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The Moonglows

 
Artist: The Moonglows
The Moonglows

Group Members:

Harvey Fuqua, John Brown, Chuck Lewis, Billy Johnson, Bobby Lester, Alexander Graves, Prentiss Barnes, Doc Williams

Similar Artists:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Roquel Davis, Charles Sutton, Bobby Lester, Sammy Fain, Alan Freed

Formal Connection With:

See The Moonglows Lyrics
  • Formed: 1951, Cleveland, OH
  • Genres: Rhythm & Blues
  • Representative Albums: "Their Greatest Hits," "Moonglows Acapella," "Blue Velvet: The Ultimate Collection"
  • Representative Songs: "Sincerely," "Ten Commandments of Love," "Most of All"

Biography

The Moonglows were among the most important R&B groups of the 1950s, despite the fact that they only had a handful of hits among fewer than 50 recorded songs, in a history that lasted just six years, in sharp contrast to such acts as the Orioles and the Drifters, who were together across decades and recorded huge bodies of work.

Chicago-born Harvey Fuqua (born July 27, 1928) was part of a musical family virtually from birth, as the nephew of Ink Spots guitarist Charlie Fuqua, and before he was in his teens was aiming for a career of his own in music. He grew up in Louisville, KY, where he learned the piano and also began singing with his high school classmate Bobby Lester (born January 13, 1930; died October 15, 1980) at dances. They formed a professional duo in Louisville during 1949, after both finished brief periods of serving in the military, and were soon working with saxman and bandleader Ed Wiley, and it was in his group that they started singing jump and blues. Eventually a lack of earnings led them to split up, with Fuqua moving to Cleveland, where he crossed paths with an army buddy, Danny Coggins, and a neighbor of his, Prentiss Barnes (born April 25, 1925), who'd previously been a gospel singer, and formed a trio.

Fuqua brought Lester into the group, which was known as the Crazy Sounds, and they started to get work in the area around Cleveland. They were an improvisational singing group that specialized in a technique called vocalese, using their voices to replace instruments, basically in a jazz context, somewhat similar to the work of the Swingle Singers and the Manhattan Transfer. Their first break came in 1952 when they came to the attention of local disc jockey Alan Freed, who was already making a name for himself playing R&B records. They auditioned and did well enough to earn a chance to record on Freed's own Champagne Records label, changing their name to the Moonglows in the process in an effort to hook their recognition to Freed's on-air persona as "Moondog." The group enjoyed a modest local hit with a Lester composition, "I Just Can't Tell No Lie." They began performing in venues throughout the industrial Midwest and underwent their first membership change when Coggins quit for a more stable life as a gas station owner. He was replaced by Alex Walton and Alexander Graves.

Lester and Fuqua shared the lead vocal spot, sometimes even on the same song, and both of them had a keen interest in songwriting as well. The group was special not only for their mix of subtle polish and visceral excitement, but also the sheer attractiveness of the singing and the way in which their arrangements locked it all together -- Lester and Fuqua were the leads and the most visible talents, but there were no weak links anywhere in the Moonglows' sound; from bass to the occasional falsetto, all of the singing was dazzling, animated, and bracing, whether on the jump numbers or the ballads; each of their finished records was the total package, distinctly voiced, gorgeously textured, and exciting. In the early fall of 1953, Freed landed the group a contract with Chance Records, a small Chicago outfit that was making a serious noise in blues and R&B, and already had the Flamingoes and the Spaniels under contract. For a year, they tried to chart with ballads -- including a killer version of "Secret Love" with Lester singing lead -- and jump numbers but saw little success at Chance, before they were dropped.

In October of 1954, the group moved to Chess Records, and their first session was one of the most productive in the history of the label, yielding 13 songs including one of the biggest hits in Chess' history, "Sincerely" -- authored by Fuqua (with Freed taking half the royalties as "co-author," a common arrangement at the time for Freed and other managers), the Moonglows' recording charted in December of that year and bumped "Earth Angel" by the Penguins out of the number one R&B spot the following month, and later climbed to number 20 on the Hot 100 pop chart. The single rode the R&B listings for 20 weeks and sold over a quarter of a million copies, an extraordinary number for Chess in those days and all of it happening before R&B had fully crossed over to white listeners.

It was numbers like this that were delighting independent executives like Phil and Leonard Chess, and giving ulcers to executives at the major labels, who saw something happening in music that they'd somehow missed over the preceding year or two and were having trouble grasping even then. In the case of "Sincerely," it was such an attractive song that it begged to be covered by other artists in other styles -- thus, the Moonglows became one of the earliest R&B groups to see an original of theirs picked up by a pop act, when the white sibling vocal trio the McGuire Sisters covered "Sincerely" in a pop style and got a number one pop hit and a million-selling single out of it. The success of the Moonglows' original version was the break they'd been waiting for, and they began playing some of the best gigs of their history, as part of Freed's huge package shows alongside acts like Joe Turner, the Clovers, and Lowell Fulson. In early 1955, the group's ranks expanded with the addition of Billy Johnson, a guitarist who'd previously played with Charles Brown. During the summer of 1955, the group was part of a package tour that included Muddy Waters, Sarah Vaughan, and Nappy Brown.

Alas, they found it difficult to repeat the crossover pop success of "Sincerely" -- the group did produce such worthy efforts as "Most of All" (number five R&B), "Foolish Me," "Starlite," and "In My Diary." Then, in the middle and latter half of 1956, they succeeded anew with the ballad "We Go Together," which reached number nine on the R&B charts and attracted considerable interest from young white listeners in the bargain; and the rock & roll number "See Saw," which reached number nine R&B and got to number 25 on the pop charts. During this period, Chess also briefly attempted to double-up on the group's approach to the airwaves and radio play lists by taking some of the sides featuring Lester and Fuqua together on lead and issuing those under the name "the Moonlighters."

The group's status in the hierarchy of rock & roll -- or, at least, that corner of it under the control of Freed -- was confirmed when the Moonglows were included in the jukebox movie Rock, Rock, Rock, working alongside Chuck Berry, the Flamingoes, LaVern Baker, the Johnny Burnette Trio, and Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers. Later that same year, they also began work on what was to have been their debut LP, and early in 1957 they made another screen appearance, in Mr. Rock and Roll, a second jukebox feature, sandwiched in between many of the same acts as the prior movie -- this was to mark the last screen appearance of the original group, however.

During 1957, in the wake of their unfinished debut album, Lester receded from the lead vocal spot, yielding it to Fuqua, who already dominated the group as a producer, songwriter, and their de facto vocal arranger. "Please Send Me Someone to Love," which got to number five R&B and number 73 on the pop charts, featured Fuqua on lead vocals and reduced Lester to back-up. The friction between Lester and Fuqua continued through most of the year, and the latter's increasing control of the group's direction also caused friction with Barnes, Graves, and Johnson, who were more or less caught in the middle between the two most identifiable voices in the group. Complicating their strained internal dynamics were the changes in public taste that had taken place since 1955 -- they not only couldn't decide who ought to be leading them, or agree on who should sing lead, but also on which direction their music should go in, toward the more pop-oriented sound of the Platters, who were selling large numbers of records to white audiences, or toward the harder sound that seemed to be coming out of some quarters of the black community, and seemed to be where black listeners were moving.

Torn by these multiple schisms, the Moonglows' lineup collapsed under circumstances that are still a bit murky, in terms of who decided what and who exited. In late 1957, a pair of sides were recorded featuring Fuqua and possibly Johnson, and in early 1958, a new single appeared entitled "Ten Commandments of Love," featuring Fuqua as a speaker. It reached number nine as an R&B hit and number 22 as a pop single, the group's best pop performance in two years and one of their biggest sellers, except that it wasn't credited to the Moonglows -- rather, it was also credited to Harvey & the Moonglows, and precisely who was singing on it behind Fuqua is still a matter of conjecture; some sources attribute the back-up to the original Moonglows, whereas others say with assurance that it was Fuqua's "new" Moonglows, actually formerly known as the Marquees, a Washington, D.C., outfit consisting of Marvin Gaye, Reese Palmer, James Knowland, and Chester Simmons. What is clear is that they accompanied Fuqua over the next year or so, credited as Harvey & the Moonglows. The group's ranks changed quickly -- though he kept Gaye, who had sung lead on the group's recording of "Mama Loocie," with him -- and eventually included a young Chuck Barksdale, from the Dells.

In addition to his work with the new group, Fuqua was featured on solo singles throughout 1958, including "Don't Be Afraid of Love," which he co-authored with Berry Gordy, Jr. and Billy Davis, and also turned up miming in the last (and best) of the Freed showcase films, Go Johnny Go. Fuqua's professional association with Gordy had begun when they met, on the latter's visit to Chess to license the early sides of the Miracles; the two wrote songs together, and eventually Fuqua married Gordy's sister Gwen. He continued recording for several more years, including some legendary sides with Etta James, but increasingly concentrated on the purely creative rather than the performing side of music. After operating such independent labels as Tri-Phi (where he recorded not only his own and the later Harvey & the Moonglows stuff, but also the early Spinners, whom he discovered as the Domingoes, and with whom he sang as well), he joined Motown as the executive in charge of developing new talent, and became not only successful in that department but also as a producer and songwriter, and was collaborating successfully with Smokey Robinson in the 1990s.

Having had the group and the group name pulled out from under him, Lester went solo on the Chess label for a short time, before giving up performing for a decade. His name was well known enough and the recordings left behind with the group were good enough, however, so that as late as 1962 Chess saw the point in releasing a single credited to "Bobby Lester & the Moonglows," consisting of "Blue Velvet" and "Penny Arcade," the A-side culled from the group's abortive late 1956 album sessions -- this may have been simply Chess's way of trying to amortize everything but the kitchen sink in their operation, but it is difficult to imagine any other artist of the era, apart from Elvis Presley or Clyde McPhatter (or deceased figures such as Buddy Holly or Eddie Cochran), getting their six-year-old recordings pushed as new releases.

Johnson passed through gigs backing Jackie Wilson and Brook Benton before joining Motown Records, and passed away in the late '80s. Walton put together a new Moonglows lineup in 1964 to cover some of the group's '50s sides, but this effort didn't last long, and Graves and Barnes left the music business, and the original Moonglows were consigned to history, apart from Chess' periodic attempts to continue selling sides left in the vaults. The label also released of a pair of LPs made up of the group's single sides, Look, It's the Moonglows (1959) and The Best of Bobby Lester & the Moonglows (1962). Chess kept several vestiges of the Moonglows sound alive more profitably when they signed the Dells, and the group's sound could also be heard in the early work of the Four Tops (who had also spent time on Chess) and the Temptations at Motown.

Lester tried reviving the group name twice, at the beginning and end of the '70s, and even recut "Sincerely" the first time around. That composition remained the jewel in Fuqua's songbag -- in 1990, 36 years after the Moonglows cut their version and 35 years after the McGuire Sisters' pop hit, the Forester Sisters' country rendition of "Sincerely" earned a Grammy nomination; that same year, filmmaker Martin Scorsese (who is known to take a very deep interest in the music used in his movies) used the Moonglows' version of the song in the film Goodfellas. Between the original and the successful covers, "Sincerely" bids fair to remain a popular song well into the 21st century. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Moonglows
Top
The Moonglows
Origin Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Genres R&B/doo-wop
Years active 1951-1972
Labels Champaign
Chance
Chess
Lana
Times Square
Crimson
RCA
Associated acts Alan Freed
Former members
Harvey Fuqua
Bobby Lester
Pete Graves
Prentiss Barnes
Billy Johnson
Marvin Gaye
Reese Palmer
Chuck Barksdale
James Knowland
Chester Simmons
Doc Green
George Thorpe
Bearle Easton
Doc Williams
Chuck Lewis

The Moonglows were an influential American R&B and doo-wop group based in Cleveland, Ohio.

Contents

Career

Early years

Originally formed in their native Louisville, Kentucky as the Crazy Sounds, the group moved to Cleveland, where legendary disc jockey Alan Freed renamed them the Moonglows (after his own nickname, "Moondog"). Freed helped to promote the group during their early years and, in a common practice of the day, took a co-writer credit as compensation for his efforts. Lead singer Harvey Fuqua served as the group's leader and chief writer. Vocals were split between Bobby "Lester" Dallas and Fuqua, and sometimes, in the group's occasional duet leads, both. The other members were tenor Alexander "Pete" Graves and bass Prentiss Barnes, with Billy Johnson on guitar. The Moonglows recorded one single for Freed's Champagne label in late 1952, and then for Chicago's Chance label in 1953 and 1954. After a moderately-successful release of the Lester-led version of Doris Day's "Secret Love" on Chance, the Moonglows signed to independent Chicago powerhouse Chess Records in mid-1954.

R&B stardom and influence

Their first Chess release, 1954's "Sincerely" became a number one R&B hit and was "covered" successfully for the pop (read: "White") market by The McGuire Sisters. Between 1955 and 1957, the Moonglows reached the R&B charts frequently with hits like "Most of All", "In My Diary", "When I'm With You", "See Saw", "We Go Together", and "Please Send Me Someone to Love." Different styles defined the Moonglows lead singers: Fuqua favored the uptempo R&B/rock numbers while Lester sung more of the romantic ballads, for which the group was better known, and occasionally the two would share the leads, duet-style. Although Lester and Fuqua are credited as forming a spinoff group called the Moonlighters, recording in 1955 for the Chess subsidiary label Checker, they paired on only two numbers released as by the Moonlighters, "So All Alone" and "New Gal." The flip sides of these two songs, respectively "Shoo-Do-Be-Doo" and "Hug And A Kiss" featured the full group. The flip side of "Starlite" called "In Love" also featured a Lester-Fuqua duet. In 1957, the Moonglows appeared the Alan Freed movie Rock, Rock, Rock. In late 1957, the group recorded their classic "Ten Commandments of Love," featuring Fuqua on lead and guitarist Billy Johnson flawlessly executing the spoken recitation. This became the group's second biggest hit, after "Sincerely," early in 1958. It was also the first record to be billed on the label as "Harvey & the Moonglows".

The Moonglows singing style is revered by aficionados as "blow" harmony, based on the technical method used by the backgrounds singers. This style can be heard in many other groups of the era and beyond, perhaps most notably the Chi-Lites (particularly on their hit "Oh Girl").

Fallout from the original group and "The New Moonglows"

In 1958, shortly after the Moonglows recorded their final hit, "The Ten Commandments of Love", Fuqua re-asserted himself as the group's lead singer, putting Lester further in the background and causing friction among group members. The biggest blow came when Fuqua spotted a young vocal group, the Marquees from Washington, D.C., and took the talented quartet of Reese Palmer, Chester Simmons, James Knowland and nineteen-year-old lead singer Marvin Gaye under his wing. The group had recently recorded (unsuccessfully) on the Okeh record label after being discovered by rock icon Bo Diddley when Fuqua found them. Recording with fifth member Chuck Barksdale, who had been (and would again become) the bass singer of The Dells, Fuqua hired them as his new Moonglows. This group recorded songs such as "Twelve Months of the Year" (featuring a speaking part by Marvin Gaye), "Beatnik" and "Mama Loocie", which (the first recorded lead by Gaye), released in 1959. The forming of the "New Moonglows" ended the affiliation of the original Moonglows. In 1959 and 1960, Fuqua also recorded several duets for the Chess label with the singer of "Roll with Me Henry" (and future blues superstar) Etta James. [1]The other four Moonglows recruited bass John Bowie to fill their commitments, and then disbanded.

After the Moonglows and splinter groups

In 1960, Fuqua, on the advice of the Chess Brothers, moved to Detroit, Michigan, disbanded the Moonglows, and started working with Gwen Gordy who was sister of Motown founder Berry Gordy, Jr. At the time, she was running Anna Records, and he became a producer and A&R man for the fledgling label. It was during this time that Fuqua discovered many artists who would later find fame at Motown and elsewhere, including Lamont Dozier, Johnny Bristol, The Spinners, Jr. Walker & The All Stars, Shorty Long, and David Ruffin. Later, Gwen and Harvey married, and after a few years of struggling they jumped at the chance to merge their operation with Motown.

Harvey joined the new Motown label as behind-the-scenes jack of all trades. Mostly, he worked with artists on their live performances. While there, Fuqua was responsible for getting Marvin Gaye signed to Motown, and would continue to play a pivotal role in Gaye's career later serving as producer of some of his famed recording duets with Tammi Terrell and later being the production adviser of Marvin's final album, 1982's Midnight Love. Fuqua also began a record label called Tri-Phi, signing and mentoring the original Spinners, who copied the Moonglows style on their 1961 hit, "That's What Girls are Made For". Fuqua would serve as a staff songwriter and producer for Motown producing hits for The Spinners and later played a role in forming the funk-soul band New Birth in the 1970s.

Pete Graves started another Moonglows group in 1964 with the Drifters' Doc Green and George Thorpe and Bearle Easton, which recorded briefly for the Lana, Times Square and Crimson record labels, before disbanding. Lester, who had returned to Louisville and opened a nightclub, formed yet another Moonglows in 1970, with a Louisville-based group called the Aristocrats, including his cousin Gary Rodgers, Albert Workman, Robert Ford and Clyde McPhatter's son Billy. In 1972, the three original Moonglows who had remained active, Graves, Lester, and Fuqua, joined with new members Doc Williams and Chuck Lewis, and recorded an LP called Return of the Moonglows for RCA. The group released an updated, uptempo soul single of their hit "Sincerely", which became the group's final chart record. Soon after, the group parted ways, with Lester re-forming his Louisville Moonglows. Their LP, released in 1979, captured a live, mostly a cappella performance of a nightclub date. Barnes, meanwhile, had retired from professional performing after a car accident in 1969.

Activity in later years and members' deaths

Lester was the first of the original members to die, succumbing to cancer in 1980 at the age of 49. Billy McPhatter was not in the group in 1979, but joined the current members for a performance at Madison Square Garden (originally intended to include Bobby Lester), and remained in the group afterwards. Gary Rodgers took over management of the group and they began calling themselves Bobby Lester's Moonglows (sometimes also referred to as Gary Rodgers' Moonglows). Harvey reunited with most of his 1972 Moonglows for a 1983 Grammy performance and later toured as Harvey and the Moonglows until 1986. By the 1980s, the Billy McPhatter group included Rodgers, Robert Lee Davis, Pete Lawford, and Bruce Martin. In the early 1990s McPhatter was replaced by Bobby's son, Bobby Lester, Jr.[2] In 1999, Harvey and members of Bobby Lester's Moonglows reunited to perform on the PBS special, Doo Wop 50. By this time, the Moonglows were Rodgers, Martin, Lawford, and Gene Kelly.

Fuqua still sings occasionally and produces and manages gospel acts. Marvin Gaye later died in a tragic incident with his father during an argument in 1984. By that point, the former Moonglows singer had become one of the world's most influential soul artists of his generation[3]. Reese Palmer, a fellow member with Gaye on the "new Moonglows", became a member of The Orioles, while Barksdale returned to The Dells and has remained with them since 1960. Original guitarist Johnson died in Los Angeles in 1987, Rodgers died in 2005, and original member Prentiss Barnes died in 2006 [4]. The Moonglows were inducted to the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 1999 and the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2000.

Members

Original members

  • Harvey Fuqua: lead vocals, background vocals (1951-1958)
  • Bobby Lester: lead vocals, background vocals (1951-1958)
  • Alexander "Pete" Graves: background vocals (1951-1958)
  • Prentiss Barnes: background vocals (1951-1958)
  • Billy Johnson: background vocals (1951-1958)
  • William Westbrooks: background vocals (1951-1952)

Other members

Harvey Fuqua and the New Moonglows
  • Marvin Gaye: lead vocals, background vocals (1958-1960)
  • Reese Palmer: lead vocals, background vocals (1958-1960)
  • Chester Simmons: background vocals (1958-1960)
  • James Knowland: background vocals (1958-1960)
  • Chuck Barksdale: background vocals (1958-1960)
  • John Bowen (Barksdale's replacement) (1960-1960)
    • Fuqua also served as a background singer but acted more as the group's manager.
Pete Graves' Moonglows
  • Doc Green: vocals (1964-1968)
  • Pete Graves: vocals (1964-1968)
  • George Thorpe: vocals (1964-1968)
  • Bearle Easton: vocals (1964-1968)
Bobby Lester's Moonglows
  • Bobby Lester: vocals (1970-1972, 1979-1980)
  • Gary Rodgers: vocals (1970-1972, 1979-2005)
  • Albert Workman: vocals (1970-1972)
  • Billy McPhatter: vocals (1970-1972, 1980s)
  • Robert Ford: vocals (1970-1972, 1980s)
  • Pete Crawford (1980s-2000s)
  • Bruce Martin (1980s-2000s)
  • Gene Kelly (1990s-2000s)
The revived Moonglows
  • Harvey Fuqua (1972)
  • Bobby Lester (1972)
  • Pete Graves (1972)
  • Doc Williams (1972)
  • Chuck Lewis (1972)

Trivia

The song "Ten Commandments of Love" was spoofed on the Sesame Street 1983 album "Born to Add" by a fictitious band called Dr. Thad & the Medications. The song is called "The Ten Commandments of Health".

References

  1. ^ In July 1959, a group called 'The Ecuadors' ... "who, according to Harvey Fuqua, really were the Moonglows (which included Marvin Gaye) and Etta James" [1][2] reportedly recorded at Chess singing backgrounds for Chuck Berry. See Argo Records 5353, w/ 'Say you'll be mine', 'Let me sleep woman'.
  2. ^ Warner, Jay. American Singing Groups: A History from 1940s to Today. Google Books link
  3. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marvin_Gaye
  4. ^ http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/news/politics/15661794.htm

The song ten commandments of love is also featured in A Bronx tale in a scene in which the mafia savagely beats a biker gang.

External links


 
 
Learn More
The Best of Chess Vocal Groups, Vol. 1 (1988 Album by Various Artists)
Harvey & The Moonglows (Rhythm & Blues Band)
Rockin' Little Christmas (1986 Album by Various Artists)

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