A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 102: “Twist and Shout” by the Isley Brothers
Episode Date: October 26, 2020Episode one hundred and two of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs looks at “Twist and Shout” by the Isley Brothers, and the early career of Bert Berns. Click the full post to re...ad liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a ten-minute bonus episode available, on “How Do You Do It?” by Gerry and the Pacemakers. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by doing a first-pass edit, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt’s irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ (more…)
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs by Andrew Huck.
Episode 102, Twist and Shout by the Isley Brothers.
Today, we're going to look at one of the great brill-building songwriters,
and at a song he wrote, which became a classic both of soul and of rock music.
We're going to look at how a novelty Latin song based around a dance craze,
was first taken up by one of the great sole groups of the 60s,
and then reworked by the biggest British rock band of all time.
We're going to look at Twist and Shout by the Isley Brothers.
When we left the Isley Brothers, they had just signed to Atlantic
and released several singles with Libre and Stoller,
records like Standing on the Dance Floor,
there were excellent R&B records, but which didn't sell.
In 1962, they were dropped by Atlantic and moved on to Wond Records,
the third label started by Florence Greenberg, who had already started tiara and scepter.
As with those labels, Luther Dixon was in charge of the music,
and he produced their first single on the label,
a relatively catchy dance song called The Snake, which didn't catch on commercially.
While The Snake didn't sell, the Isley brothers clearly
had some commercial potential, and indeed their earlier hit, Shout, had just re-charted,
after Joey D. and the Starlighters had a hit with a cover version of it. All that was needed
was the right song, and they could be as big as Luther Dixon's other group, the Cherelles,
and Dixon had just the song for them, a song co-written by Bert Baccarac, and sung on the demo
by a young singer called Dion Warwick. Unfortunately, they spent almost all the session trying
and failing to get the song down.
They just couldn't make it work,
and eventually they gave up on it,
and Baccarac produced the song for Jerry Butler,
the former lead singer of the Impressions,
who had a top 20 hit with it.
So they were stuck without a song to record,
and then Dixon's assistant on the session,
Bert Burns, suggested that they record one of his songs,
one that had been a flop for another group the previous year.
The story of Twist and Shout actually starts with a group called The Five Pearls, who made their first record in 1954.
The Five Pearls recorded under various different names and in various different combinations for several different mid-sized record labels like Aladdin throughout the 1950s.
but without much success.
The closest they came was when one of the members,
Dave Baby Cortez, went solo and had a hit
with the Happy Organ in 1959.
But in 1960, two members of the Pearls,
who used different names at different points of their career,
but at this point were calling themselves
Derek Ray and Guy Howard,
signed to Atlantic as a new duo called The Top Notes.
Their first single under this name,
a wonderful time, did no better than any of their other records had.
But by their third single, they were being produced by a new staff producer, Phil Spector,
who had started taking on production jobs that Libre and Stoller weren't interested in doing themselves,
like a remake of the old folk song Carina Carina,
which had been an R&B hit for Big Joe Turner,
and which Spector produced for the country singer Ray Peterson.
But soon after that, Spector had broken with Libre and Stoller,
Spector was given the opportunity to co-write songs for the new Elvis film, Blue Hawaii,
but he was signed to a publishing contract with Libre and Stoller's company Trio Music,
and they told Hill and Range that he could only do the songs if Trio got after publishing,
which Hill and Range refused.
There was apparently some talk of them going ahead anyway,
but Hill and Range were scared of Trio's lawyer, one of the best in the entertainment industry.
This wouldn't be the last time that Phil Spector and Lee Eastman
ended up on the opposite sides of a disagreement.
Shortly after that, Spector's contract mysteriously went missing from Trio's office.
Someone remembered that Spector happened to have a key to that office.
But by this point, Spector had co-written or co-produced a fair few hits,
and so he was taken on by Atlantic on his own merits.
And so he and Jerry Wexler co-produced singles for the top notes,
with arrangements by Teddy Randarzo,
who we last heard of singing with accordion accompaniment,
in that the girl can't help it.
The first of these top-note singles, Hearts of Stone,
was an obvious attempt at a ray Charles sound alike,
with bits directly lifted both from What Did I Say,
and Charles' hit, Sticks and Stones.
But the next top-notes release was the song
that would make them at least a footnote in music history.
The writing credit on it was Bert Russell and Phil Medley,
and while Medley would have little impact on the music world otherwise,
the songwriter credited as Bert Russell,
is worth us looking at. His actual name was Bertrand Russell Burns. He had been named after the
famous philosopher, and he was a man on a mission. He was already 31, and he knew he didn't
have long to live. He'd had rheumatic fever as a child, and it had given him an incurable heart
condition. He had no idea how long he had, but he knew he wasn't going to live to a ripe old age,
and he'd wasted his twenties already. He'd tried various ways to get into showbiz, and he'd tried various ways
to get into showbiz with no success.
He'd tried a comedy double act,
and at one point had moved to Cuba,
where he'd tried to buy a nightclub
but backed out when he realised it was actually a brothel.
On his return to the US,
he'd started working as a songwriter in the Brill Building.
In the late 50s, he worked for a while
with the rockabilly singer, Ursul Hickey,
no relation to me,
who had a minor hit with Bluebirds Over the Mountain.
Burns was proud just to know Hickey, though,
because Bluebirds Over the Mountain had been covered by Richie Valens,
and La Bamba was Burns' favourite record,
one he would turn to for inspiration throughout his career.
He loved Latin music generally.
It had been one of the reasons he'd moved to Cuba,
but that song in particular was endlessly fascinating to him.
He'd written and produced a handful of recordings in the early 50s
before his Cuba trip,
but it was on his return that he started to be properly productive.
He'd started producing novelty records,
with a friend called Bill Giant, like a song based on the Gettysburg Address.
Or a solo record about the Alamo. At the time, Byrne seemed to think that songs about American history were going to be the next big thing.
cannon burst that took his men of fame.
Twelve long days and twelve long nights the battle blazed away.
The fire and stop, then silence came upon the 13th day.
The Mexican army gathered for the final push ahead.
Wahelia was their song of death, their battle flag was red.
He'd co-written a song called A Little Bird Told Me with Ersel Hickey,
not the same as the song of the same name we talked about a year or so ago.
and it was recorded by Laverne Baker.
And he and Medley co-wrote Push Push for Austin Taylor.
But he was still basically a nobody in the music industry in 1961.
But Jerry Wexler had produced that Laverne Baker record of A Little Bird Told Me,
and he liked Burns,
and so he accepted a Burns and Medley co-write for the next top note session.
The song in question had started out as one called Shake It Up Baby,
based very firmly around the chords and melody of La Bamba,
but reimagined with the Afro-Cuban rhythms that Burns loved so much,
and then further reworked to reference the twist dance craze.
Burns was sure it was a hit.
It was as catchy as anything he could write and full of hooks.
Burns was allowed into the studio to watch the recording,
which was produced by Wexel and Spectre,
but he wasn't allowed to get involved,
and he watched with horror as Spector flattened the rhythm
and totally rewrote the middle section.
Spector also added him backing vocals
based on the recent hit,
Handyman, a comma-coma vocal line
that didn't really fit the song.
The result was actually a quite a decent record,
but despite being performed by all the usual
Atlantic session players like King Curtis
and having the cookies do their usual sterling job on backing vocals,
twist and shout by the top notes was a massive flop,
and Burns could tell it would be even during the session.
The top notes soon split up, making no real further mark on the industry.
When Guy Howard died in 1977, he had reverted to his original name, Howard Guyton,
and the top notes were so obscure that his obituaries focused on his time in one of the later touring versions of the platters.
Burns was furious at the way that Spector had wrecked his song,
and decided that he was going to have to start producing his own songs, so they couldn't be messed up.
But that was put on the back burner for a while,
as he started having success.
His first chart success as a songwriter
was with a song he wrote for a minor group called the Jarmels.
By this time, the drifters were having a lot of success
with their use of the same Latin and Caribbean rhythms
that Burns liked,
and so he wrote a little bit of soap in the drifter's style,
and it made the top 20.
He also started making non-novelty records of his own.
Luther Dixon at Wond Records heard one of Burns' demos
and decided he should be singing, not just writing songs.
Burns was signed to Wond Records as a solo artist,
under the name Russell Bird,
and his first single for the label was produced by Dixon.
The song itself is structurally a bit of a mess.
Burns seems to have put together several hooks,
including some from other songs,
but not thought properly about how to link them together,
and so it meanders a bit,
but you can definitely see a family resemblance to twist and shout in the melody,
and in Carol King's string arrangement.
That made the top 50,
and got Burns a spot on American bandstand,
but it was still not the breakout success that Burns needed.
While Burns had been annoyed at Spector for the way he'd messed up Twist and Shout,
he clearly wasn't so upset with him that they couldn't work together,
because the second Russell Bird session, another Drifter's knock-off, was produced by Specter.
But Burns was still looking to produce his own material.
He got the chance when Jerry Wexer called him up.
Atlantic were having problems.
While they had big vocal groups, like the Drifters and the Coasters,
they'd just lost their two biggest male solo vocalists.
as Bobby Darren and Ray Charles had moved on to other labels.
They had recently signed a gospel singer called Solomon Burke,
and he'd had a minor hit with a version of an old country song,
just out of reach.
Burke was the closest thing to a male solo star they now had,
and clearly a major talent,
but he was also a very opinionated person,
and not easy to get on with.
His grandmother had had a dream 12 years before he was born,
in which she believed God had told her of her future grandson's importance.
She'd founded a church, Solomon's Temple, the House of God for All People,
in anticipation of his birth,
and he'd started preaching there from the age of seven as the church's spiritual leader.
Rather unsurprisingly, he had rather a large ego,
and that ego wasn't made any smaller by the fact that he was clearly a very talented sin.
singer. His strong opinions included things like how his music was to be marketed. He was fine with
singing pop songs rather than the gospel music he'd started out in, as he needed the money. He had
eight kids, and as well as being a singer and priest, he was also a mortician, and had a side job
shoveling snow for $4 an hour. But he wasn't keen on being marketed as rhythm and blues. Rhythm and blues
was dirty music, not respectable. His music needed to be.
be called something else. After some discussion with Atlantic, everyone agreed on a new label
that would be acceptable to his church, one that had previously been applied to a type of mostly
instrumental jazz influenced by black gospel music, but from this point on, would be applied
almost exclusively to black gospel-influenced pop music in the lineage of Ray Charles and Clyde McFatter.
Burke was not singing rhythm and blues, but soul music. Waxler had produced
Burke's first sessions, but he always thought he worked better when he had a co-producer,
and he liked a song Burns had written, Cry to Me, another of his drifters sounder likes.
So he asked Burns into the studio to produce Burke singing that song. The two didn't get on very
well at first. Burke's original comment on meeting Burns was, Who is this Paddy Mother?
Except he included the expletive that my general audience content rating prevents me from saying
there. But it's hard to argue with the results, one of the great soul records
of all time.
That made the top five on the R&B chart,
and started a run of hits for Burke,
whose records would continue to be produced
by the team of Burns and Wexler
for the next several years.
After this initial production success,
Burns started producing many other records,
most of them are again unsuccessful,
like a cheap twist album to cash in
on the resurgent twist craze.
and he was still working with Wond Records,
which is what led to him being invited to assist Dixon
with the Isley Brothers' session for Make It Easy on Yourself.
When they couldn't get a take done for that track,
Byrne suggested that they make an attempt at Twist and Shout,
which he still thought had the potential to be a hit,
and which would be perfectly suited to the Isley Brothers.
After all, their one hit was Shout,
so Twist and Shout would be the perfect way for them to get some relevance.
The brothers hated the song, and they didn't want to record any twist material at all.
Apparently they were so vehemently against recording the song,
that furniture got smashed in the argument over it.
But Luther Dixon insisted that they do it,
and so they reluctantly recorded Twist and Shout,
and did it the way Bert Burns had originally envisioned it,
Latin feel and all.
It's a testament to Ronald Isley's talent, in particular,
that he sounds utterly committed on the record.
despite it being something he had no wish to take part in at all.
The record made the top 20 on the pop chart and number two in R&B,
becoming the eyes these first real mainstream hit.
It might even have done better, but for an unfortunate coincidence.
Do You Love Me by The Contours, a song written by Barry Gordy,
was released on one of the Moton labels a couple of weeks later,
and had a very similar rising vocal hook.
Do You Love Me was a bigger hit,
making number three in the pop charts and number one R&B,
but it's hard not to think that the two records being so similar
must have eaten into the market for both records.
But either way, Twist and Shout was a proper big hit for the Isleys,
and one that established them as real stars,
and Burns became their regular producer for a while.
Unfortunately, both they and Burns floundered about what to do for a follow-up.
The first attempt was one of those strange records
that tries to mash up bits of as many recent hits as possible,
and seems to have been inspired by Janandine's then recent hit
with a revival of the 1946 song, Linda.
That song was, coincidentally,
written about the daughter of Lee Eastman,
the lawyer we mentioned earlier.
Twisting with Linda, the brother's response,
took the character from that song
and added the melody to the recent novelty hit,
Hully Gully.
Lyrical references to Twist and Shout
and Chubby Checkers' Twist hits,
And in the tag, Ronald Isley sings bits of shout,
Don't You Just Know It, Duke of Earl, and for some reason, I'm Popeye the Sailor Man.
That only made the lower reaches of the charts.
Their next single was Nobody But Me, which didn't make the Hot 100,
but would later be covered by the human beings, making the top ten in their version in 1968.
With Burns still producing, the Isleys moved over to United Artists' Remy.
but within a year of Twist and Shout, they were reduced to remaking it as Surf and Shout,
with lyrics referencing another Janandine hit, Surf City. Oddly, while they were doing this,
Burns was producing them on much more interesting material for album tracks, but for some reason,
even as Burns was also by now producing regular hits for Solomon Burke, Benny King and The Drifters,
the Isleys were stuck trying to jump on whatever the latest bandwagon was,
in an attempt at commercial success.
Even when they were writing songs that would become hits,
they were having no success.
The last of the songs that Burns produced for them
was another Isley's original,
Who's That Lady?
That would become one of the group's biggest hits,
but not until they remade it nine years later.
It was only two years since Twist and Shout.
but the Isley brothers were commercially dead.
But the successive Twist and Shout,
and their songwriting royalties from Shout,
gave them the financial cushion to move to comparatively better surroundings
and to start their own record label.
They moved to Teaneck, New Jersey,
and named their new label Teaneck in its honour.
They also had one of the best live bands in the US at the time,
and the first single on Teaneck,
Testify, produced by the brothers themselves,
highlighted their new guitar player, Jimmy James.
But even while he was employed by the Aisle's,
Jimmy James was playing on other records that were doing better,
like Don Covey's big hit, Mercy Mercy, and he soon left the Aisle's,
going on first to tour with a minor soul artist supporting Sam Cuck and Jackie Wilson,
and then to join Little Richard's band,
playing on Richard's classic soul ballad,
I don't know what you've got, but it's got me,
also written by Don Covey.
We'll be picking up the story of Jimmy James in a couple of months' time,
by which point he will have reverted to his birth name
and started performing as Jimmy Hendricks.
But for the moment, this is where we leave Hendricks and the Isley brothers,
but they will both, of course, be turning up again in the story.
But of course, that isn't all there is to say about Twist and Shout,
because the most famous version of the song isn't the Isleys.
While the Beatles' first single had been only a minor hit,
their second, Please Please Me, went to number one or two in the UK charts,
depending on which chart you look at.
And they quickly recorded a follow-up album,
cutting ten songs in one day to add to their singles to make a 14-track album.
Most of the songs they performed that day
were cover versions that were part of their live act,
versions of songs by Arthur Alexander, the Cookies and the Shirelles,
among others. John Lennon had a bad cold that day, and so they saved the band's live showstopper
till last, because they knew that it would tear his throat up. Their version of Twist and Shout was
only recorded in one take. Laren's voice didn't hold up enough for a second, but it is an undoubted
highlight of the album. Suddenly, Bert Burns had a whole new market to work in, and so when we
next look at Bert Burns, he will be working with British beat groups and starting some of the
longest lasting careers in British R&B.
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