Sunday, 17 October 2021

Steve Gibson born 17 October 1914


Steve Gibson (October 17, 1914 – 1996) was a well known guitarist and bass singer and was the main force behind The Five Red Caps, a top R&B combo for decades. 

The Lynchburg, Virginia-born Gibson, who sang bass and played guitar, shifted in and out of various bands well into the '40s, was in the Four Toppers when they decided to change their name to the Five Red Caps in 1943. Producer Joe Davis recorded the band as much as was possible under the restrictions of the Second World War recording ban, even getting hit with violations for some of the sessions. 

In 1944, Gibson and the then-five other band members jumped to the Savoy label. This enterprising outfit managed to release more sides by the group then it actually ever recorded simply by distributing the tunes under more than one title. Gibson's moment of song title immortality is involved in the process, as one of these recordings came out first as "Nat's Boogie Woogie," and then was released as "Steve's Boogie Woogie." 

Gibson and his Red Caps had shifted from Mercury Records to RCA Victor in November of 1950 and would stay there for half a decade. Personnel was pretty fluid, though tenor David Patillo (who was there when the group formed in a decade earlier as The 4 Toppers) and baritone/pianist Romaine Brown, who came on board a little later, were still on hand. For the June 18, 1951 New York date that produced the driving Would I Mind (it was issued the following month) with the tall, lanky Gibson out front as well as a rip-roaring remake of their proto-rock and roll Boogie Woogie On A Saturday Night, the ranks were rounded out by Emmett Mathews who doubled on soprano sax. 

                    

Though The Red Caps' sound grew commercially passé on record, it was a different story live. Gibson's crew tore up East Coast and Vegas lounges year after year, playing packed houses in Wildwood, New Jersey (a 1955 promo photo shows Gibson, original tenor Jimmy Springs, and Patillo surrounded by a sizable crew including Treniers sidemen Henry Tucker Green on drums and Jimmy Johnson on electric bass, saxist Gene Redd, and another drummer: the young, white Bobby Gregg) 

The sound of the group evolved with the addition of vocalist Damita Jo. She married Gibson in 1954 and divorced him in 1958 but was committed to stay on with the group for performances through 1960. The Red Caps tried to stay current, moving to ABC-Paramount in 1956 and cutting Rock And Roll Stomp. Their cover of The Rays' '57 smash Silhouettes cracked the low end of the pop hit parade. 

Due to tax problems the group split into two factions in 1962. The one without Gibson dubbed themselves The Modern Red Caps and recorded for Smash, Swan, and several other labels. Gibson's Red Caps employed some intriguing female vocalists at '60s engagements featuring future Motown thrushes Tammi Terrell and Barbara Randolph and '50s Specialty label star Wynona Carr. By the end of the decade, both groups were defunct. Gibson’s Red Caps returned from the Far East (having also played in Thailand), they were supposed to open at Caesar's Palace, but there were some internal problems and the group never performed again. 

Around 1980, Steve Gibson was part of the "New Ink Spots". A promotional album (The Wonderful World of the New Ink Spots on Spot Records) listed Gibson as baritone, Lucius "Dusty" Brooks (formerly of the 4 Tones) as bass, Johnny Taylor as lead tenor, and LaRue "Rufus" McKay as second tenor. Old friend Henry Tucker Green was the drummer. 

Steve Gibson had a stroke and subsequently passed away, in Las Vegas, in March 1996. 

 (Edited from Discogs, Bear Family notes & Marv Goldberg’s notes) 

5 comments:

  1. For “STEVE GIBSON & THE RED CAPS
    - BOOGIE WOOGIE BALL - 1943-1955” Go Here:

    https://krakenfiles.com/view/vm6npNwOnw/file.html

    Disc 1

    1. MAMA PUT YOUR BRITCHES ON
    2. TUSCALOOSA
    3. GRAND CENTRAL STATION
    4. NO FISH TODAY
    5. JUST FOR YOU
    6. I'VE LEARNED A LESSON I'LL NEVER FORGET
    7. BOOGIE WOOGIE BALL
    8. LENOX AVENUE JUMP
    9. STRICTLY ON THE SAFETY SIDE
    10. SOMEBODY'S LYIN'
    11. WAS IT YOU
    12. GABRIEL'S BAND
    13. SUGAR LIPS
    14. IT'S SO GOOD GOOD GOOD
    15. I'M SO CRAZY ABOUT YOU
    16. MARY HAD A LITTLE JAM
    17. BOOGIE WOOGIE ON A SATURDAY NIGHT
    18. ATLANTA G.A.
    19. GET OFF THAT KICK
    20. I'VE GOT A HOLE IN IT
    21. MONKEY AND THE BABOON
    22. YOU CAN'T SEE THE SUN WHEN YOU'RE CRYING
    23. JACK YOUR DEAD
    24. WEDDING BELLS ARE BREAKING UP THAT OLD GANG OF MINE
    THE TOPPERS
    25. IF MONEY GREW ON TREES
    26. PALACE OF STONE
    27. I'M LIVING FOR YOU

    Disc 2

    STEVE GIBSON AND THE RED CAPS
    1. SCRATCH AND YOU'LL FIND IT
    2. DANNY BOY
    3. BLUEBERRY HILL
    4. I WANT A ROOF OVER MY HEAD
    5. THE THING
    6. AM I TO BLAME
    7. I'M TO BLAME
    8. SIDEWALK SHUFFLE
    9. WOULD I MIND
    10. WHEN YOU COME BACK TO ME
    11. BOOGIE WOOGIE ON A SATURDAY NIGHT
    12. SHAME
    13. THREE DOLLARS AND NINETY EIGHT CENTS
    14. D'YA EAT YET JOE
    15. I MAY HATE MYSELF IN THE MORNING
    16. TWO LITTLE KISSES
    17. WAIT
    18. I WENT TO YOUR WEDDING
    19. WHY DON'T YOU LOVE ME
    20. TRUTHFULLY
    21. BIG GAME HUNTER
    22. DO I, DO I, I DO
    23. MY TZATSKELE (My Little Darling)
    24. WIN OR LOSE
    25. FEELIN KINDA HAPPY
    26. NUFF OF THAT STUFF
    27. FREEHEARTED
    28. ALWAYS
    29. HOW I CRY
    30. BOBBIN'

    If you like The Ink Spots or The Mills Brothers you will not be able to resist the harmonies that this collection of 57 original tracks has to offer! Rocking recordings such as, 'Boogie Woogie on a Saturday Night' are abundant throughout this set and later recordings feature the lead vocals of R&B diva Damita Jo before she went on to her solo career.

    Steve Gibson & The Red Caps were a top R&B group for decades and this wonderful 2CD set is a great introduction for the uninitiated and must have for fans alike.(Jasmine notes)

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  2. Many thanks, boppinbob, pioneer vocal group harmony.

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