights, so they failed to notice until too late that Johnson had claimed them for himself. Hamilton says he also copyrighted their name without telling them or her mother, Bernice, who acted as the group's manager. Now 49, she says the girls were too busy swooning over their brushes with stardom???including a raucous food fight with Marvin Gaye while they were recording the album in LA. "[Johnson] was telling me he was going to give me the world and feeding me beans," says Hamilton, who currently drives a CTA bus and is trying to launch a career as a gospel singer. "But I don't have any malice toward the man." She says Johnson only told her about the compilation when it was a month or two from completion, and our conversation was the first she'd heard of the Lovelites stuff Johnson has licensed overseas. "Outside of the publicity there's really nothing I'm getting out of it," she says. "If there's money to be made, I don't think I'm going to see any." In 1973, the Lovelites broke up. "Tension in the group kept growing," says Hamilton. "We were jumping from one of his labels to the next, and eventually [Johnson] decided our name should change to Patti & the Lovelites. I was against it, but he insisted that it was a good idea. It caused some animosity in the group and we started snapping at one another." Berlmon and Grayson became successful studio backup singers, but Hamilton never fronted another group. Johnson went on to produce records by Brighter Side of Darkness, Heaven and Earth, and Coffee; he also worked with Denise Chandler (aka Deniece Williams of "Let's Hear It for the Boy" fame), four of whose songs for Lock are tacked on to the end of The Lovelite Years. He had financial interest in a profusion of small labels, including Lovelite, Lock, G.E.C., and Starvue. But in 1975, the legendary soul station WVON???which was owned in its prime by Leonard Chess and had broken quite a few hits for Johnson???shut down, a casualty of the migration of the entertainment industry to the coasts, and Johnson's career ran up against the wall.Though he hasn't had a hit in 20 years, he says he's more interested in making new records than rereleasing his old ones. He recently released an EP of nondescript contemporary R & B by the female vocal trio C-nario on his new Chi-City imprint, and an album by former Heaven and Earth singer Dean Williams is forthcoming. But fans of vintage soul will be pleased to hear that he's also planning to issue several more compilations that collect his productions from the 60s and 70s.

  Comments


  • GuzzoGuzzo 8,611 Posts
    somewhere in NYC a record shop owner suddenly felt a hotflash

  • canonicalcanonical 2,100 Posts
    No mention of the strut effect? What kind of hack-job was this?


  • this is awesome.


  • Check up by the byline, this story was published over 6 years ago,
    and is in reference to the CD issue of the material.

    This is not regarding Market Price for lobster.

    This is regarding the availability of music in the musicians' hometown,
    as well as a side-story of publishing rights.

    The Strut-Effect is in your hand.

  • canonicalcanonical 2,100 Posts

    Check up by the byline, this story was published over 6 years ago,
    and is in reference to the CD issue of the material.

    This is not regarding Market Price for lobster.

    This is regarding the availability of music in the musicians' hometown,
    as well as a side-story of publishing rights.

    The Strut-Effect is in your hand.
    Haha, dude I was joking. I enjoyed the article. Always intersted in hearing what old musicians are doing now.



  • It's all good.

    For the most part, old musicians are either preaching in churches
    or driving city buses.



  • canonicalcanonical 2,100 Posts


    It's all good.

    For the most part, old musicians are either preaching in churches
    or driving city buses.
    Reminds me of the story that start this interest for me. I was trying to find information on this post-punk group The Dance, turns out the singer left the band because she had a baby, started a website in the early nighties about astrology, and is now a dot-com millionaire.

    Anyway, back to the Lovelites.

  • z_illaz_illa 867 Posts

    You cant touch me
    Stand back
    No!!! [2x]


    Yeah

    [Hook 2x]
    They got scared when these hard hittas came in
    They got chains but they all tucked in
    We got them thangs and we brought 'em all in
    These niggaz play dead when they hear we came in (Came in)

    See I'm a hard hitta yes I am
    And I dont really nigga give a damn
    About you and how you fuckin rock shit
    I put a 45 that make you bitches stop dead
    You wanna cock it go ahead and cock it
    Dont make a nigga like me make you drop it
    I'm ten toes I'm from tha M-fuckin-Town
    We gangster walkin
    You hear the fuckin gangster sound
    Its ashes to ashes dust to dust
    The gats we trust
    Y'all dont really wanna bust
    I see you and your crew nigga in da club
    You tuck in yo chainz you must be some sissy club
    Do you wanna go to war nigga & spit some blood
    You talkin that shit like a fuckin slut
    You talk shit then you might as well bring shit
    I shut this muthafuckin club down for you bitch![/b]

    [Hook 2x]

    (Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!)
    Now if you wonder why so many diss Hypnotize
    Its cause them haters ain't eatin
    they on some muthafuckin diets
    A lot them is really sick I think they got amnesia
    Cause on Sunday they diss ya
    But come Monday they need ya
    Quit tellin lies to the public
    If you could rewind your life back
    You probably be wit me on this track
    But I ain't come here my nigga for no sorrow no wounds
    But im'a stay bumpin till I bump by head on my tool
    Fo' real!

    Niggaz wanna blame us cause they ain't famous
    They wanna ride a new whip instead of catchin the matter bus
    So why I gotta take the blame for lame ass niggaz not havin things
    Maybe you need to boost some clothes get yourself some pocket change
    I know you like them fairy tales say you make the three six sell
    So while my pockets still on swoll you reachin in the garbage pale
    Player I'm not your friend wit' it name a price and J'll spend it
    Get yourself a nine to five and try your luck on a lottery ticket

    What's up nigga
    Wanna be bad as the next nigga
    True facts you ain't gettin shit but fuck nigga
    Buck nigga catchin the cut when I rush nigga
    Jump nigga thinkin you cool you chump nigga
    Fuck that im'a get nine to get mine
    If you hood dog off in the club I'm on shine
    Pine in my mouth fuck up your cloud and get paid
    Wit' the same place to call our own and get away
    Whats the deal dog I be bout buckin and getting crunk
    And really dog I could care less about stunts
    In my trunk though where you gon' ride after the show
    Ain't no punk goes so I suppose you'll get throwed by some elbows
    Fuck it I'll fill his ass wit' holes on that funk blow throwin high low
    Like I'm a pro get crunk dog get buck dog
    But actin like a fuckin' fool gon' get you jumped dog
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