Thursday, May 30, 2024

Kent 229 - The Manhattans - There's No Me Without You + That's How Much I Love You (2004 + Booklet) - Rare Soul (FLAC 595MB)

Following the previous review of The Manattans we have moved us on to 1973 and 1974 with the first and second albums that the group made for the Columbia label, where they had most success. Not that they had been strangers to the charts before, fourteen 45s and two LP entries on the Billboard R&B charts prior to their spell at Columbia demonstrate that. For those who revel in statistics, reference to the Record Research publication, Top R&B Singles, 1942-1999 by Joel Whitburn" shows the Manhattans placed #47 in the list of Top 500 artists, based on chart entries and positions over the relevant period. Their period with Columbia spawned 26 (of 44) R&B appearances, beginning with the #3 R&B (#43 pop) peaker, "There's No Me Without You", which made its chart debut at the end of May 1973 and bringing us neatly to this CD pairing.The liner notes to this release, written by Tony Rounce, tell the tale of the group and their individual outings in detail. To recap, the roots of the Manhattans go back to New Jersey based group the Dorsets, who disbanded circa 1962, displacing members Winfrid "Blue" Lovett, George 'Smitty' Smith and Richard "Richie" Taylor. That threesome quickly hooked up with Edward "Sonny" Bivens and Kenneth "Wally" Kelly, the Manhattans was born. In 1963, an appearance at the Amateur Night At The Apollo brought them to the attention of Joe Evans, a Newark NJ based record producer who signed the group to his newly formed Carnival Records and the quintet was on its way. On the expiry of their five year Carnival contract, the group moved to King Records' DeLuxe subsidiary and the earlier successes that had cemented the group name continued. Sadly George Smith fell ill with spinal meningitis and, although his voice is heard on the initial DeLuxe recordings, Phil Terrell another artist from Carnival became a temporary stand in for live performances. Ultimately, in 1971, George Smith died and a permanent replacement was found in the shape of Gerald Alston, possessor of a similarly rich, if smoother, voice. The stay at DeLuxe was relatvely short and, by 1973, they had been scooped up by Columbia. In 1977  having converted to Islam, Richard Taylor left the group and they continued as a quartet for the rest of their Columbia tenure. This lasted until 1987, when Taylor died and Alston announced his intention to pursue a solo career, signing with Motown. This move undermined the group and, after a one off set with Valley Vue, much of the 90s found the former compatriots at loggerheads, with Edward Bivins teaming up with four new Manhattans and recording an album for the Hektoen label while Kenneth Kelly and Winfrid Lovett went in another direction entirely. (The animosity was such that, as Pioneer Award Winners of the Rhythm & Blues Foundation in 1999, there was much back-stage speculation that the Columbia Records' line-up being honoured would agree to perform together. They did!) Most recently, the Manhattans name has been carried by Gerald Alston with Winfrid Lovett as the featured "names", augmented by David Tyson and Troy May. So what of the content of this two-album set? On signing the group, Columbia put them with hot producer/arranger, Bobby Martin, who took them off to the equally hot Sigma Sound Studios in Philadelphia. However Martin did not get them all to himself, some work was undertaken by Teddy Randazzo at Columbia's own studios in New York City. The Manhattans were experienced songwriters and their talents were fully utilised. Edward Bivins penned the sterling ballad, "There's No Me Without You", very much in the vein of what would become the group's most successful format an up front lead, quintessential harmonies and a few spoken lines. Winfrid Lovett kept the formula going for "We Made It2 and "Wish That You Were Mine" but provided variety by way of the uptempo "Soul Train", while Kenneth Kelly offered a relaxed floater in "The Day The Robin Sang To Me". Rounding off the group's efforts on the first album, Messrs Alston and Lovett collaborated on the understated beauty, "The Other Side Of Me". The "That's How Much I Love You" album was, by contrast, a slightly stranger affair. Columbia had acquired the group's DeLuxe masters as part of the contract deal and, although there was no need at the time for a "rushed" album, they opted to place the earlier material on side two of the set, duplicating three tracks from the DeLuxe "A Million To One" LP plus two tracks taken from the vaults: an excellent version of "A Change Is Gonna Come" and some 'wah-wah funk' by way of Winfrid Lovett's "Nursery Rhymes". Lovett was also responsible for the uncharacteristic "Summertime In The City", a minor hit single (#45 R&B) compared with the more traditional "Don't Take Your Love From Me" (#7 R&B) from the Philly writers Allan Felder, Bunny Sigler and Ron Kersey. Given that a dozen albums were issued by the Manhattans on DeLuxe and Columbia and that excludes any 'greatest hits' packages let's hope there,s more on them from Kent ?..It,s another cracking album!

AMM

                                                           

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17 comments:

Renald Heyns said...

Master balladeers. Fantastic group. Thanks for the upgrade and review, AMM.

PeterH said...

They were a great group … Thanks for review, P.

RMstorm said...

Thanks AMM for the double Manhattans. Here's hoping Kent keeps them coming.

trinity said...

Totally agree my friend, wonderful stuff
Thank you for the review

soulfood said...

Loved the last one so must have this one thanks AMM

Ray said...

great Manhattans review AMM thanks

bigcravings said...

Excellent

gmortars said...

There's no me without Kent!
Thanks, AMM!

Big Dave said...

I have 'there's no me'... but not the other one, so many thanks AMM for this review.

BigD

imnokid said...

yes please.

Carlos Uria said...

Thank you AMM for the upgrade!!

hakase said...

also thanks for this upgrade and much appreciated nice scans too

Little Bill said...

Another great Kent upgrade thanks AMM!

reb.jukebox said...

Nice review AMM thanks for another great kent release

Rush said...

Thanks for the review AMM, There's No Me Without You is my ultimate Manhattans album

richsoul said...

I agree with the previous comment. I thoroughly enjoyed the album "There's no me without you." All the songs were painkillers. Thank you AMM.

pedro B said...

Thanks for the twofer of the Manhattans fantastic review this one AMM

Cheers Pedro