
Thought ya'll might get a kick out of this....ROFLMBO. I had to take my own pictures. I put the video on full screen, paused it and snapped 20 pics....LOLOLOL. Pretty good huh....LOL. Be honest what was your first thought on seeing the title of thisBlog...ROFLMBO…
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Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 27, 2008 at 1:43am —
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"Who is that Girl?" a question i asked my Mother at a Family Gathering during the summer of 1974, but as i soon found out, there was no question that this was no girl, but The Stylistics singing You Make Me Feel Brand New and this began love affair with The Group thats has lasted 33 years.
In the fall of 1992 The Stylistics were coming…
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Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 24, 2008 at 11:03pm —
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Here is a collection of some of the Smokey Robinson Albums i have purchased over the years. This is not all of them, i just wanted to post enough so that the Blog could look real interesting....LOL
WARM THOUGHTS...1980
On his follow-up to… Continue
Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 19, 2008 at 4:56pm —
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BLACK IVORY were one of New York's best loved soul groups. The trio - Leroy Burgess III, Stuart Bascombe and Russell Patterson - were discovered by producer/arranger Patrick Adams when hey were known as the Mellow Sounds, and although he amended the name, the type of music suggested by their original moniker was spot on. Adams cut them on a series of delicate harmony ballads for Today records - scoring notable successes in the… Continue
Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 17, 2008 at 4:52pm —
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Introducing the Whatnauts is the kind of hard-to-find album that makes you pee in your pants when you uncover a copy dusting away at some Goodwill, yard sale, or flea market. Scavenging for their
recordings is what you had to do until the late ‘90s when no fewer than
three CDs of the Whatnauts’ music finally hit the streets. Obscure
beyond reason, the Whatnauts were comprised of Garnett Jones,…
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Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 17, 2008 at 10:25am —
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Sonny Til (vocals; born August 18, 1928, died September 9, 1981), Tommy Gaither (guitar; born 1930, died November 5, 1950), George Nelson (vocals; birth date unknown, died 1959), Johnny Reed (vocals; birth and death dates unknown), Alexander Sharp (vocals; birth and death dates unknown)
The Orioles have been called “the first R&B vocal group.” Formed in 1947 as the Vibranaires in their hometown of Baltimore, they… Continue
Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 10, 2008 at 9:54pm —
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When five self-trained Tennessee State Prison convicts waxed a cool disc called "Just Walking In The Rain," the Prisonaires became a nation-wide sensation. Their sweet ballad has already sold a quarter-of-a-million copies.
The story of the group's success as artists, however, is not nearly so staggering as the story of five cons who can leave prison just about any time they please. You see, in order to maintain their… Continue
Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 10, 2008 at 3:23pm —
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January 18
*Johnny Bragg was born on this date in 1926. He was an African-American singer.
From Nashville, Tenn., as a teenager in 1943, Bragg was sentenced to six life terms in the Tennessee State Prison. The charge was rape, he always denied the charges, and Governor Frank Clement commuted his sentence in 1959. He soon returned to prison on a parole violation and spent time in and out of incarceration until 1977.… Continue
Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 10, 2008 at 3:17pm —
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The Schoolboys sound almost uncannily similar to Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers, but they predate them by close to a year in terms of recording and success. Formed in Harlem's Cooper Junior High School in 1954 or early 1955, with Harold Atley as leader, James Edwards (first tenor), Roger Hayes (second tenor), James "Charlie" McKay (baritone), and Renaldo Gamble (bass), they performed in school talent shows and became… Continue
Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 9, 2008 at 7:21pm —
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The Five Echoes are notable for having been the group that both Earl Lewis (Channels, Flamingos) and Johnnie Taylor both passed through at one time or another. The original Chicago-based group -- Constant "Count" Sims (baritone), Herbert Lewis (baritone), Jimmy Marshall (bass), and Tommy Hunt (second tenor) -- originally called themselves the Flames because they hung out at the Morocco Hotel, home to a famous nightspot, the Flame.
The Flames… Continue
Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 9, 2008 at 5:46pm —
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0n the east Coast in the 1950s there were certain vocal groups that managed to become immensely popular without having national record sales success. The two groups that best fit into that category were the immortal HARPTONES and the incomparable Channels.
Late 1955 New York City was the setting for the latter's formation. Larry Hampden (first tenor), Billy Morris (second tenor), and Edward Doulphin (baritone)… Continue
Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 8, 2008 at 9:40pm —
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In 1964, the Magnificent Men, the only white act to ever headline New York 's legendary Apollo Theatre and the other major stops on the rhythm and blues "chitlin circuit," was formed from the improbable combination of two integrated bands. York, Pennsylvania's Del-Chords, a seven-member group that featured singers Dave Bupp and Adrian "Buddy" King, often played Battle of the Band contests against Harrisburg's nine-member… Continue
Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 7, 2008 at 1:40am —
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Joe Bataan (also spelled Bataán) (born 1942 in Spanish Harlem, New York City) is an Afro-Filipino American Latin R&B musician from New York. He was born Bataan Nitollano and grew up in the 103rd and Lexington part of East Harlem where he briefly lead the Dragons, a local Puerto Rican street gang before being sent to the Coxsackie Correctional Facility to serve time for a stolen car…
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Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 6, 2008 at 3:56pm —
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Ralfi Pagan passed without making a significant mark in the music industry, but not because he
didn't try. Raised on the Lower East Side of New York City, he was part of the city's bubbling
salsa scene in the '60s and late '70s. His main body of work -- four albums -- was waxed for
Johnny Pacheco and Gerald Masucci's Fania Records. Though a major player in the studio, he
didn't achieve the notoriety of some… Continue
Added by Shelley "SoleMann" King on January 1, 2008 at 7:13pm —
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