Saturday, June 18, 2022

Herbert Hunter - Northern Soul Legend (2011) Superbird - Rare Soul (MP3) + Booklet

This CD features Herbert’s recordings for Spar, Poncello and Ref-O- Ree records, as well as a handful of previously unreleased recordings produced by Fred James in the 1990s. Northern Soul fans truly covet and laud Herbert Hunter recordings and several of his 45s go for hundreds of dollars on the collectors market. 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 had a hit as a songwriter with "You Can Make It If You Try" recorded by Gene Allison. The record was pushed by WLAC and received national distribution on Vee Jay, reaching number three on the R&B Billboard chart. Jarrett put together a revue on the back of this. He and Allison together with Earl Gaines and Christine Kittrell took to the road. He also took Herbert Hunter with him as a general help and let him stand in when they were short of a singer. Jarrett continued to be impressed by his talent. It wasn't until after they returned from Texas that Ted found out Herbert was a minor at only 15 years of age. Hunter spent a lot of time, too much time, he felt, singing cover versions. Indeed this was how the Spar and Hit 45s came about. Both labels featured affordable versions of current popular hits, sold at a fraction of the cost of the original songs (Hit 45s at 69 cents each or two for a dollar; compared to 99 cents for a regular chart 45). Around 50,000 copies were sold of Hunter's version of the Ray Charles classic "Your Cheatin' Heart" alone. As Hit 45 expert Paul Urbahns recounts: "Leroy Jones was, like many on Hit, a fictitious name used for recordings by Herbert Hunter, Thomas Henry and Bobby Russell. Seventy-five percent of the Leroy Jones 45s from the early years were actually Herbert Hunter. If it's a low pitched voice, it's likely to be Herbert." In all, Hunter made around twenty 45s for Hit, Spar and another label, Poncello, both in his own name and under the Leroy Jones pseudonym. Like Hit, Spar released a fair share of cover versions of popular songs. Turnover in sales were so high that Spar was able to get a reduced rate from the publishers for licensing the right to use cover versions, hence why the labels could afford to set the retail price so low. Bill Beasley and the Bubis brothers owned Spar, previously owning Tennessee Records and Republic. Ted Jarrett was brought in as the staff writer by Bubis and Beasley to produce the black artists, including Hunter. This proved to be a financial success for the label and for Jarrett, allowing him to start a couple of his own labels, including Poncello and eventually taking Herbert Hunter with him. Around April 1968, Bill Beasley opened Spar Recording Studios. On the opening of the studio, Beasley reported for Billboard magazine: "we will be the only 8 track cartridge duplicator in the south. As well as our own label, we provide custom recordings, and mastering sessions for Bobby Russell and Buzz Cason who are doing things for Amy-Mala and Elf." Jarrett would continue to use Spar studios for recording, manufacture and distribution. From a northern soul perspective, Jarrett and another Nashville songwriter Mac Gayden provided the goods for Hunter at Poncello. "Wasn't It Wonderful To Dream" (Poncello 714) is the first one of interest, from 1961. Jimmy Fran appears on writing credits, although this was in fact a Jarrett original .Fran was reported to be the chauffeur for the Gene Allison tour. The song was an early soul sound, simple in melodic structure, much in the same vein as Ben E. King recordings though more up-tempo. Two releases on Spar are particularly worthy of reference. "I Was Born To Love You" (Spar 9009), written by Mac Gayden in 1966, has long been an established northern soul classic. Along with Buzz Cason, Gayden may be most remembered as the man behind Robert Knight's "Everlasting Love", although his song writing activities also included The Valentines "Breakaway" and Joe Simon's "When" both on Sound Stage 7. The R&B flipside to Spar 9009, called "Push Away From The Table", has also been attracting attention in recent years. "Happy Go Lucky" (Spar 741) is a lesser known Motownesque Hunter track, played at Stafford Top of The World northern soul all-nighters in the 1980s by DJ Guy Hennigan. "The Big Oak Tree" (Poncello 7701) is another big production number, similar in structure to "I Was Born To Love You". A great talent that could sing soul across the board.

AMM


                                                                        The Tasters!





24 comments:

gmortars said...

I've gotta sit down and listen to this! Eventually. 😎 Thanks, AMM!

RMstorm said...

Thannks AMM...'only 8 track cartridge duplicator in the south' - that takes me back.

Guy said...

Thanks for the review

andr3 nalin said...

Uuuh, interesting. On Spar Records(?) Mmh, not easy to connect the both for me, that makes it more interesting ;) Thanks AMM ✌🏻🌞☮️

oldsoulrebel said...

Very nice, I have a copy of this but not the booklet, thanks for reviewing this AMM

Carlos Uria said...

I Was Born To Love You, song of life, many thanks AMM!!

deadwoodie said...

Thanks

bigcravings said...

Great review. Looks like a great add.

Bill said...

I love being introduced to a new artist! From your review ,this looks a winner!

Anghellic67$ said...

Thank you AMM For this Album

tsi&hrjs said...

Thank you AMM for the Herbert Hunter review. His legend was previously unknown to me.

Big Dave said...

Herbert Hunter is previously unknown to me... many thanks for the review AMM

BigD

hakase said...

thank you so much for the review AMM

Wicked Souldies (Gto Town) said...

Thanks for this great comp AMM

renald said...

New to me and very nice. Thanks for the review AMM!!👍

pedro B said...

I was looking at the spar label I was thinking is that part odf the old spar grocers then I thought now way wouldn't invest in that even if there mark up was way up anyway Great set here from Herb nice review to match for All Music Man can fault it

Cheers Pedro

PeterH said...

Another legend I need to know more about ... Thanks for review, P.

richsoul said...

I sure miss reading and listening to artist that I might not have heard had it not been for you. Thank man and keep up the great work.

Tel said...

Thanx AMM I've Only Got A Few Trax Off This For Some Reason
Thanx For The Review

Rush said...

Thanks for the review AMM

Guitarradeplastico,scraping oddities said...

Many thanks for the Booklet & review

reb.jukebox said...

Great share AMM and info
Thanks Reb

CanoMan said...

Great background story thanks for sharing

ELtel said...

As OSR, i have this but no art, so thanks for the review MM.
cheers,ELtel