Eugene Church (January 22, 1938 – April 3, 1993) was an American R&B singer.
Eugene R. Church was born in St. Louis, but was raised in
Los Angeles, where his father was pastor at a church at 5th Avenue and West
Adams. Around 1955, Eugene became friends with Jesse Belvin, who already had
released several records on different
labels. Jesse showed him the finer points
of vocal harmony and songwriting. The duo first recorded together in 1956,
under the name The Cliques ("Girl In My Dreams", Modern 987).
Church & Belvin |
After a solo single for Specialty in 1957 ("Open Up
Your Heart"), Church sang background vocals on such Belvin recordings as
"Beware" and "Deacon Dan Tucker". The latter song was the
inspiration for Eugene's biggest hit, "Pretty Girls Everywhere",
which made the Top 40 (# 36) in 1959. Church claims that the late Tommy
"Buster" Williams, another member of Jesse Belvin's inner circle,
inspired the song when they were out driving around in Church's car.
Church with The Turks AKA The Fellows |
The house band for Class Records was the Googie Rene Combo,
which included the illustrious trio of Plas Johnson (tenor sax), Rene Hall
(guitar) and Earl Palmer (drums). Eugene's follow-up Class single, "Miami"/"I
Ain't Going For That" also did well (# 14 R&B, # 67 pop) and saw a UK
release on London HL 8940, after London
had inexplicably withheld "Pretty Girls Everywhere" from the UK public. After two more singles for Class and one for Rendezvous (a label also co-owned by Leon Rene), Church moved to the King label in 1961.
had inexplicably withheld "Pretty Girls Everywhere" from the UK public. After two more singles for Class and one for Rendezvous (a label also co-owned by Leon Rene), Church moved to the King label in 1961.
The first King single, "Mind Your Own Business"
(still with involvement from Messrs Hall, Johnson and Palmer) peaked at # 19 on
the R&B charts, but it was to be Eugene's last chart entry. Four further
King singles followed in quick succession, produced by Johnny Otis, but sales
were very limited.
By 1963, Church (who had relocated to Texas) was ready to
join the ministry. Over the next four years he sang nothing but gospel music.
In 1967 he recorded one last single ("Dollar Bill") for the World
Pacific label, before embarking on a study to become a beautician. Eugene
opened his own beauty parlour, from which he made much more money than he had
ever seen as a recording artist.
Church (left) in 1992 with Richard Berry
|
(Compiled and edited mainly from the liner notes of The Very Best Of Eugene Church by Stuart
Colman.)
For “The Very Best Of Eugene Church” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.upload.ee/files/9463942/Eugene_Church-VBO.rar.html
01 Pretty Girls Everywhere CHURCH, Eugene & THE FELLOWS
02 For The Rest Of My Life CHURCH, Eugene & THE FELLOWS
03 Miami
04 I Ain't Goin' For That
05 Without Soul
06 Jack Of All Trades
07 The Struttin' Kind
08 That's What's Happenin'
09 Good News
10 Polly
11 Mind Your Own Business
12 You Got The Right Idea
13 That's All I Want
14 Geneva
15 Light Of The Moon
16 I'm Your Taboo Man
17 Pretty Baby Won't You Come On Home
18 The Right Girl, The Right Time
19 Time Has Brought About A Change
20 Sixteen Tons
21 The Girl In My Dreams CLIQUES
22 I'm In Love With A Girl CLIQUES
23 I'll Mess You Up CLIQUES
24 Open Up Your Heart
25 Don't Stop Loving Me
26 Miami (take 1)
Incredibly, this is the very first album by Eugene Church, the epitome of cool West Coast R&B. We feature his four singles for the great Class label including the Hot 100 hits: 'Pretty Girls Everywhere' ('36 in 1958) and 'Miami' (#67 in 1959). Also the one single for Rendezvous and an unissued take of' 'Miami', all produced by Leon Rene. Included are Church's five King singles, which are almost unknown even though produced by Johnny Otis.
There was one R&B hit for King, 'Mind Your Own Business' (#19 in 1961). The compilation is rounded off by Church's earlier recordings for Specialty and Modern (as the Cliques duo with Jesse Belvin, including the #45 pop hit 'Girl In My Dreams' from 1956). Will appeal to the many fans of classic R&B, Rock'n'Roll and Doo Wop.
This compilation may have taken a long time in coming but it serves as a fitting tribute to a man who, whilst his time in the limelight was all too brief, gave us a great body of work.
A big thank you to The Rockin’ Bandit for original post.
Thank You!
ReplyDeletebig thank you - Aussie
ReplyDeleteOh boy, oh boyyy! I remember bopping to Pretty Girls like it was yesterday. All of us kids were crazy about his music but it's funny, we listened on the radio but not one of us had an album by him. I am SO happy to see this and can't wait to listen. In fact, think I'll put on my now dry rotted boppin' shoes. Thank you!
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