Tommy James

Tommy James (born Thomas Gregory Jackson; April 29, 1947) also known as Tommy Tadger, is an American pop rock musician, singer, songwriter, and record producer, widely known as leader of the 1960s rock band Tommy James and the Shondells.[1]

Tommy James
Tommy James in 2010
Background information
Birth nameThomas Gregory Jackson
Born (1947-04-29) April 29, 1947
Dayton, Ohio, US
OriginNiles, Michigan, US
Genres
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter, guitarist
InstrumentsVocals, guitar, tambourine
Years active1959–present
LabelsRoulette Records,
Fantasy Records,
Millennium Records,
Rhino Records,
Aegis Records,
Aura Records
WebsiteTommy James and the Shondells

Early life and career

Born in Dayton, Ohio, James and his family moved to Niles, Michigan. He was a child model at the age of four.[1][2] In 1959, at the age of twelve, he formed the band "The Echoes", which eventually became "Tom and the Tornadoes".[2] In 1964 the band changed its name to The Shondells. That same year, Jack Douglas, a local DJ at WNIL radio station in Niles, formed his own record label, Snap Records. The Shondells were one of the local bands he recorded at WNIL studios.[3] One of the songs was the Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich ditty "Hanky Panky", which the pair had recorded under the name The Raindrops.[3] The song was a hit locally, but the label had no resources for national promotion, and it was soon forgotten.[2][3]

James in 1967

In 1965, a local dance promoter, Bob Mack, found a copy of "Hanky Panky" in a used record bin and started playing it at his Pittsburgh dance clubs.[1][2] Soon after, a Pittsburgh area bootlegger made a copy of the song and began pressing copies of it, speeding it up slightly in the process.[3] Sales of the bootleg were estimated at 80,000 in ten days.[1][4] It became number one on Pittsburgh radio stations in early 1966.[4] Douglas heard about the record's sudden popularity in Pittsburgh because his name and location always appeared on Snap Records labels.[3] Numerous calls from Pittsburgh convinced James to go to Pennsylvania, where he met Mack and Chuck Rubin, who handled the talent bookings for Mack's dance clubs. Before long, all three major music trade papers, Billboard, Cashbox and Record World, were listing "Hanky Panky" as a regional breakout hit. Rubin, who had music industry connections, said it was a good time for the trio to travel to New York City in search of a record deal.[3]

The men made the rounds of the major recording labels, getting initial potential offers from most companies they visited. One label, Roulette Records, gave no initial response because its head, Morris Levy, was out of town until evening; Roulette was one of the last stops on their visit.[3] By the next morning, Mack, Rubin, and James were now receiving polite refusals from the major record companies after the enthusiasm for the record the day before. James said, "We didn't know what in the world was going on, and finally Jerry Wexler over at Atlantic leveled with us and said, 'Look, Morris Levy and Roulette called up all the other record companies and said, "This is my freakin' record." (laughs) and scared 'em all away – even the big corporate labels.'" Their only option would be to sign with Roulette.[4]

Since the band had broken up two years before, James was the only Shondell left.[3] Mack made his dance club bands available to James, but nothing seemed to fit until one of the bands' guitarists took James to the Thunderbird Lounge in Greensburg, Pennsylvania. James sang with the house band, the Raconteurs. The Raconteurs became the new Shondells,[3] and Jackson acquired the professional name of Tommy James. By the third week of June 1966, "Hanky Panky" had become the top single at WLS.[5] By the third week of July 1966, "Hanky Panky" had become the top single in the United States.[3]

Tommy James and the Shondells

After a few comings and goings of members, the classic lineup of James, Eddie Gray (guitar), Mike Vale (bass), Ron Rosman (keyboards) and Pete Lucia (drums) was formed. The group recorded a follow-up song to "Hanky Panky". When Bob Mack's attempt at finding some Shondells worked out in an inadvertent way, he told James about another record he found in the same used record bin "Hanky Panky" came from: "Say I Am" by Jimmy Gilmer and the Fireballs. The only thing James and his new Shondells were aware of when they entered the recording studio for the first time is that whatever they recorded should sound similar to "Hanky Panky", although the two songs sound nothing alike. Mack played The Fireballs record for the group, and they decided to record their version of the song. Mack was credited as the producer for the group's first album, Hanky Panky.[3][6]

Songwriter Richie Cordell wrote (or co-wrote) and produced many of the group's hits, among them "I Think We're Alone Now", "Mirage", and "Mony Mony".[7] The creation of "Mony Mony" was a group effort involving Cordell, James, Shondells band member Peter Lucia, producer Bo Gentry, and Bobby Bloom. James and Cordell set out to create a party rock single, working out everything except the song's title, which eluded them even after much effort. When they took a break from their creative endeavors on James' apartment terrace, they looked up at the Mutual of New York Insurance Company's large neon sign bearing the abbreviation for the company: M-O-N-Y, which provided the song's name.[3]

Tommy James and the Shondells also produced a "Mony Mony" video when the song was a hit. Even though a number of musical groups had already produced videos by that time, there was no market at all for that film in the US. Television stations would not air it, and it was originally shown between double features in movie theaters in Europe. The film was not seen in the US until the creation of MTV.[2]

James was contacted by Beatle George Harrison, who was working with a group called Grapefruit at the time. Harrison and the group had written some songs they wanted James to consider recording. Since the group came to a decision to change their musical style (and would do so with "Crimson and Clover": see below) and the material Harrison and Grapefruit provided was in the style of "Mony Mony", James turned down their offer.

The music business changed after the success of "Mony Mony". Top 40 program formatting, based on 45 RPM single records, drove popular music on the radio. Few stations played cuts from record albums, so radio was, in effect, "selling" single records for the record companies.[3] In August 1968, James and the Shondells went on the campaign trail for three months with presidential candidate, Vice-President Hubert Humphrey. Meanwhile, popular music had become album-driven, displacing many performers whose singles had been top sellers. James realized he and the Shondells needed to become an album-oriented group if they were to survive in the business, necessitating a change in their style.

After working out a marketing strategy for their new sound, James visited WLS when the group was in Chicago to play a concert, bringing along a rough cut of "Crimson and Clover" to the station. WLS secretly recorded the music when James played his tape for them. By the time James was out of the building and in the car, its radio was playing the station's dub of the not-yet-finished song. "Crimson and Clover" had to be pressed the way it was heard on the radio station, and the marketing plan was now wasted time and effort.[3]

"Crimson and Clover" was a huge success, and the group would have two follow-up hits that also reached the Hot 100's top 10, "Sweet Cherry Wine" and "Crystal Blue Persuasion". James, who co-wrote all three of those songs,[8] and his band did well enough with the transition to be invited to perform at Woodstock. James describes Artie Kornfeld's invitation like this: "Artie was up and asked if you could play at this pig farm up in upstate New York." I said, "What?!?" "Well, they say it's gonna be a lot of people there, and it's gonna be a really important show." At the time James was in Hawaii and was incredulous about being asked to travel 6,000 miles to play a show on an upstate New York pig farm, telling the Roulette Records secretary, "If I'm not there, start without us, will you please?"[1][3]

In March 1970, after four more hits, drugs almost killed James when, at a concert, he collapsed, and was pronounced dead. However, he survived, decided to take a break from the recording studio, and moved up into the country to recuperate. The Shondells, without James, recorded two albums under the new group name Hog Heaven (one "self titled" on Roulette Records in 1970 and the 2nd (1971) unreleased until 2008), but disbanded soon afterwards.

Tommy James and The Shondells were voted into the Michigan Rock and Roll Legends online Hall of Fame in 2006. Four of the band's biggest hits have been voted Legendary Michigan Songs: "Crimson & Clover" in 2010, and "Hanky Panky", "I Think We're Alone Now", and "Mony Mony" in 2011.[9]

Solo

James went solo and had two further Billboard Hot 100 top 20 chart hits with "Draggin' the Line" (co-written by Bob King) (#4 in 1971) and "Three Times in Love" (#19 in 1980), plus eleven much smaller Hot 100 chartings. "Hanky Panky" has been James' one RIAA certified gold single. He also wrote and produced the million-selling 1970 hit "Tighter, Tighter" for the group Alive 'N Kickin' (co-written by Bob King). In 1971 James spent time in Nashville at the recommendation of friends when a "mob war" erupted among organized crime families in New York, and threats against James were intimated due to his connection to Morris Levy. He recorded an album there with top Nashville musicians, My Head, My Bed and My Red Guitar, which received critical acclaim but sold poorly. He left Roulette Records in 1974 and two more albums, In Touch (1976) and Midnight Rider (1977), followed on Fantasy Records, with yet another, Three Times in Love, appearing on Millennium Records in late 1979. The independent label Aegis Records put out his Hi-Fi in 1990.

To date, over 300 musicians have recorded versions of James' music.[1][2] Covers of three of James' songs went top ten on the Hot 100 (the last two as consecutive No. 1s) in the 1980s: Joan Jett with "Crimson and Clover", Tiffany with "I Think We're Alone Now", and Billy Idol with "Mony Mony".

In October 2008 James and the three surviving members of the original Shondells (Pete Lucia died in 1987) reunited in a New Jersey studio to record again, after 37 years. The group recorded an album, I Love Christmas.[2][10]

Music and the mob

In February 2010, an autobiography Me, The Mob, and The Music was published. James announced that deals were in hand to turn the story into both a film and a Broadway play.[2] Barbara De Fina is producing the film.

It was evident when James first met Morris Levy, the head of Roulette Records, that Levy was willing to strongarm others when necessary. Those signed to Roulette were there to produce money for the company, having their needs met only when it pleased Levy. Asking to be paid meant intimidation; to survive, those under contract to Roulette needed to find a means of generating income that did not involve the record company, such as personally booked tours.[4] While a Roulette artist had great creative control when recording for the company, the lack of payment for those efforts was difficult to take.[3][4][10]

James estimates the company owed him royalties he never received.[4][11] Roulette was used as a front for organized crime, also functioning as a money laundering operation, as Levy was closely allied with the Genovese crime family. In the early 1970s, the Genovese outfit found itself in a bloody gang war with the Gambino family, which saw victims not only among mobsters (such as Levy's close friend and business partner Thomas Eboli), but increasingly among non-mob figures on the periphery of the organizations. Levy had taken a somewhat fatherly shine to James, and worried that he might be a target for those who wanted to get at the Genovese family through Levy, so he warned Tommy to flee New York for an extended period, until the war was over. James settled in Nashville, Tennessee, where the Mafia had little presence or influence. While there he began jamming with local country music session players, and was inspired to record a country-rock record in 1971. He did not feel comfortable writing his book until all those deeply involved with the record company had died.[4] It was only after Roulette Records and Levy's Big Seven Music publishing company were sold (the record company to an EMI and Rhino Records partnership, the music publishing company to Windswept Pacific Music which was later sold to EMI) that James began to receive large royalty checks from sales of his records.[12]

Current career

In February 2018, James became host of weekly radio program 'Gettin Together with Tommy James' on Sirius XM Radio channel 60s on 6.[13]

James can also be seen on late-night informercials selling collections of music from the Woodstock era for Time Life.[14]

Personal life

James moved to Clifton, New Jersey in the mid 1970s and circa 2000 to nearby Cedar Grove.[15]

Solo discography

Albums

Year Album Billboard 200 Record label
1970 Tommy James Roulette Records
1971 Christian of the World 131
My Head, My Bed, and My Red Guitar
1976 In Touch Fantasy Records
1977 Midnight Rider
1979 Three Times in Love 134 Millennium Records
1990 Hi-Fi Aegis Records
1991 The Solo Years (1970-81) Rhino Records
1994 Discography Deals and Demos 74-92 Aura Records
2006 Hold the Fire
2008 I Love Christmas
2019 Alive

Singles

Year Title Peak chart positions Record label B-side Album
US AC
[16]
Country CAN
1970 "Ball and Chain" 57 44 Roulette Records "Candy Maker" Tommy James
"Church Street Soul Revival" 62 55 "Draggin' the Line" Christian of the World
1971 "Adrienne" 93 "Light of Day"
"Draggin' the Line" 4 6 2 "Bits and Pieces"
"I'm Comin' Home" 40 19 "Sing, Sing, Sing"
"Nothing to Hide" 41 35 "Walk a Country Mile" My Head, My Bed, and My Red Guitar
1972 "Tell 'Em Willie Boy's A'Comin'" 89 89 "Forty Days and Forty Nights"
"Cat's Eye in the Window" 90 85 "Dark is the Night" non-album
"Love Song" 67 40 51 "Kingston Highway" non-album
"Celebration" 95 "The Last One to Know" non-album
1973 "Boo, Boo, Don't'cha Be Blue" 70 68 "Rings and Things" non-album
"Calico" "Hey, My Lady" In Touch
1974 "Glory, Glory" MCA Records "Comin' Down" non-album
1976 "Tighter, Tighter" Fantasy Records "Comin' Down" In Touch
"I Love You Love Me Love" "Devil Gate Drive"
1977 "Love is Gonna Find a Way" "I Don't Love You Anymore" Midnight Rider
1979 "Three Times in Love" 19 1 93 64 Millennium Records "I Just Wanna Play the Music" Three Times in Love
1980 "You Got Me" 101 "It's All Right (For Now)"
1981 "You're So Easy to Love" 58 "Halfway to Heaven" non-album
1983 "Say Please" 21 Records "Two Time Lover" non-album
2006 "Love Words" 40 Aura Records Hold the Fire
2019 "So Beautiful" 29 Aura Records Alive
"I Think We're Alone Now" (acoustic) 27

Bibliography

  • James, Tommy; Martin Fitzpatrick (2010). Me, the mob, and the music : one helluva ride with Tommy James and the Shondells. New York: Scribner. ISBN 978-1-4391-2865-7. The book extensively details James's relationship with Morris Levy.
gollark: It gets equivocated to mean so many things, like "respect"; it is more of a fuzzy label for a set of related concepts than a precise technical definition.
gollark: Not sure it's their fault. Consciousness is just tricky.
gollark: And consciousness is too poorly defined to mean anything much anyway.
gollark: Wrong. It isn't the issue.
gollark: People assume quantum computers are magic do-anything boxes, that regular computers "can't be random", that AI is "incapable of creativity" or might randomly become "conscious"/"sentient"/humanlike and rebel, etc.

References

  1. "Tommy James & The Shondells". Classicbands.com. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  2. "Tommy James Biography". TommyJames.com. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  3. James, Tommy; Fitzpatrick, Martin, eds. (2010). Me, the Mob, and the Music: One Helluva Ride with Tommy James & The Shondells. Scribner. p. 240. ISBN 1-4391-2865-0. Retrieved December 11, 2010. raindrops.
  4. Mervis, Scott (March 22, 2010). "Tommy James' music success linked to Pittsburgh and gangsters". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  5. "Silver Dollar Survey". WLS. June 17, 1966. Retrieved August 30, 2014.
  6. Viglione, Joe. "Hanky Panky (album)". Allmusic.com. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  7. Kuruts, Steve. "Richie Cordell Biography". allmusic.com. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  8. Ruhlmann, William. "The Very Best of Tommy James & the Shondells". allmusic.com. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  9. "Home". Michigan Rock and Roll Legends. Retrieved June 25, 2014.
  10. James, Gary. "Tommy James Interview". Classicbands.com. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  11. La Gorce, Tammy (November 19, 2010). "A Rock 'n' Roll Story Is Finally Told". New York Times. Retrieved December 11, 2010.
  12. "For Tommy James, the past is the future | 40 Years After | a Chron.com blog". Blogs.chron.com. July 5, 2010. Retrieved April 13, 2012.
  13. "Tommy James Launches New Weekly Series Exclusively on SiriusXM". cashboxmagazine.com. February 28, 2018. Retrieved July 23, 2018.
  14. "The Woodstock Collection". Time Life. September 30, 2012. Retrieved August 19, 2015.
  15. Lustig, Jay. "Tommy James tells all: The glorious highs and little-known dark side of a hit-filled career", The Star-Ledger, September 5, 2010. Accessed October 2, 2016. "James was born in Dayton, Ohio, and grew up in South Bend, Ind., Monroe, Wis., and Niles, Mich. He moved to New York in '66, and New Jersey in 1973. He has been in Cedar Grove for about 10 years, having previously lived in Clifton. He recently moved to Sykesville, Maryland."
  16. "Tommy James Chart History: Adult Contemporary". Billboard. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.