News
The In-Men Ltd (excerpt from Rhythm Message by E. Mark Windle)
The In-Men Ltd. (originally known as The In-Men Combo and In-Man Ltd.) were from Burlington and Graham, NC. They were hugely popular throughout the south, running as the In-Men Ltd. from 1966 until 1971, with a reunion and further recordings in 2004. The band should not be confused with Bob Kuban's In-men of "˜The Cheater" fame, another beach music favourite but who hailed from St. Louis, Missouri. "Wilson Rogers (the founder of the band) grew up in Graham, NC just next door to Burlington and Elon College" says guitarist Sonny Long. "His brother Tommy was our drummer. Moose Smith (keyboard)...
Allen McLaurin "Long Time Coming" (CD)
This blog section is usually reserved for referencing things of a literary nature rather than music media. However, keen to make an exception here for some news that may interest readers who are fans of blues and soul from the south eastern states of the US. "Little Al" and the Maxidynes may be a familiar name to rare soul fans for a particular Shell 45 label release from the 1960s. Well... "Allen" McLaurin has recently brought out a new CD "Long Time Coming". I heard about this project via Van Coble, bass player for the Tempests, and Nat Speir, co-founder...
Herbert Hunter (excerpt from "House of Broken Hearts") - E. Mark Windle
Herbert Hunter was the son of Baptist minister and came from a large family. As a young child he started singing for his father in church with his brother Rufus (who was later to record for Ted Jarrett and Bob Holmes label Ref-O-Ree). Jarrett first encountered Hunter in 1957 singing outside a bar on Jefferson Street, whilst Hunter was attempting to get noticed and obtain work. Jarrett saw his potential talent and befriended him. Jarrett taught Hunter songs on the piano and eventually found him a job at the Del Morocco on Jefferson Street. In the late 1950s Ted Jarrett...
Peggy Gaines (excerpt from "House of Broken Hearts" by E. Mark Windle)
Peggy Walker (nee Gaines) (b. 1944) was born and raised in Nashville, in a family of four children. There was no specific professional music talent within the family at that time - her entry into singing was through church, school competitions and a variety of local and regional singing competitions, from around the age of ten years. Peggy attended Cameron High School where she sang in the glee club and school choir, before she met band leader Bob Holmes and embarked on a professional singing career. Robert L. Holmes (b. unknown d. 2000) was born in Mississippi but raised in...
Southern City: Hal and Jean, The Paramount Four and The Poodles - E. Mark Windle (excerpt from "House of Broken Hearts")
Gallatin is a tiny rural town in Sumner County, a mere thirty miles from Nashville. New York author Ken Abraham notes in More Than Rivals that Gallatin was a typical segregated main street southern town in the 1960s with separate drinking fountains, parks and pools and engagement in sports activities. Working class families of both races did interface to some extent, finding themselves experiencing common financial hardship and living conditions, though blacks typically held the lowest paid jobs available in the area. Abraham explains that African-American entrepreneurship did gradually create community based services such as taxi services, dry-cleaners, barber shops...