Artist |
Banks, Darrell |
|
Label |
Revilot |
|
Catalog |
RV 203 |
|
Year |
1967 |
|
Price |
$10.00 |
Titles |
Somebody (Somewhere) Needs You |
Baby What'cha You Got (For Me) |
Writer(s) |
Frank Wilson - Marc Gordon |
C. Hatcher - J. Barnes - W. Sanders |
Producer(s) |
Solid Hitbound Productions (Lebron Taylor) |
Solid Hitbound Productions (Lebron Taylor) |
Time |
2:35 |
2:38 |
Chart position |
# 55 (pop); # 34 (R&B) |
not applicable |
Condition |
VG |
VG |
Parent LP |
Darrell Banks Is Here! - ATCO SD 33-216 |
Comments |
This was Banks' second and final single for Lebron Taylor's Buffalo, New York-based Revilot Records. Ike and Tina Turner recorded it first (really Tina alone), but to my ears Banks' version is the better of the two. Hard to believe that a song this catchy didn't top the pop charts !!! It was also Banks' final chart entry. The flip side featured a tougher, R&B-ish sound, but was no less commercial. Interestingly while Banks never cut an LP for Revilot, he was subsequently picked up by Atlantic's ATCO subsidiary which included all four Revilot sides on his ATCO debut.
|
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Born Darrell
Eubanks in Mansfield, OH, (1938), the gospel-voiced soul singer stepped out
as Darrell Banks from the east side of Buffalo, NY, where he lived since a
toddler. He sang in church before going secular and wailing at local watering
holes. He befriended Doc
Murphy, a dentist whose nightclub the Revilot lounge was one of those
"holes." A scorching song written by fellow Buffalo resident Donnie
Elbert got Banks off and running, not in Buffalo, but further west in
Detroit, MI.
Banks hooked up with Lebron Taylor and Solid Hitbound Productions via some type
of license agreement with Doc Murphy; Lebron used the name of Murphy's Buffalo
nightspot (Revilot) for the label which debuted in 1966 with "Open the Door
to Your Heart" (whose legal name is "Baby Walk Right In"), the
tune Donnie
Elbert wrote for his Buffalo buddy. The recording took place when Elbert
was on the road. No problem there. But when it came out, only Banks was credited
as songwriter. A shocked Elbert
checked with Broadcast Music Incorporated (B.M.I.) thinking Revilot's secretary
inadvertently omitted his name, something that happens all the time; it's what's
on the contract that counts, a record label is not a legal document. Elbert
found the song clearance form submitted by Banks listed him as the sole writer
allotting him 100 percent of the writers' share of "Open the Door to Your
Heart" performance income. Elbert
eventually got the mess straight, while copies of the 45 rpm list only Banks'
name, newly issued CDs credits both Banks and Elbert.
Still a sore point for Elbert,
according to him, all Banks did was speed the tempo up a bit, for this he
attempted to take full credit and ended up with 50 percent of a soul classic.
The irony of this scenario is that Banks wasn't a songwriter, "Open the
Door to Your Heart" is the only song he ever wrote, which he really didn't.
Elbert,
however, has more than 125 songwriting credits logged with B.M.I. While the
legal battle ensued, the song scored an impressive number two R&B and number
27 pop showing in 1966, Banks' biggest ever.
Banks followed with Marc
Gordon and Frank
Wilson's "Somebody Somewhere Needs You" (a Motown song that wasn't
originally or ever recorded by a Motown artist). Ike
& Tina Turner first did the catchy romp on Loma Records (really just Tina,
Ike's
nowhere on the record). Banks' rendition charted at number 34 R&B and number
55 pop and provided chitlin' and the grits & gravy circuit work for the
singer; it was his last chart record. The Revilot deal somehow switched to
Atlantic Records' Atco division for two nonstarters: "Here Come the
Tears" b/w "I've Got That Feelin'" and "Angel Baby (Don't
Ever Leave Me)" b/w "Look into the Eyes of a Fool," both in 1967.
Banks never issued an album on Revilot to commensurate the success of the hit
single, but both Revilot singles were compiled on his 1967 Atco album Darrell
Banks Is Here, as well as, both sides of the Atco singles and nuggets
like "I'm Gonna Hang My Head and Cry" from the writing team of Rose
Marie McCoy, Donald
Bell, Cleveland
Horne (the
Fantastic Four), and Gene
Redd who worked with Kool
& the Gang on Delight Records. Atco switched him in-house to Cotillion
Records for a final release "I Wanna Go Home" written by Fred
Briggs (aka Coldwater
Stone) and Don
Davis, b/w "The Love of My Woman" in 1968. Revilot continued
issuing singles on artists like the Parliarment,
Rose
Batiste, J.
J. Barnes, and others without Doc
Murphy's involvement. Changing cooks again, Banks signed with Stax Records'
Volt division for two singles and an album issued in 1969. "I'm the One Who
Loves" followed by the two-sided gem "Beautiful Feeling" and
"No One Is Blinder (Than a Man in Love)" sold well but didn't create
any overtime at Stax's pressing plants. The
Dramatics later cut an equally stirring rendition of
"Beautiful..." for their Dramatically
Yours album.
Banks, an exciting entertainer, was often less than pleasant away from the
footlights. He was moody, quick tempered and kept a "don't tread on
me" Sonny Liston scowl on his face. Not the type of guy you approached with
"wass up." Stax Records rattled his nerves when they compiled a song
recorded by Steve
Mancha on the Rare
Stamps LP and credited it to him, which Banks considered an insult; both Mancha
and Banks recorded the song, somebody just mixed them up, easy to do, since both
singers, as well as J.
J. Barnes sounded similar (especially since all were produced by Don Davis
at the time). The original album featured just J.
J. Barnes and Steve
Mancha but a CD reissue added Banks' and his entire Stax LP Darrell
Is Here to Stay, which included Banks' Johnnie
Taylor sound alike "Don't Know What to Do," "Forgive
Me," and the Mancha
composition "I Could Never Hate Her."
Tragedy aborted Banks' recording output at seven singles and two albums. The man
considered by many as soul's finest voice was shot dead March 1970 in Detroit by
Aaron Bullock, an off duty policeman who was seeing Banks' woman (Marjorie
Bozeman). He was waiting when Bullock dropped Bozeman off after work; when Banks
grabbed her, Bullock intervened, Banks pulled a gun, and the officer reacted
with deadly force ending Banks' four turbulent years as a recording
artist/entertainer. Bozeman, a barmaid, allegedly was trying to leave Banks, who
was divorced and the father of two kids.
Diehards will want to cop J.
J. Barnes' The
Groovesville Masters for the duet featuring Barnes and Banks entitled
"Harder You Love." Goldmine Records released a compilation of Banks'
two albums and three unreleased tracks: "I Will Fear No Evil,"
"I'm Knocking at Your Door," and "The Harder You Love," in
1997 entitled The
Lost Soul which includes some unreleased tracks — check it out.