Showing posts with label Danville. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Danville. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Kookie Cook (Danville)

Arlie Neaville aka Dean Carter is responsible for some of the wildest sounds to come out of downstate Illinois (or anywhere else for that matter) in the mid-1960's.

Neaville, originally from Champaign, gravitated east to Danville, Illinois in the early 60's where he surrounded himself with a gang of talented, like-minded musicians.  One of those people was drummer Richard "Kookie" Cook.
   
Cook, a member of Neaville's backing band - The Lucky Ones, was also part of the unofficial house band at Arlie Miller's Midnite Sound recording studio located on the outskirts of Danville.

It was there that Miller, Neaville and Cook, along with a handful of other area musicians, recorded dozens of late night sessions, experimenting and honing their unique sound.

Cook, however, was not strictly a session man.   Kookie was also a bandleader and a singer that released at least two singles under his own name.  In addition, Cook wrote and recorded several incredible songs that went unreleased at the time but eventually saw the light of day.

Other members of Kookie's band (according to the above promo photo) included Karl Reed, Mark James, Johnnie Dee and Dave Diamond.

Cook's first single, released as Kookie and Satalites, was a cover of the Duane Eddy instrumental "Rebel Walk" backed with "Boy Meets Girl," an original song penned by Neaville and Miller.   The two Arlies also produced the record which was released on the Chicago label GMA in 1964.
 

In the spring of 1964, Kookie recorded two more instrumentals in Chicago, again under the name the Satalites.  Both songs, "Space Race" and "Space Monster," were again credited to Neaville and Miller.  Both would remain unreleased for 40 years.

 

The next year, Miller and Neaville started their own record label in Danville, Milky Way Records.  While the label only released a handful of singles, one of them was by Cook.

Listed simply as Kookie on the record, the single included a cover of Roy Orbison's "Ooby Doody" with the original "You Took Her Love" on the flip side.  The song was credited to Miller, Neaville and Cook.

 

The single was reviewed in the November 13, 1965 issue of Cash Box.  Both songs received a grade of B, with "Ooby Dooby" labelled a "lite tuned reading of the Roy Orbison oldie," while "You Took Her Love" was described simply as "mournful lost love."

Nothing in Kookie's official releases however can adequately prepare the listener for the songs that Cook recorded but never released.   

In 2004, Ace subsidiary Big Beat Records released The Midnite Sound of the Milky Way.  Researched and compiled by Alec Palao, the collection gathered a number of unissued songs recorded at Arlie Miller's studio, including several tracks by Kookie.

The liner notes do not provide specific dates for Kookie's unissued songs, but it appear that many were recorded in 1966 or early 1967 - sometime after "Ooby Dooby" but before the Milky Way label folded.

Several songs clearly bare a sonic resemblance to the Dean Carter releases around that same time.  Kookie's pounding drums and tortured screams even match Carter's intensity and wild abandon.   Prime examples include Cook originals such as "Working Man," "Revenge," "Misery," and "Don't Lie." 
 
 

In the liner notes of Midnite Sound of the Milky Way, Arlie Miller said this about the songs, "On most of his stuff, Kookie had the original idea, and Neaville and I would help on it, or one of his band members.  I had 'Workin' Man' all leadered up and ready to send to [pressing plant] RCA, but Kookie said forget it, he knew that we weren't gonna get any hits."

Just like that it was over.  Soon after, for a few reasons, the Milky Way label came to a sudden demise.  There is no evidence that Cook recorded ever again.

If not for the Midnite Sound of the Milky Way compilation, the far out sounds of Kookie Cook would have been completely lost and forgotten. 
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The last single released on the Milky Way label was Dean Carter's mind-blowing take on "Jailhouse Rock." For more about "one of the most otherworldly rockabilly singles ever made" see Plastic Crimewave's recent edition of The Secret History of Chicago Music.

In addition to Midnite Sound of the Milky Way, please be sure to check out Big Beat's other compilation, Dean Carter - Call of the Wild!

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Bobby Carter & Cardell Records (Bloomington)

Bobby Carter's two singles on Cardell Records are some of the finest examples of rockabilly to come out of downstate Illinois.  Released in 1960-1961 on an unknown label, both remain extremely rare and shrouded in mystery.
The first record however contained a few clues.  Printed on the label was "Bloomington, Illinois" as well as the names of some of the other musicians: H. Sherman, A. Miller and Johnny Lawrence.

Carter it turns out was a native of Danville, Illinois (not Bloomington). Born in 1935, William Robert Carter actually had a long career as a singer and musician, despite having one of his lungs removed as a child.  Carter claimed that singing helped strengthen his remaining lung.

In the 1950's, while still in Danville, Carter was a member of the rockabilly group The Varieteers.   Other members of the Varieteers at one time included: Arlie Miller, Jim Foley, George Foehrer and Curley Arnett.  

In a 2015 interview, Carter remembered playing in downtown Danville in the 50's for hundreds of people with some protesters carrying signs saying "Sinful Music."  Danville's WITY once billed Carter as "the Illiana Elvis Presley."  

In 1957, Carter moved to Phoenix, AZ for his health where he signed with Rev Records.  It is unclear whether he recorded for the label or not.  By 1960 Carter had returned to Illinois and settled in Bloomington.

It was during this time that Carter released his two singles:
  • "Before We Part and Go" / "If You're Gonna Shake It"  (1960)
 
"Destiny, I Love You" / "Run, Run, Run" (1961)
Both were released on Cardell Records.  While the second 45 listed Carter's backing band simply as The Spotlites, the first provided us with the names H. Sherman, A. Miller and Johnny Lawrence.

Given the Danville connection, it is likely that A. Miller is Arlie Miller who recorded his own single in Danville around the same time and like Carter had been a member of the Varieteers.   Miller's single "Lou Ann" / "You're The Sweetest Girl" was released on the Lucky label.  Jim Foley, another member of The Varieteers, also released a single on Lucky in 1960.  

Arlie Miller would go on to open the Midnite Sound Studio in Danville and start Milky Way Records with Arlie Neaville (aka Dean Carter) a few years later.   As for H. Sherman and Johnny Lawrence, it is unknown if they were from Bloomington, Danville or somewhere else entirely.  

For the next decade or so, Bob Carter's musical activities are also uncertain.  In 1973 however, he moved to Nashville and recorded a demo that eventually landed him a deal with Oweman Records.  It is not clear whether he ever released anything for the label.  He did however have one single released on the Royal American label:  "As The Fire Grows" b/w "Soakin' Up Suds."

While living in Nashville, Carter worked at various recording studios, label and production companies.  He eventually moved back to the Danville area where he continued to perform with area bands.  According to the Commerical-News, "when he wasn’t playing music, Carter worked numerous jobs, including selling shoes and managing stores. A barber, he also had several barber shops in the area, and started the Tilton Teen Club."

In 2015, at age 80, Carter was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award by the Music in the Heartland Society.   Carter passed away in 2017.

Thursday, February 7, 2019

WESN Show #11 - Feb. 7, 2019


Danville's Midnite Sound

ARTISTTRACKYEARLABEL
Arlie MillerBig Black Train1959Buffalo Bop
Jim Foley & The Big BeatsBlues In The Morning1960Lucky
Arlie NeavilleI'm Leavin'1959Big Beat
Dean CarterSugaree1964Big Beat
Dave MartenYou Gotta Love Me196-?Big Beat
Dean CarterFever1965Milky Way
The CobrasTry1966Milky Way
Willie & The TravelairesThe Fiery Stomp1966Milky Way
Dean CarterRebel Woman1967Milky Way
Kookie CookWorking Man1966Big Beat
The Four A WhileLow Class Man1966Big Beat
Dean CarterCall Of the Wild1968Big Beat
Kookie CookRevenge1966Big Beat
George JacksLook1968Big Beat
Dean CarterDon't Try To Change Me1968Big Beat
The 12th KnightRebel Woman1972Big Beat
Dean CarterDobro Pickin Man1968Big Beat
Danny MacklinHome Of The Blues1969Redd Hedd
The CorpsWindow Room1970Redd Hedd
Arlie NeavilleAir Mail1969Fraternity


Danville's Midnite Sound: An Arlie & Arlie Production

The story of the Midnite Sound studio is the story of two musicians named Arlie:
Arlie Neaville
Arlie Miller

Neaville and Miller began performing and recording in the late 1950s and were some of the earliest purveyors of rock'n'roll in all of downstate Illinois.   Neaville from Champaign-Urbana was performing with his Rock-N-Roll Devils and later with the Rocking Stars and released a couple singles on various labels in the early 1960s:


  • Arlie Neaville - "Angel Love"/"River Of Life" Ping #8001, 1961
  • Arlie Nevil - "Alone On A Star"/"The Skip"  Fraternity F-900, 1962
In Danville, Arlie Miller and fellow musicians Jim Foley, Ronny Roach and Johnny Coons released a trio of singles in 1960 on Lucky Records:
  • Arlie Miller and the Bullets - "Lou Ann"/"You're The Sweetest Girl"
  • Jim Foley and the Big Beats - "Goodbye Train"/"Blues In The Morning"
  • Ronny and Johnny - "Massacre"/"Jungle Boogie"
By 1963, Neaville had adopted the stage name Dean Carter.   Around that same time he and Miller (along with bass player Dave Marten) joined forces to form the Lucky Ones:

By 1964, tired of driving to Nashville or Chicago to record, the two Arlies purchased a townhouse on the south side of Danville and converted it into a makeshift recording studio, Midnite Sound, where they began recording themselves, their band mates and other local musicians.   Soon after the two men started their own record label, Milky Way Records, which released eleven singles between 1964 and 1967:
  • MW-001 June Kinney - "The Hands You're Holding"/"I'll Be A Long-Time Gone" 1964
  • MW-002  Dorothy Barnes - "Baby, We're Really In Love"/"This Little World" 1964
  • MW-003  Dean Carter - "Number One Girl"/"Fever" 1965
  • MW-004  Dean Carter - "The Rockin Bandit"/"Care" 1965
  • (MW-005)  Kookie - "Ooby Dooby"/"You Took Her Love" 1965
  • MW-006  The Cobras - "Try"/"Good Bye" 1965
  • MW-007  Willie and the Travelaires - "The Fiery Stomp"/"I Had A Girl" 1966
  • MW-008  June Kinney - "Look Out Heart"/"Good Luck and Goodbye" 1966
  • MW-009  Ed Mason - "You Don't Know Me"/"Oh Lonesome Me" 1966
  • MW-010  Dean Carter - "Run Rabbit Run"/"Soul Feelin" 1967
  • MW-011  Dean Carter - "Jailhouse Rock"/"Rebel Woman" 1967
In 1967, Miller's divorce as well as a cease and desist from the makers of Milky Way candy bars put an end to the label.  The Midnite Sound however carried on and despite just a handful of official releases, the studio had made dozens if not hundreds of recordings during the period of 1964-1968.  Most of them went unreleased and would have been lost and completely forgotten if not for two great compilation CDs released in the early 2000s by Big Beat Records in the UK:
Image result for call of the wild dean carter
By 1969, Miller had started a new record label, Redd Hedd Records, producing a handful of singles into the 1970s of mostly local Danville musicians:
  • #001 Danny Macklin - "Take A Stool"/"Home Of The Blues", 1969
  • #002 The Fronge - "Love Is Fine"/ "It's Gone", 1970
  • #003 Gene Cooper - "One Of A Kind"/"Forever", 1970
  • #004 The Corps - "New York City"/"Window Room", 1970
  • #005 Freddie and the Freeloaders - "Last Night"/"Freddie's Blues", 1971
  • #007 Spice - "Broken Down In Tiny Pieces"/"Save It For A Rainy Day"
Around that same time, Arlie Neaville dropped the Dean Carter moniker and turned away from rock'n'roll to focus strictly on gospel music.