Hayward "Chuck" Carbo (January 11, 1926 – July 11, 2008) was an American R&B singer, best known for his time as a vocalist in the New Orleans group The Spiders.
Chuck Carbo was born in Houma, Louisiana, then moved with his family to the Zion City neighborhood of New Orleans in the early 1930s. Chuck and brother Leonard "Chick" Carbo sang in the choir at their minister father's church. Among their influences were the Golden Gate Quartet and the King Cole Trio. The brothers served in the Coast Guard during World II.
After the war the brothers became affiliated with the Zion City Harmonizers gospel quartet. Taking the name the Delta Southernaires, the off-shoot group performed on Sunday mornings on WWEZ. In 1953 they auditioned for Cosimo Matassa at J&M Studio with the songs John The Revelator and Bye and Bye. Matassa encouraged the group to consider singing Rhythm and Blues. Local guitarist and songwriter Adolph Smith wrote two songs for the newly rechristened Spiders, cut in their initial Imperial Records session. The R&B single was a two-sided hit with I Didn't Want To Do It reaching #3 on the R&B charts and You're The One following at #8.
At the first recording session the group had misgivings, so also recorded two gospel songs which were unreleased until 1994. Imperial Records A&R man and bandleader Dave Bartholomew took over the production work for The Spiders' follow-up releases, which were regional and local hits but didn't make the national charts.
Conflicts within the group caused Chuck to leave, with Chick taking over lead vocals. The original Spiders reunited in 1955 to record Witchcraft which went to #7 on the R&B charts. Chick continued to front the Spiders. Chuck cut two singles under his own name for Imperial before being dropped by the label in 1957. He didn't record again for several years, but could be heard performing locally at the Dew Drop Inn and other clubs.Carbo continued to perform intermittently for the next several decades, though he took odd jobs (including as a truck driver) whenever he could not make a living performing. Through the 1970s, he sat things out on the sidelines while the music business continued to go through many changes. In the 1980s, there was beginning to be a musical resurgence in his hometown. Early that decade he sang at a benefit concert for WWOZ , the city's cultural jewel of a community radio station, and got such positive feedback and enjoyed the experience so much that he was inspired to get back into performing. That led to occasional gigs a local clubs and appearances at JazzFest.
In 1988 Carbo recorded his first solo album Life's Ups and Downs on 504 Records, featuring guitarist Alvin Robinson, Dr. John, and Edward Frank. Second Line On Monday was released as a single. The flip side Meet Me With Your Black Drawers On (by Jeannie and Jimmy Cheatham) got attention and airplay on WWOZ in New Orleans. This led to a follow-up album Drawers Trouble on Rounder Records in 1993 featuring Dr. John and Edward Frank.
A second full-length The Barber's Blues followed in 1996. Those albums provided a fitting coda to Chuck Carbo's career so long on hold, proving that he not only still had what it takes, but that he was definitely one of the most distinctive in a long line of great New Orleans singers. "When I sing, I'm Chuck Carbo," the singer remarked in 1997, "and I don't try to copy anybody else. I'm glad my fans responded to that. To me, they are the greatest. I love them all."
Carbo and his wife Gloria were the parents of nine sons and daughters. His granddaughter, Rolexis Delaney Schinsing is an actress who has appeared on HBO show Treme, OWN's Queen Sugar, and Daytime Emmy nominated network BYUtv's show Relative Race. Carbo died in July 2008, in New Orleans at the age of 82.
(Edited from Wikipedia, Home of the Groove, Funky 16 Corners & wwoz.org)
Here's a clip of Chuck Carbo singing this Spiders classic live at UGHA in November 1994
For ”The Spiders - The Imperial Sessions (Bear Family 1992)” go here:
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1-01 The Spiders I Don't Want To Do It
1-02 The Spiders You're The One
1-03 The Spiders For A Thrill
1-04 The Spiders Mellow Mama
1-05 The Spiders Lost And Bewildered (Slowly Losing My Mind)
1-06 The Spiders Tears Begin To Flow (Sneaky Pete)
1-07 The Spiders Why Do I Love You
1-08 The Spiders Love's All I'm Puttin Down
1-09 The Spiders I'll Stop Crying
1-10 The Spiders Mmm Mmm Baby (Hey Baby)
1-11 The Spiders I'm Slippin' In
1-12 The Spiders Mmm Mmm Baby (Hey Baby)
1-13 The Spiders Walking Around In Circles
1-14 The Spiders I'm Searchin'
1-15 The Spiders The Real Thing
1-16 The Spiders She Keeps Me Wondering
1-17 The Spiders 21 (3 X 7 = 21)
1-18 The Spiders That's Enough
1-19 The Spiders Sukey, Sukey, Sukey
1-20 The Spiders Bells In My Heart
1-21 The Spiders Am I The One
1-22 The Spiders Don't Knock
1-23 Delta Southernaires John The Revelator
1-24 Delta Southernaires Bye And Bye
2-01 The Spiders (True) You Don't Love Me
2-02 The Spiders Witchcraft
2-03 The Spiders You Played The Part
2-04 The Spiders Is It True (A Little Bird Told Me)
2-05 The Spiders With Chuck Carbo How I Feel
2-06 Chuck Carbo And The Spiders That's The Way To Win My Heart
2-07 Chuck Carbo And The Spiders Goodbye
2-08 The Spiders I'll Be Free
2-09 The Spiders With Chuck Carbo Don't Pity Me
2-10 The Spiders With Chuck Carbo Dear Mary
2-11 The Spiders With Chuck Carbo A-1 In My Heart
2-12 The Spiders Without Love
2-13 The Spiders Someday Bye And Bye
2-14 The Spiders With Chuck Carbo That's My Desire
2-15 The Spiders Better Be On My Way
2-16 The Spiders With Chuck Carbo Honey Bee
2-17 The Spiders I'm Glad For Your Sake
2-18 Chuck Carbo Poor Boy
2-19 Chuck Carbo The Bells Are Ringing
2-20 Chuck Carbo I Miss You
2-21 Chuck Carbo Times
2-22 The Spiders You're The One
2-23 The Spiders Tennessee Slim
New Orleans wasn’t best-known for vocal groups. The exception was the Spiders. Between 1953 and 1960, they recorded 46 songs for Imperial with the incredible studio bands led by Dave Bartholomew. It was Bartholomew himself who said that the Spiders’ lead singer, Chuck Carbo, was the ‘The best voice to come out of New Orleans in the last thirty years.’ Here are the original versions of I Didn’t Want To Do It, You’re The One, and Witchcraft (later recorded by Elvis, Johnny ‘Guitar’ Watson, etc.,), and 43 other songs – many of them making their first appearance on a long-playing, compact disc.
A big thank you goes to King Cake @ the deepsouthernsoul blog (now dormant) for the loan of this 2CD set. Here’s my contribution……
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For “Chuck Carbo – The Barber's Blues (Rounder Records 1996)” go here:
https://mega.nz/file/liJBzaLZ#DXSbMKov1uWj2Emrm6c-Q4mcjpuYM7AevW3ZPZmbmd8
1. Hey, Mardi Gras! (Here I Am) 4:09
2. I'd Rather Beg 4:33
3. Blues Medley: Hootie Blues / Every Day I Have The Blues 5:38
4. The Very Thought Of You 3:29
5. The Barber's Blues 2:52
6. Black Widow 4:27
7. Too Many Goodbyes 3:47
8. A World I Never Made 4:19
9. Don't Boogie With Your Black Drawers Off 5:03
10. Promises 5:12
Bass – Erving Charles Jr.
Drums, Percussion – Bernard "Bunchy" Johnson
Guitar – Cranston Clements (tracks: 2), Eugene Ross (tracks: 1, 3 to 10)
Keyboards – Dave Torkanowsky (tracks: 4)
Organ [Hammond B-3] – Davell Crawford (tracks: 1, 7, 8, 10)
Piano – Davell Crawford (tracks: 1), Edward Frank (tracks: 2 to 10)
Tenor Saxophone – Fred Kemp
Trombone – Craig Klein
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Christian Patrick (tracks: 4, 8)
Vocals – Chuck Carbo
Recorded, mixed and edited by Steve Reynolds at Ultrasonic Studios, New Orleans, Louisiana, June - September 1996.
Those 1990 era Rounder Records releases were so instrumental in preserving the heritage of NO music: Carbo, Johnny Adams, Walter "Wolfman" Washington (RIP), Irma Thomas, Alvin "Red" Tyler,and Tuts Washington amongst others. Thanks for this great gift.
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ReplyDeleteThanx for these. A "new" artist = "new" hears here & nice addition to N. O. music collection.
Cheers!
Ciao! For now.
rntcj
Many thanks X 2 ,King Cake...
ReplyDeleteThank you!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the Spiders
ReplyDeleteTHANK YOUUUUUUUUUUUU
ReplyDeleteThank you, thank you.
ReplyDeleteThe Spiders, inside baseball group of the fifties vocal group harmony genre - many thanks, boppinbob.
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