A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 6: The Ink Spots — “That’s When Your Heartaches Begin”
Episode Date: November 12, 2018Welcome to episode six of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs. Today we’re looking at the Ink Spots and “That’s When Your Heartaches Begin” (more…)...
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs
By Andre Hig
Episode 6
The Ink Spots
That's when your heartaches begin
Okay
So we've covered the Carnegie Hall concert of 1938 and 39
And the performers around them
Quite exhaustively now
We had a bit of a diversion into Western swing
but mostly we've stayed around there.
Now, we're still looking at New York
in the late 1930s and early 40s,
but we're moving away from those shows,
and we're going to look at the most popular vocal group of the era,
and possibly the most important vocal group of all time.
We've talked over the last few weeks
about almost all the major elements
of what we now think of as rock and roll,
the backbeat, the arrangements that focus on a rhythm section, the riffs, the electric guitar,
and the amplification generally. We've seen, quite clearly, how most of these elements were being
pulled together in different proportions and by different people in the late 1930s,
almost but not quite coalescing into what we now call rock and roll. There's one aspect,
which might be quite easy to overlook, though, which we've not quite.
covered yet, and that's the vocal group. Vocal harmonies have become much less prominent in rock
music in the last 40 years or so, and so today they might not be thought of as an essential
element of the genre, but vocal groups played a massive role in the 50s and 60s, and were a huge
element of the stew of genres that made up rock and roll when it started. And the vocal group
that had the most influence on the groups that became rock and roll,
was a band whose basis was not as a vocal group,
but in coffee-pot groups.
Coffee-pot groups were groups of poor black teenagers,
who performed on street corners
and tried to reproduce the sounds of the lush records they heard on the radio
using, well, using the equipment they had to hand.
For string parts, you'd play ukuleleys or guitars or banjos.
But for the horns, you'd play the kazoo.
But of course,
kazoos were not particularly pleasant instruments,
and they certainly didn't sound much like a saxophone or clarinet.
But it turned out you could make them sound a lot more impressive
than they otherwise would if you blew them into something that resonated.
Different sizes of container would resonate differently,
and so you could get a pretty fair approximation of a horn section
by having a teapot, a small coffee pot,
and a large coffee pot, and having three of your band members play kazoo's into them.
The large coffee pot, you could also pass around to the crowd afterward to collect the money in.
Though, as Deke Watson said about his coffee pot group, the percolating puppies,
all of us had to keep our eyes on the cat who passed the collection for the evening,
or else some of the money found its way from the pot to his pocket before dividing time arrived.
Other instrumental parts, of course, would be replaced with simple mouth noises.
You can make quite an impressive collection of instrumental sounds with just your voice if you try hard enough.
The ink spots formed out of people who'd started their careers in these groups.
Charlie Foukwe, and yes I have checked out and pronounced that,
was in one with Jerry Daniels before they became the imaginatively named duo Charlie and Jerry,
while Deke Watson was in another.
Those three, plus Hoppy Jones, performed in a variety of combinations under a variety of names.
before they settled on calling themselves King Jack and Jester, or sometimes King Jack and
Jester. In the early years of their career, they actually got themselves a radio show on a local
station, where they were a fill-in for another band, the Four Mills Brothers, and the Four Mills Brothers
were the people who influenced them the most. The Mills Brothers had actually started out not
so differently from the coffee-pot groups. They entered a talent contest, and John Mill's
had lost the kazoo he was going to play.
He cupped his hands in front of his mouth and imitated a trumpet,
and the brothers decided that they were going to start imitating brass instruments with their voices,
and they got good at it.
Listen to this.
There is no instrument on there, other than a single acoustic guitar, believe it or not.
They're imitating trumpets, a tuba, and a trombone with their voices,
and they'd listen to instrumental musicians and copy their voicings.
This is something that a lot of vocal groups have continued to do,
but no one has done it better than the Mills Brothers.
The Mills Brothers became massively successful,
and from 1930 through 1939,
they were far and away the biggest black act in the US,
making multiple appearances on Bing Crosby's radio show,
appearing in films and touring the world.
It was the touring the world,
that caused their eventual downfall.
They went to play the UK in 1939
and discovered that with World War II imminent,
the only ship away from the UK they could get at the end of their tour
was one that went to Australia.
Between that massive transport disruption
and then the further disruption caused by the war itself,
it took them two years to get back into the US,
by which time their popularity had faded somewhat,
although they went on to have a massive hit with paper moon,
when they got back. Their career was far from over. They carried on having occasional hits into the
late 60s and carried on performing together into the late 80s, and the last surviving Mill's brother
carried on performing until his death in 1999, with one of his sons, who carries on the family band to this
day. But they'd lost their place as the top of the entertainment tree, and they'd lost it to people who'd been
imitating them, to the band we last heard of performing as King Jack and Jester's.
By the mid-1930s, those four men were in New York and performing as the Rift Brothers,
but not getting very far. They were doing a mix of Mills Brothers-inspired stuff and more jive music,
and were earning decent money, but not yet massive successes. In his autobiography,
Deke Watson talks about how the Rift Brothers decided to change their name.
name. There were too many brother and cousin acts for the Rift Brothers to stand out, and the band
eventually ended up in their booking agent's office, arguing for hours over what name they should
choose and getting nowhere. Finally, as their agent toyed with a pen, a few drops of ink fell out.
I'll read the next bit from Watson's book directly. To me, it seemed like inspiration.
That's it, I shouted. How about calling us the ink spots? The boys really yelled this time.
"'There you go again, Deke,' Charlie exclaimed.
"'That's right,' agreed Hoppy.
"'Always wanting us to be something coloured.
"'Black dots, ink spots, next thing you know he'll be wanting us to call ourselves the old Black Joe's.'
They all talked at once.
"'Man, you know ain't nobody wants to be no ink spot.'
Now, Watson in his book does seem to take credit for absolutely every good idea anyone involved in the band had.
and for other things which had nothing to do with them, like writing Yefeet Too Big,
which was written by Fred Fisher and Ada Banson, he also makes up some quite outrageous lies.
Like that this original line-up of the ink spot played at the coronation of King Edward VIII.
Anyone who knows anything about interwar British history will know why that is impossible.
But this does have the ring of truth about it.
When he was in the percolating puppies, Watson used to work under the name.
for Dice Rastus, and many early reviews of the ink spot criticized him for eye-rolling, hand-waving,
and other minstrelie behaviours, which many black reviewers of the time considered brought black people
into disrepute. It's entirely possible that his bandmates would be irritated by his emphasis
on their race. That said, I'm not going to criticise Watson for this, or repeat some of the insulting
names he was called by other black people. Everyone has a different response to the experience of
oppression, and I'm not, as a white man, going to sit here and moralise or pontificate about how
black people should have behaved in the 1930s. A lot of much better artists than Deke Watson
did a lot more to play along with those stereotypes. Either way, and whatever they thought about it,
Charlie Fouque, Deke Watson, Jerry Daniels, and Hoppy Jones became the Ink Spots.
And that was the name under which their group would eventually become even more famous than the Mills Brothers.
But there was a problem.
Jerry Daniels, their main jive singer, was getting seriously ill from the stress of the band's performing schedule,
and eventually ended up hospitalized.
He couldn't continue touring with them, and so for a little while, the four ink spots,
were down to three. They had to change, and in changing their line-up, they became the band that would
change music. In 1936, Bill Kenny, a 21-year-old high tenor singer, won an amateur night contest
at the Savoy Ballroom. Mo Gale, the Inkspot's manager, was the co-owner of the Savoy,
and Charles Buchanan, the club's manager, knew his boss's band wanted a new singer and suggested
Kenny. Kenny was, by any standards, an extraordinary singer, and his vocals would become the
defining characteristic of the Inkspot's records from that point on. When you think of the Inkspots,
it's Kenny's voice you think of, or, at least, it's Kenny and Hoppy Jones. Because as well as
being an utterly astonishing singer, Bill Kenny was an inspired arranger, and he came up with an idea
that changed the whole style and sound of the InkSpot's music,
and would later, indirectly, change all of popular music.
The idea he came up with was called Top and Bottom.
Note that Deke Watson also claimed credit for this idea in his autobiography,
but the story, as he tells it there, is inconsistent with the known facts.
So I'm happy to believe the consensus view that it was Kenny.
Up until Bill Kenny joined the band,
the ink spots had been a jive band,
performing songs in the style of Cab Calloway or Fats Waller.
They were performing up-tempo comedy numbers,
and they were doing it very well indeed.
No meat on my bones, no sign of a pot.
I looked in the mirror and I think I'm hot.
I've been to the tennis and let my molo's whizzen.
All boys, but my gal won't listen.
You know what, you call your feet to be, mad at you called the band.
They continued doing the same kind of thing for a while,
still concentrating on up-tempo numbers,
as you can hear in their 1937 recording of Swing High, Swing Low.
When someone complains that they're lonely and blue,
baby dudes get by the baby dudes get,
so baby dudes get, lally-eye,
Make campaign can do more than anything for you, baby, it'll carry you through.
Swing high, swing low.
Swing to and fro.
Not fair, not slow.
And if you think you can't swing high, swing low.
Sometimes in those performances, Hoppy Jones would speak single line or two in his
bass voice, but it was mostly fairly straightforward vocal group singing. They were still basically
doing the Mills Brothers sound, and that was fine, because the Mills Brothers were, after all,
the most popular black vocal group ever up to that point. But if they were going to be really
big, they needed their own sound, and Bill Kenny came up with it. He refined the idea of Hoppe's
spoken vocals and came up with a hit formula, which they would use over and over, and
over again. They first did it in the studio with their massive hit if I didn't care. But the one
we're going to look at is their 1941 record. That's when your heart takes begin. They started
doing ballads, usually introduced by an acoustic guitar playing what would become a familiar figure.
This one. We then get the whole song sung through by Bill Kenny with the other singing backing vocals.
Find your sweetheart in the arms of a friend.
That's when your heart aches be due.
When dreams of a lifetime must come to an end.
That's when your heart aches.
Candy would join in with the backing vocals.
as Hoppy Jones repeated the whole song,
speak singing it in his deep bass voice.
When you find your sweetheart in the arms of your best friend,
brother, that's when all your heart aches begin.
When dreams of a lifetime must all come to an end.
That's when your heart aches begin.
And then finally, there'd be a final line with Caddy sinking lead again.
When I say this was a formula, I mean it really was a formula.
They'd found a sound, and they were going to absolutely stick with it.
To give you an example of what I mean, here's the intro to We3, My Echo, My Shadow and Me.
Now here's the intro to I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire.
And here's the intro to To Each His Own.
To Whispering Grass.
I could go on.
If you don't believe that those are different songs, incidentally,
check out the Mix Cloud with the full versions of all these songs on.
This was such a well-known formula for them
that the Glenn Miller band did a dead-on parody of it.
If I didn't know
why the roses grow
bumoomboom boom boom boom
you listen here to me honey child if i didn't know
all of them they're little things i'm supposed to know
then i wouldn't be one of the inkspots
they didn't know
all those songs i just played the intros of
they all went top ten and two of them went to
number one. This was a formula that absolutely, undoubtedly, worked. And when I say number one,
or top ten, I don't mean on the R&B charts, I mean number one on the pop charts. They did
sometimes deviate from the formula slightly, and when they did, they didn't have hits that were
quite so big. The public knew what it liked, and what it liked was a guitar going,
dun dun dun dun dun then bill canny singing a song in a high voice then hoppy jones saying the same words that bill kenny had just sung in a much lower voice and the ink spots were happy to give that to them that may sound like i'm being dismissive of the ink spot's music i'm not i absolutely love it
one of the great things about popular music before about 1970 is it had a lot of space for people who could do one thing really really
and who just did their one thing. Dwayne Eddy, Bo Diddley, John Lee Hooker, all just kept making
basically the same record over and over, and it was a great record, so why not? The Inkspots
sold tens of millions of records over the decade or so when they were at their peak,
roughly from 1939 when they started making top and bottom records until the late 40s. Their manager,
Mo Gale was also the manager of most of the bands who played the Savoy, and so could put on
package tours, combining, say, Ella Fitzgerald and the Inkspots, and Lucky Millinder's band,
all of whom often played on the same bills together. This also meant that, for example,
when Deke Watson took ill with pneumonia in 1943, Trevor Bacon from Millinder's band,
could fill in for him. Or when the Inkspots needed a new pianist to back them,
in 1942. Bill Doggett, who had been in Millinder's band, was easily available. But Gale was taking
the majority of the money. Gale took 60%, while the ink spots got the other 40 between them, split four ways.
But 40% of multiple millions of 1940s dollars is still a lot of money. And with a lot of money
comes the kind of problems you only get when you've got a big pile of money and think you could
get a bigger pile of money if you didn't have to share it. The InkSpot's period in the spotlight
was eventually brought to an end by personality conflicts, line-up changes, legal squabbles and deaths.
Four years after their career took off, in 1942, Charlie Foukwe was drafted, and that began a
whole series of line-up shifts, as replacements were brought in to cover his part for the three years
he was away. But then, two years later, in 1944, everything started falling apart.
Deke Watson and Bill Kenny never got on very well. Watson thought of himself as the leader,
on the grounds that he was the one who'd put the band together, named it, and been the on-stage
leader until Kenny came along. Meanwhile, Kenny thought of himself as the leader, on account
of being the lead singer and arranger. Hoppy Jones was the piece.
between the two of them. He'd worked with Watson for years before Kenny came along,
but he also had an assured place in the band because of his spoken bits, so he took it on himself
to keep the peace. But Hoppy Jones was growing ill, and started missing more and more dates
because of what turned out to be a series of brain hemorrhages. Meanwhile, Mo Gale allegedly
gave Bill Kenny a pay rise, but not Watson or Jones. Deek Watson quit the band as a result of
and went off to form his own ink spots.
Kenny and Hoppy Jones carried on for a month,
but then, tragically, Hoppy Jones collapsed on stage and died.
After this, Deek Watson tried to rejoin the band,
but Kenny wouldn't let him.
The result was a complicated four-way legal battle.
Deke Watson wanted the right to rejoin the band,
or failing that to form his own ink spots.
Bill Kenny wanted to continue touring with his current ink spots,
line up. Charlie Fouquet wanted to make sure that once the war was over, he was allowed back into the
band. Unlike Watson, he hadn't quit, but he was worried that with Jones and Watson out,
Kenny would see no reason to let him back in. And Mo Gale wanted to be able to continue taking
60% of what any of them was making. There was a whole flurry of lawsuits and countersuits. In the end,
Bill Kenny more or less won. The courts ruled that no club could book an act called the
ink spots, which didn't have Bill Kenny in it, but also that Deke Watson and Charlie Fouquet
continued to have a financial interest in the band, that Mo Gale was still everyone's manager,
and that Charlie Fouquet would be paid a regular salary as an ink spot while he was in the army.
The only real loser was Deke Watson. He continued to get some money for his share of the inkspot's
name, although I've seen some claims that Bill Kenny bought him out totally. But he wasn't
allowed to tour as the ink spots, or to rejoin the band he'd founded. Fouquay came back,
and for a few years a new lineup of Bill Kenny and his brother Herb, Fouquay and Billy Bowen,
toured and recorded. Deek Watson, meanwhile, had been performing with his own ink spots before
the lawsuits, but once they were settled and not in his favour, he said he was going to form a
new vocal group based on a completely new idea. This completely new idea was to have a
have a vocal group made up of four people, which would start their songs off with a guitar going,
dun dun dun, have a bloke sing the song in a high tenor, then have someone recite the same song
lyrics, then finish the song off with the high tenor again, and called the brown dots.
The brown dots actually made a record that would itself go on to be hugely influential.
I Love You for Sentimental Reasons, written by two of their members.
I hope you do believe, I'll give you my heart.
Give your love and say we'll never part.
That's been covered by almost everyone who ever sang a ballad.
From Nat King Cole to Ella Fitzgerald to Sam Cork, to the righteous brothers, to Rod Stewart.
It looked like Deke Watson had found himself a second great band to be with.
But then the other band members realized that it was hard to get on with Dick Watson,
and left to form their own band without him.
The four tunes, their new name,
would have several big hits in the 50s, without Watson.
Meanwhile, back in the ink spots,
Charlie Fouqueh returned for a while,
but in 1952 he and Bill Kenny decided to part ways.
The lawsuit from eight years earlier
had said that both of them had an equal share in the band name,
but had also said that only bands with Bill Kenney in
could legally be presented as the ink spots.
Rather than reopen that can of worms, they eventually came to an agreement that Kenny and his band could carry on calling themselves the ink spots, and Fu Kui would tour as Charlie Fu Kui's new ink spots, except that Fu Kui soon ended up breaking this agreement, and just touring and recording as the ink spots.
He even got Deke Watson back into his band for a while.
There's one recording of that version of the band, Jimmy Holmes, Charlie Fu Kui, Deek Watson, and Harold Jackson.
Live at the Apollo, before Watson was kicked out again.
As you can hear, it sort of sounds like the ink spot, but not really.
Meanwhile, Bill Kenny was still making records as the ink spot, which still sounded like
the old ink spots, minus Hoppy's bass vocal.
I need your love so badly, I love you all so madly, but I don't stand a ghost of a chance with you.
So there was one version of the ink spots touring with two original members, and another
with no original members but with the bloke who sung lead on all their hits, and had
the memorable voice that everyone wanted to hear when they heard the ink spots. That wasn't a
situation that was sustainable, so they went to court again. And most people would have expected the
court to make the same ruling it had before, that they owned the band name equally, but that Bill
Kenny was the only one who could tour as the ink spots. Instead, the ruling was one that no one
had expected, and that no one wanted. You see, it turns out that the ink spots weren't a corporation,
they were a partnership, and the judge ruled that when Hoppy Jones had died, ten years earlier,
that partnership had been dissolved. Since then, there had been no legitimate group called the
Inkspot, and no one owned the name. Neither the surviving original members of the band,
nor the man whose arrangement ideas and lead vocals had brought the band their success,
had any claim over it. Anyone at all could go out and call themselves the Inkspots and go on
and there was nothing anyone could do about it.
And they did.
Every surviving member of the band,
not just the three surviving members of the classic lineup,
but anyone who had filled in in a later version of the band on guitar or what have you,
went out on tour as the ink spots.
At one point, there were up to 40 different ink spots groups touring,
and many of them were recording too.
Usually, at first, these bands would have some claim to authenticity,
having at least one person who'd been in a proper version of the ink spots.
And indeed a few times in the 50s and 60s,
Fouquet and Watson would get together again and tore us ink spots,
in between bouts of suing each other.
But more and more, there'd just be any group of four black men,
so long as you could get one old enough
that he might plausibly have been in the band with Bill Kenny at some point.
The last actual ink spots member, Huey Long,
who had been one of the temporary replacements for Charlie.
Fouquet in 1945 for nine months, died aged 106 in 2009. The last Inkspots gig I've been able
to find details for took place in 2013. But the Inkspot's career ending in legal infighting,
arguments over credit and disputes over the band name isn't the only way in which they were a precursor to rock
music. Over the next few weeks we'll hear how, along with the jump band sound that was coming to
dominate rhythm and blues, a new wave of InkSpot's inspired vocal groups ended up shaping
the new music. And how? In 1953, shortly after the Inkspot's final split, a young man walked
into a recording studio in Memphis that let you make your own single copy records. He wanted to make
a record of himself singing as a gift for his mother, and he chose one of his favorite songs. That's
when your heartaches begin, as one of the two tracks he would record. But we'll get to Elvis Presley
in a few episodes time.
A history of rock music and 500 songs
is written produced and performed by Andrew Hickey.
Visit 500Songs.com,
that's 50000 the numbers,
Songs.com, to see transcriptions,
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including a mixed cloud stream
of all songs excerpted in this episode.
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