Thursday, 2 May 2024

Randy Cain born 2 May 1945

Randy Cain (May 2, 1945 – April 9, 2009) was a Philadelphia soul singer with The Delfonics (early 1960s to 1971). He also helped set up the group Blue Magic. 

Herbert Randal Cain III was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Growing up, he befriended two brothers, Wilbert and William Hart. During their attendance at Overbrook High School, Cain joined the Harts' existing vocal group, the Orphonics when a couple of its members dropped out. They loved recreating the doo-wop sound of Little Anthony and the Imperials and Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers in the Harts' basement and became good enough to play colleges and high schools and enter local talent shows. 

In 1966, they acquired as manager and promoter Stan Watson, who suggested a name-change to the Delfonics. He introduced them to Bell, working as pianist and arranger at Cameo Parkway, the Philadelphia label famous for Chubby Checker, Dee Dee Sharp and The Tymes. William Hart and Bell wrote "He Don't Really Love You", with the studio musician turned producer playing most of the instruments on the track. 

The following year, they released "You've Been Untrue", another Bell-Hart composition, but the partnership really delivered in 1968 with the smooth ballad "La-La (Means I Love You)" which reached No 4 in the US. The same year the Delfonics played Vegas with Sammy Davis Jnr and were supported by the Jacksons in Chicago (Cain loved telling the story of a 10-year-old Michael Jackson bringing them tea and honey in the dressing room and telling everyone they were his favourite group). 

With Bell's gift for melody and orchestration, the Delfonics ushered in the era of slick, sophisticated, symphonic Philly Soul, and helped define the genre with three excellent albums – including 1969's Sound of Sexy Soul – and a run of singles which crossed over from the R&B to the pop charts including "Break Your Promise", "I'm Sorry", "Funny Feeling", "Somebody Loves You", "When You Get Right Down To It" and "Over and Over". 

                                   

As the second tenor, Randy Cain played an important part in creating the Delfonics' distinctive blend of three-part harmonies with Wilbert Hart – lead and baritone – and his older brother, William, whose swoop from aching tenor to falsetto made listeners swoon and became the group's trademark. William "Poogie" Hart co-wrote most of the group's hits with Bell and remains its de facto leader to this day. 

Cain was a mainstay from 1965 to 1971, the year the Delfonics won a Grammy Award for Best Rhythm & Blues Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group for "Didn't I", and he also helped the band to score three Top 40 hits in the UK  and appeared on Top of the Pops, but Cain either became ill or fell out with the Harts, depending on whose account you believe. He was replaced by Major Harris of the Jarmels. Thom Bell had also moved on as well, working with groups such as The Stylistics and The Spinners. 

Chubby Checker & Randy Cain

In 1973, Cain, then working for WMOT Productions (the initials stood for We Men of Talent), suggested that the singer and songwriter Ted Mills get together with a quartet called Shades of Love. As Blue Magic, they scored a No 1 R&B hit with "Side-show" and also placed "Three Ring Circus" in the US Top 40 in 1974. 

The Delfonics’s fifth album, Alive & Kicking (1975), produced by Stan Watson, generated lackluster sales and the critical consensus was that the group had creatively fallen behind other TSOP groups such as The Stylistics. Shortly after its release, Major Harris left the band and the remaining original Delfonics disbanded. 

Cain rejoined the Delfonics for a while in the '80s, and again recently, though in the intervening years both he and Wilbert Hart had filed and won civil suits against William Hart, the sole owner of the name, and Arista Records/Sony BMG, the owners of the Delfonics' catalogue, for back royalties. 

Cain died at his home in Maple Shade Township, New Jersey in April 2009, aged 63.

(Edited from The Independent & Wikipedia)

 

3 comments:

boppinbob said...

For “The Delfonics – The Essential Delfonics (2015 Arista)” go here:

https://www.imagenetz.de/dDTwv

1-1 La-La Means I Love You 3:17
1-2 Can't Get Over Losing You 2:30
1-3 I'm Sorry 2:44
1-4 You Are Gone 2:33
1-5 Break Your Promise 3:01
1-6 Alfie 2:46
1-7 The Shadow Of Your Smile 3:21
1-8 The Look Of Love 3:15
1-9 Can You Remember 2:14
1-10 A Lover's Concerto 2:01
1-11 Hurt So Bad 2:01
1-12 Ready Or Not Here I Come (Can't Hide From Love) 1:59
1-13 Somebody Loves You 3:20
1-14 Let It Be Me 2:20
1-15 Hot Dog (I Love You So) 2:16
1-16 Ain't That Peculiar 1:46
1-17 With These Hands 2:12
1-18 Face It Girl, It's Over 2:56
1-19 Going Out Of My Head 2:05
1-20 Everytime I See My Baby 2:41
2-1 Delfonics Theme (How Could You) 4:33
2-2 Funny Feeling 2:22
2-3 My New Love 2:48
2-4 You've Got Yours And I'll Get Mine 3:16
2-5 You Can't Be Loving Him 2:02
2-6 Didn't I (Blow Your Mind This Time) 3:19
2-7 Down Is Up, Up Is Down 2:29
2-8 Trying To Make A Fool Of Me 3:04
2-9 Baby I Love You 3:07
2-10 When You Get Right Down To It 2:48
2-11 I Gave To You 5:53
2-12 Over And Over 3:06
2-13 Think About Me 2:35
2-14 Hey! Love 3:20
2-15 Walk Right Up To The Sun 3:00
2-16 Round & Round 3:10
2-17 Tell Me This Is A Dream 3:31
2-18 I'm A Man 3:02
2-19 Baby I Miss You 3:18
2-20 Delfonics Theme 4:15

Unfortunately released only as a digital download by Sony's catalog division, The Essential Delfonics contains a very high percentage of the tracks from the group's first four albums: La La Means I Love You (1968), Sound of Sexy Soul (1969), The Delfonics (1970), and Tell Me This Is a Dream (1972). (There's also a pair of non-album B-sides.) That means that all the significant singles -- the Top Ten R&B hits "La-La Means I Love You," "You Got Yours and I'll Get Mine," "(Didn't I) Blow Your Mind This Time," and so forth -- are contained. Those who don't need physical packaging and were unable to snap up the Kent label's 2007/2008 two-for-one reissues should not miss out here. In 2016, the catalog label Real Gone Music released the two-CD set 40 Classic Soul Sides, which featured a tracklist identical to that of this anthology.(AllMusic review)

krobigraubart said...

Thank you vey much, Bob!

The Delfonics - La La Means I Love You / Sound Of Sexy Soul (Kent Soul CDKEND 287) 2007
(with comolete artwork)
https://workupload.com/file/bw6kNY7HF8P

boppinbob said...

Hi Krobi, Recieved with Thanks.