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风格
#芝加哥灵魂乐
地区
欧美

艺人介绍

by Andrew HamiltonThe Carltons — James Leon Diggs, Larry Bell, and Jerry Norris — from Washington, D.C., were Chess Records answer to the Impressions. A&R director Billy Davis was so enamored with Diggs songwriting skills that he signed them to a deal, even though Diggs was already contracted to Chess with Richard Dunbar as the Knight Brothers. They sounded totally different — the Knight Brothers sang emotionally gripping, down-home soul with heavy gospel overtones, while the Carltons breezy, soulful sounds were reminiscent of second-tier Impressions. Andy Macks early 1964 single on Chess, Later Than You Think b/w Do You Wanna Go, featured the Carltons. It flopped, but the Carltons issued their first single, Ooo Baby b/w Cant You Hear the Beat, in May 1964. Diggs shifted between both acts depending on who had something going on. Neither ever caught fire, so there was never a conflict. Hey Mr. Lonesome b/w Easy Livin (September 1964) was their most successful single, but it was a turntable hit: the units sold didnt equal the radio action. Chess issued the Carltons singles on their Argo subsidiary; the final one appeared the same month (October 1964) as the Knight Brothers first single, which was recorded in Chicago. Previous 45s were cut in D.C. and New York. Im a Man b/w Keep on Hoping is the only Carltons single that Diggs didnt write (besides Andy Macks — Shena De Mell and Sugar Pie DiSanto co-wrote both sides, with Billy Davis collaborating on the A-side). The single failed to do anything, and the Carltons resigned; ironically, the Knight Brothers Temptations Bout to Get Me, issued the same month as the Carltons swan single, was the duos biggest record. Diggs sang with the Starfires on two late-50s singles on Decca Records.