Racial issues in music

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Bunky & Jake were female-male interracial folk-rockers, mainly known to me re 60s-70s work, but this says they released a kiddie album in '93. Jake was also in the Magicians with Gary Bonner and Alan Gordon, whose songs were hits for the Turtles, and I also have an album by his band Jake and the Family Jewels, The Bog Moose Calls His Baby Sweet Lorraine, kind of like a more laidback Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks. They must have gotten some pushback for being an interracial duo, but also their musical interests were pretty wide-ranging for a duo, not some skills-proud combo, hellbent on being eclectic, which was a trend of sorts (re Beatles, Byrds etc.). And Jake is quoted here as saying one wide-ranging album project never did cohere enough to finish (or get released anyway). Interesting musical people: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bunky_and_Jake

dow, Tuesday, 28 June 2022 16:43 (one year ago) link

The BIG Moose, sorry!

dow, Tuesday, 28 June 2022 16:44 (one year ago) link

I have a Magicians cd cos I liked the song on Nuggets. Invitation to Cry. Not played it in years though.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 28 June 2022 16:46 (one year ago) link

Forgot Jake was a Fug too! He did get around. Another folk etc. interracial couple recording back then: Hedge & Donna, who got to make more albums than Bunky & Jake: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedge_and_Donna

dow, Tuesday, 28 June 2022 17:25 (one year ago) link

John Renbourn and Dorris Henderson recorded 2 great lps together. Not sure if they were connected on any other level.

Stevolende, Tuesday, 28 June 2022 17:33 (one year ago) link

The Bog Moose would be a great name for a Canadian sludge metal band.

but also fuck you (unperson), Tuesday, 28 June 2022 19:28 (one year ago) link

The initial release of this milestone was a little earlier than xpost "Storybook Children""

At the age of 14, Ian wrote and recorded her first hit single, "Society's Child (Baby I've Been Thinking)", about an interracial romance forbidden by a girl's mother and frowned upon by her peers and teachers. Produced by George "Shadow" Morton and released three times from 1965 to 1967, "Society's Child" became a national hit upon its third release after Leonard Bernstein featured it in a late-April 1967 CBS TV special titled Inside Pop: The Rock Revolution.[8]

The song's theme of interracial relationships was considered taboo by some radio stations, who withdrew or banned it from their playlists accordingly. In her 2008 autobiography Society's Child, Ian recalls receiving hate mail and death threats as a response to the song and mentions that a radio station in Atlanta that played it was burned down.[citation needed] In July 1967, "Society's Child" reached no. 14 on the Billboard Hot 100. The single sold 600,000 copies and the album sold 350,000 copies.[7]

At the age of 16, Ian met comedian Bill Cosby backstage at a Smothers Brothers show where she was promoting "Society's Child". Since she was underage, she was accompanied by a chaperone while touring. After her set, Ian had been sleeping with her head on the lap of her chaperone (an older female family friend). According to Ian in a 2015 interview, she was told by her then manager that Cosby had interpreted their interaction as "lesbian" and as a result "had made it his business" to warn other television shows that Ian wasn't "suitable family entertainment" and "shouldn't be on television" because of her sexuality, thus attempting to blacklist her.[9][10][11] Although Ian would later come out, she states that at the time of the encounter with Cosby she had only been kissed once, by a boy she had a crush on, in broad daylight at summer camp.[12]

Ian relates on her website that, although "Society's Child" was originally intended for Atlantic Records and the label paid for her recording session, Atlantic subsequently returned the master to her and quietly refused to release it.[13] Ian relates that years later, Atlantic's president at the time, Jerry Wexler, publicly apologized to her for this. The single and Ian's 1967 debut album (which reached no. 29 on the charts) were finally released on Verve Forecast. In 2001, "Society's Child" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, which honors recordings considered timeless and important to music history. Her first four albums were released on a double CD entitled Society's Child: The Verve Recordings in 1995

(Her other big hit meant a lot to many as well, and that kind cruelty was an unusual topic then, seems like, certainly in pop hits:

"Society's Child" stigmatized Ian as a one-hit wonder until her most successful US single, "At Seventeen", was released in 1975. "At Seventeen" is a bittersweet commentary on adolescent cruelty, the illusion of popularity and teenage angst, from the perspective of a narrator looking back on her earlier experience. The song was a major hit as it charted at no. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100, hit number one on the Adult Contemporary chart and won the 1976 Grammy Award for Best Pop Vocal Performance - Female, beating out Linda Ronstadt, Olivia Newton-John and Helen Reddy.
)

dow, Wednesday, 29 June 2022 23:46 (one year ago) link

Oops--both of those are from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janis_Ian

dow, Wednesday, 29 June 2022 23:48 (one year ago) link

Man, Cosby never runs out of ways to disappoint...

I used to hear kids talking about this place, dunno if any of them made it up there--from a memoir that references church bombing, hence the title:

One Sunday morning, September 15, 1963
Pamela Walbert Montanaro
PAMELA WALBERT MONTANARO
Age 18 in 1963

...My parents, Jim and Eileen Walbert, had moved to Birmingham in 1947. My father taught piano lessons during the day and played piano for supper clubs and parties in the evening and on weekends. My mother, who had been a singer in her home state of Virginia and later in New York City, did occasional part time work, but, like most other wives and mothers of her day, was a “stay at home” mom and prodigious volunteer.

My parents were introduced to the Civil Rights Movement by their friends Anny and Frederick Kraus who were refugees from Europe during World War II and had been active since their arrival in Birmingham where Frederick worked in the VA hospital and the University of Alabama at Birmingham Medical Center. From the mid fifties on, the Movement became my mother’s primary work, as a volunteer—and a very devoted one. She was very involved in school desegregation and provided support and counseling to the young people who integrated Shades Valley High School that had been “whites only” when my brother David and I attended. In 1965, she and my brother marched in Selma in support of voters’ rights. David later opened the first integrated coffee house in Birmingham called Society’s Child and performed there with an integrated band that featured future Broadway and television star Nell Carter.


from https://kidsinbirmingham1963.org/one-sunday-morning-september-15-1963/?doing_wp_cron=1656547600.8970320224761962890625

dow, Thursday, 30 June 2022 00:13 (one year ago) link

Society's Child was a music club located in the former Dale's Cellar at 1927 7th Avenue North in downtown Birmingham near Linn Park.

It was opened in 1968 by guitarist David Walbert, son of Jim and Eileen Walbert. He and singer Jackie Dicie formed a folk duo that served as a house band. Nell Carter was also a frequent performer. The club did not sell alcohol, and was open to minors. It closed in the early to mid-1970s.

"Society's Child" was the name of a song written by Janis Ian in 1965 about an interracial romance. The song became a controversial nationwide hit in 1967.

This article is a stub. You can help Bhamwiki by expanding it.

References
Haden, Courtney (July 31, 2008) "Friendly folk: Local music lovers get a BFF." Birmingham Week


https://www.bhamwiki.com/w/Society%27s_Child

dow, Thursday, 30 June 2022 00:17 (one year ago) link


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