-
Par dion1 le 21 April 2009 à 23:12
The Cashmeres (1) (Northwest Atlanta, Georgia)
aka The Marktones aka The Kashmir
(By Hans-Joachim)Personnel :
Dodd Hicks (Lead Tenor)
Henry Boyd (Tenor)
Ralph Riley (Baritone)
Romeo Shuler (Bass)
Discography :
The Cashmeres (1)
Single:
1954 - My Sentimental Heart / Yes, Yes, Yes (Mercury 70501)
1955 - Don't Let It Happen Again / Boom Mag-Azeno Vip Vay (Mercury 70617)
1955 - There's A Rumor / Second Hand Heart (Mercury 70679)
1956 - Little Dream Girl / Do I Upset You (Herald 474)
Unreleased :
1954 - By And By (Mercury)
1954 - Don't Mistreat Me (Mercury)
1956 - Separate The Good From The Bad (Herald)
1956 - Please Don't Tell 'Em (Herald)The Marktones
1957 - Hold Me Close / Talk It Over (Ember 1022)
1957 - Yes Siree / Hey Girlee (Ember 1030)
The Kashmirs
1958 - Heaven Only Knows /Tippi-Tippi-Wang-Wang (Wonder 104)Biography :
"Atlanta R&B outfit the Cashmeres formed in 1949 -- according to Marv Goldberg's profile in the September 2004 issue of Blues & Rhythm, lead Dodd Hicks, tenor William Butts, baritone Ralph Riley, and bass Bobby Arnold founded the group to participate in a talent show at their high school, McNeal Turner. After winning top honors in the contest, the Cashmeres decided to continue their collaboration, making a handful of appearances at Atlanta teen clubs clad in the cashmere sweaters that were their trademark. As their live schedule expanded, however, the parents of Butts and Arnold balked, and they were forced to resign. Tenor Henry Boyd and bass Romeo Shuler, Jr. were quickly recruited to pick up the slack, and with the aid of manager Mark Allan, a radio personality with Atlanta station WAOK, the reconstituted Cashmeres cut a demo session for Mercury Records -- the label extended a contract offer, and in October 1954 the group traveled to New York City to record its debut single, "My Sentimental Heart."
Although the single earned significant airplay in Atlanta, it failed to catch on nationally, and in April 1955 Mercury issued the follow-up, "Don't Let It Happen Again" -- when it too earned little notice at radio or retail, Mercury released one more Cashmeres single, "There's a Rumor," before terminating the group's contract. A frustrated Hicks enlisted in the U.S. Air Force at year's end, and the remaining trio added lead Grover Mitchell, signing to the Herald label to release "Little Dream Girl" in mid-1956. The single quickly disappeared, and the group dissolved soon after. In the summer of 1957, Herald's Ember subsidiary issued "Hold It Close," credited to the heretofore unknown Marktones -- in truth, the song was an unreleased leftover from the Cashmeres' "Little Dream Girl" session of a year earlier. Six months later, Hicks returned from military service and with Henry Boyd formed a new Cashmeres lineup with tenor Langston George and Edward Patten, both on hiatus from their duties as Gladys Knight's Pips -- when Knight's "Whistle My Love" became a hit in early 1958, George and Patten quickly ankled the Cashmeres to reunite with the singer, forcing Hicks and Boyd to convince Ralph Riley to come out of retirement. He eventually assented, but Romeo Shuler wanted no part of the revived Cashmeres -- neighborhood friend Norman Lumpkin finally agreed to handle bass duties, and in the summer of 1958 the new lineup cut "Heaven Only Knows" for the NRC Records imprint. Credited to the Kashmirs, the single fell on deaf ears and after one last gasp, the 1959 ACA release "Stairsteps to Heaven," the group split once and for all. Hicks later resurfaced as a solo act, adopting the alias Dobie Hicks for his lone Vee-Jay effort, 1961's "Where Is She" -- he continued touring the Atlanta club circuit until finally retiring in the late '80s."
Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
https://www.uncamarvy.com/Cashmeres/cashmeres.html
your comment
Follow this section's article RSS flux
Follow this section's comments RSS flux