Friday, January 6, 2023

Various Artists - Have Mercy! - The Songs Of Don Covay (2012) Ace + Booklet - Rare Soul + Pop (FLAC)

This addition to ace,s songwriter series focuses on the behind-the-scenes endeavours of Don Covay, provider of great material to some of the biggest stars of the 1960s. Don made his recording debut in 1956 as a member of the Rainbows vocal group. His idol at this time was Little Richard, whom he managed to meet in 1957. Richard took him on as his opening act, bestowing upon him the nickname Pretty Boy, as which Don released his first solo disc. When record sales proved meagre, he channelled his energy into writing songs with John Berry of the Rainbows. Off the bat their compositions were picked by name artists Gene Vincent, Dee Clark and Wanda Jackson. "Pony Time", Don’s first record to bear an additional credit for his backing combo the Goodtimers, saw him enter the Hot 100 for the first time in 1961. The same week, a cover by Chubby Checker debuted on the charts on its way to #1, leaving Don stuck at the lower end. Convinced that financial security would come from writing rather than recording, he signed with song publishers Roosevelt Music in New York’s famous Brill Building, where he shared a cubicle with his cousin, ace arranger Horace Ott. Gladys Knight & the Pips delivered Don’s ‘Letter Full Of Tears’ into the Top 20 in 1962. His profile raised, Don was sought out by Atlantic Records’ Jerry Wexler on the hunt for material for Solomon Burke, thus beginning a long and fruitful relationship that would see the name Don Covay grace the record labels of many of the company’s major soul stars. In 1964 Goodtimers’ guitarist Ronnie Miller came up with a catchy lick that evolved into ‘Mercy Mercy’, which saw Don finally crack the Top 40. The number would be a cream cut on the Rolling Stones’ “Out Of Our Heads” album in 1965, swelling Don’s coffers further. Meanwhile, he was added to the roster of Atlantic, who dispatched him to Stax Records’ studio in Memphis to record. The trip did as intended, returning him to the charts with the blistering ‘See Saw’, co-written by guitar genius Steve Cropper. 1965 also saw Little Richard enjoy the biggest hit of his post-50s career with Don’s masterpiece ‘I Don’t Know What You’ve Got But It’s Got Me’. Don continued to record prolifically for Atlantic, but of his subsequent singles for the company, not one reached the Hot 100. Fortunately, the fallow period was offset by the massive success of Aretha Franklin’s version of Don’s ‘Chain Of Fools’ and her revival of ‘See Saw’. Don remains best remembered as a performer. Given that his catalogue runs to several hundred songs and his client list as a writer includes in addition to those already mentioned Connie Francis, Etta James, Wilson Pickett, Joe Tex, Ben E King, Jerry Butler and dozens more, the man deserves to be a household name, regardless of his great body of recorded work. Sister label Kent has covered most of his material that will end up on this blog if not posted already. Only a few non soul tracks on here, what a talented man!

AMM

                                                                       The Tasters!





19 comments:

RMstorm said...

Thanks AMM for another top-notch ACE songwriter series comp.

Guy said...

Thank for this review, I never got a chance to read the booklet

Carlos Uria said...

Great gift of wise men, thanks for the review AMM!!

soultime said...

There's some fantastic artist on this compilation , brilliant review .

Little Bill said...

He is one of the pioneers thanks for rhe share amm!

tpee said...

Billy Fury to Aretha Franklin, that's definitely eclectic. A read of the track list is testimony to Don Covay's excellence as a songwriter. AND there's Little Richards brilliant version of "I don't Kow What You've got". Someone is singing behind Mr Penniman on this song, I always wondered who it was. Perhaps it was Don Covay. I can but dream. Many thanks.

PeterH said...

I know this record and like it very much. Thanks for review, P.

Anghellic67$ said...

Great Review Thank You AMM

imnokid said...

Looks like another winner from Ace that I missed.

richsoul said...

Don Covey is one of a kind. Great music and great artist. Thanks AMM.

hakase said...

@fluffyalbert yes sir you can hear his on "Youre Good For Me" also! thanks a lot for this AMM

pedro B said...

Must say that he is a very gifted talent turning some fine performance over the years deserves all the credit that is due to him Thant AMM for the review
Cheers Pedro

reb.jukebox said...

Nice compilation of covers AMM thanks a lot Reb

oldsoulrebel said...

Some great songs on here written by Don, a very talented singer- songwriter, thanks for the review AMM

PhilN said...

Thanks AMM for the great review.

Lordchester said...

Thanks for reviewing this top notch album.

BillyMac said...

Missed this one along the way. Jagger said, "No Don Covay, no Mick Jagger." Listen to Don sing his Atlantic songs and you'll hear where Mick got his style from.

ELtel said...

Yet another ace from Ace, thank you.
cheers,ELtel

bigcravings said...

the great Don Covay