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I said I would ask him , if I bumped into him & whilst out walking Vincent our 6 month old Blue Whippet this evening , who got on rather well with Robert , I asked him how it came about that he sa
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Nice topic. I'd like to highlight the other side of the Listen 45: "Everybody's gonna say" more Mod than Northern Soul but a very cool number. Just check his likes during his Mod days!!
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A PIECE ON-LINE ABOUT HIM (Carl Dean) ... ... Dene travelled all over the country to all-nighters like Manchester’s Twisted Wheel and the Mojo in Sheffield, before taking up spinning himself. A rare s
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Nice topic. I'd like to highlight the other side of the Listen 45: "Everybody's gonna say" more Mod than Northern Soul but a very cool number. Just check his likes during his Mod days!!
Robert Plant went on to find great fame as a heavy rock god in the 70's (mostly known for his work in Led Zeppelin but then later solo stuff as well) but our scene knows him best for his CBS 45 B side "I've Got A Secret" (1967).
He's about my age (being born in 1948) and came from a well-to-do family in West Brom (Birmingham). He was intelligent but fell out of love with school work when he discovered blues music while a teenager. He didn't do well in his GCE exams, left school and drifted between 9 to 5 jobs. His main interest was in playing music & he was in groups from an early age. He hung out & played at many of the top Birmingham area blues venues (many being pubs like the Bulls Head - though he was underage). He built up a decent record collection, again mainly blues. He went to a live show @ the Gaumont Cinema in Wolverhampton and was much taken with Bo Diddley. He got a Lambretta & would use it to go over to the Old Hill Plaza. There he'd perform with groups or act as an MC / DJ. Mods & soul music had become in vogue & so he joined / formed a local mod group -- Listen. As it was mod groups that were getting the best bookings they steered that path and the group became known for doing covers of soul songs in their live act. They would do Robert's fave songs; Solomon Burke's "Everybody Needs Somebody To Love" and Sam & Dave's "Hold On I'm Coming". Noddy Holder (soon to be of Slade) would act as their Roadie, helping ferry their gear around. They got lots of local gigs + ones as far away as the Boston Gliderdrome in Lincolnshire (they'd back up visiting US singers during their acts too).
Listen were soon a big draw on the Birmingham club scene, getting packed house at venues such as the Midnight City Club in Digbeth. Next they landed a record deal with CBS. How this came about I'm unsure, but they were cut by a joint US / UK team -- Danny Kessler & Roger Bolton. Kessler was the Yank, having been head of A&R for Okeh Records and RCA's R&B division. He had co-founded Seville Records in 1959 and then sold his part of the company before joining Leiber & Stollers' production company. Later he returned to Seville Records to work in conjunction with Edward Kassner (of President Records). I guess it was via Kassner / President that he ended up in the UK cutting Robert & Listen (1966). The Listen 45 ( a cover of a Young Rascals track) sank without trace but more tracks were cut and a couple of 45's were put out under Robert's name -- the B side of the 2nd one being "I've Got A Secret".
"I've Got A Secret" was released by CBS in July 67 and was a cover of the Sharpees recording for One-derful from April 66. I guess "I've Got A Secret" was a song that Listen had also done in their live act. At that time the group were playing gigs at venues such as Le Metro in central Birmingham & Chateau Impney in Droitwich. . . . NOW (EVENTUALLY) TO MY QUESTION.
The Sharpees 45 was never released in the UK and due to this, it's unlikely that a UK publishing company was on board with the song and marketing it to UK record companies to get British acts to cut a version. So how come Robert Plant & Listen knew the song (he was performing as Robert Plant & Band of Joy by then).
WELL ... at the time they were frequenting / playing clubs like Le Metro and Chateau Impney (which boasted about having the 1st disco club in the midlands -- The Imp Cellar Club) a certain DJ was resident at both venues -- FARMER CARL DEAN.
Now Carl had a great collection of import soul 45's ahead of many other UK soulies BUT it's also said that Robert Plant had expanded his record collection to also include soul 45's .... so is it known if Robert had this 45, as when not performing in his group he'd DJ himself at various local venues. So he could have spun the 45 & witnessed the dance floor reaction ... OR ... he could have been in attendance when Carl Dean was DJing & heard him play it & again seen the crowd's reaction .... of course, it's also possible that their American producer Danny Kessler (who had worked for Okeh) could have been aware of this US soul hit and had brought the song to them himself. .. .. ... Yet another possibility is that a band that set the club alight at Le Metro near Snow Hill Rail Stn was the Spencer Davis Group -- they were very R&B biased & just maybe they did the song in their live act & that's how Robert first heard it.
. . . . Anyone know the story of how Robert Plant came to cut a version of the Sharpees song ?
Edited by Roburt