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Hometown Frolics / Terry Cashman Tommy West And Terry Cashman
Hometown Frolics
/ Terry Cashman
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CHISWICK
2CD CATALOGUE NUMBER
CDWIK2 292
LABEL
CHISWICK
DISC01
01THINGS ARE GETTING BETTER NOW
02OLD RADIO
03I KNOWmp3 available
04DAVID AND DAWN
05NIGHTINGALE
06I'M READY FOR YOU
07MAMMAS, DON'T LET YOUR BABIES GROW UP TO BE COWBOYS
08DON'T FENCE ME IN/BACK IN THE SADDLE AGAIN: DON'T FENCE ME IN
09COWBOY
10I'LL SING FOR YOU
11I KNOW
12NIGHTINGALE
13OLD RADIO
14I'LL SING FOR YOU
15THINGS ARE GETTING BETTER NOWmp3 available
16YOU BE DON AND I'LL BE PHIL
17BE A WOMAN
18THE GIRL IN MY DREAMS
19STILL WARM (NIGHT THAT WE MET)
20BABALU'S WEDDING DAY
DISC02
01BABY, BABY I LOVE YOUmp3 available
02CRUISIN'mp3 available
03THERE I GO AGAIN
04EASY TO SING A LOVE SONG
17NOW THEY'RE WRITING SONGS
18PASSIN' IT ON
05BACK TO THE DAWN
06NEW YORK CITY BLUES
07YOUNG TURKS
08I CAN'T SEE
09WE'LL BE TOGETHER
10THE DREAMER
11SONG FOR JANE
12ALL THE GOODTIME GIRLS ARE GONE
13BACK TO THE DAWN
14ALL THE LOVE
15TALKIN' BASEBALL (WILLIE, MICKEY & "THE DUKE")
16COOPERSTOWN
 Tommy West And Terry Cashman
courtesy Tommy West
 

The origins of this music are rooted deep in the 50s doo wop of New York and its surrounding suburbs. Tommy West (Tommy Picardo) was a member of the Criterions and Terry Cashman (Dennis Minogue) was lead singer of the Chevrons.

Both had substantial success: the Criterions with ‘I Remain Truly Yours’ (CDCHD 309) and the Chevrons with ‘Lullabye’ (CDCHD 739). The former was recorded for Marty Foglia’s Cecelia label He was Alan Freed’s sound engineer for his stage shows. The latter was recorded for Bob Shad’s Brent label. He was a highly experienced producer who had held A&R positions in several major record companies before starting his own Time, Brent and Shad labels.

Although both were originally released in 1959, ‘I Remain Truly Yours’ had to wait for the early 60s doo wop revival to get picked up by Laurie Records in 1964. Although neither charted in Billboard’s Hot 100, ‘Lullabye’ reached #87 in Cash Box in 1960. Both were local hits in New York and its surroundings.

Once the British Invasion scuttled all prior genres of US popular music, former doo wop artists such as Dion and Paul Simon turned to pre-rock‘n’roll heritage music such as blues and folk music. Dion released a number of hardcore blues tracks towards the end of his tenure with Columbia, which his record company made no attempt to promote, as they were hoping he would emerge as the next Bobby Darin. Paul Simon got into the swing of it quite quickly, and by 1965 had his first smash hit with his old mate Art Garfunkel from their Tom & Jerry days when ‘The Sound of Silence’ topped the charts. This wistful form of folk pop set the stage for many ex-doo woppers who still liked to harmonise.

Dion had to ride out his Columbia contract before returning to Laurie in 1969, when he reached top 5 in the Hot 100 with ‘Abraham, Martin & John’. Cashman and West teamed up with Gene Pistilli, whom Cashman had met whilst they both worked for the same publisher, and signed with Capitol to release their first album “Bound To Happen” in 1967. A song on that album, ‘Sunday Will Never Be The Same’ was covered by Spanky & Our Gang that year and became a Top 10 hit. Cashman, Pistilli & West released one more album on ABC in 1969, when Gene was lured away by ex-Criterion Tim Hauser to form the first incarnation of Manhattan Transfer.

It was as Cashman & West that they found their feet as recording artists, writers, record producers and record label owners. It was as producers they made hits for themselves and a string of smash hits for Jim Croce and others. By the time Dion had finished his tenure with Warner Bros his manager Zachary Glickman was impressed enough to suggest Dion link up with Cashman & West to produce and release his next album in 1978 on their Lifesong label. When Ace came to release this album, we were astonished to find a whole unreleased album, which we coupled as a 2 on 1 (CDCHD 936).

By 1976, when “Hometown Frolics” and “Terry Cashman” were released in the States, England had been overrun by punk, and Chiswick Records was at the heart of it. It would have been unthinkable back then to release these on Chiswick Records alongside the Count Bishops, Motorhead and the Damned. Then as Chiswick recorded more mainstream pop with Sniff ‘n’ the Tears and Rocky Sharpe & the Replays, and in its maturity released Dean Friedman and Henry Gross, so it made sense now for Chiswick to release these two albums on CD for the first time.

Each CD is rounded off with what they did next. In Tommy’s case it was a return to doo wop, and for Terry it was writing, singing and reminiscing about his favourite sport, baseball.

By Trevor Churchill



Message From Tommy West:

Greetings from an old doo wopper in New Jersey. Doo wop is still my favourite stuff. My favourite group was the Teenagers, and I believe Frankie Lymon was one of the great voices of all time.

My favourite white group was the Skyliners. Alan Freed used to play our Criterions single ‘I Remain Truly Yours’ on his radio show in April of ’59 following the Skyliners’ ‘Since I Don’t Have You’. We used to ride around in Tim Hauser’s Ford with the windows down and the radio turned up. Great Days

Tommy West

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CD
ARTIST
TOMMY WEST AND TERRY CASHMAN
CATALOGUE NUMBER
CDWIK2 292
LABEL
CHISWICK
TITLE
HOMETOWN FROLICS / TERRY CASHMAN
GENRE
70s Rock
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