I’ll tell ye a yarn of days of old When swords were heavy and castles cold. Or yarns of the sailor types And fishermen as common as snipes. Then there’s the yarn for the Knit and Natter. And the crochet ladies with hooks to batter. The sailors as they yarn their sails And fishermen telling yarns of Whales. Damsels sewing yarn in their tapestry Locked in chastity belts dying for a pee. The Knights returning to their castles cold. Regaling them with yarns so bold. So I’ll tell you a yarn bright and new I shall spin you a yarn, because thats what I do.
Good morning everyone it’s Sunday and time for our host, Jim Adams to give us our Song Lyric Sunday prompt which this week is the theme of Old, New, Borrowed, Blue.
I have chosen Something old something new by the Fantastics. I am sure lots of people will choose this one too! I have chosen it because it was realeased in 1971 the year I married hubby, that’s 50years ago? WHAT! yes in August we will if been married 50 years…how?
Anyway I remember my mum telling me I had to have, something old, something new, something borrowed and something blue.
Well I my wedding ring was my mother’s, mother’s wedding ring so that was old, my wedding dress was new and made by one of my sisters, I have to be honest I was lent something but for the life of me I can’t remember what it was or who lent me it, though I am sure it was one of my sisters in law, and my engagement ring was a blue sapphire. So mum was happy, because she was a very superstitious woman and had a saying for every event.
The Velours were an American R&Bvocal group. who had two minor pop hits in the US in the late 1950s, “Can I Come Over Tonight” and “Remember”. They relocated to England in the late 1960s, changed their name to The Fantastics, and had a top ten hit in the UK in 1971 with “Something Old, Something New”, followed by a minor US hit with “(Love Me) Love the Life I Lead”.
The group originally formed as The Troubadours in the Bedford-Stuyvesant area of Brooklyn in 1953. The original members were Jerome “Romeo” Ramos (tenor; May 15, 1937 – October 21, 2012), John Cheatdom (tenor; born 1938), Marvin Holland (bass) and Sammy Gardner (lead). In 1955, Gardner left to join the army and was replaced by Cheatdom’s cousin, Kenneth Walker. The doo-wop group performed locally, but with little success until in 1956 they added a fifth singer, tenor Donald Haywoode (August 24, 1936 – August 9, 2015), and changed their name to The Velours. They made their first recordings for the Onyx label, before Holland and Walker left and were replaced by John Pearson and Charles Moffitt (September 6, 1929 – December 1986). They also added a pianist, Calvin McClean.
Over the next two years they made some of their best-remembered records for Onyx, including “Can I Come Over Tonight”, written by Haywoode, which reached number 83 on the Billboardpop chart in 1957. They had further chart success the following year with “Remember”, with Ramos as lead vocalist, which again reached number 83.The group also recorded an LP, Remember with the Velours. They regularly performed at the Apollo Theater, and shared stages with such stars as Roy Brown, Fats Domino, Larry Williams and Bo Diddley. After adding a sixth singer, Troy Keyes, they recorded for several small New York labels through the late 1950s and early 1960s, including George Goldner‘s Gone, but with little success, and the original group disbanded in 1961. In 1966, Ramos, Cheatdom and Haywoode decided to reform the Velours, adding tenor Richard Pitts. In 1967, they released the single “I’m Gonna Change” on MGM Records, and agreed to undertake a tour in England.
When they arrived in Britain, they discovered that they were to be billed as The Fabulous Temptations, and were expected to perform Motown songs. However, they toured successfully and were invited to return, in 1968, by Sheffield club owner Peter Stringfellow, this time under another new name, The Fantastics.They decided to remain in Britain, and recorded several singles released on MGM and then on the Deram label in England. They then signed to Bell Records, and released “Something Old, Something New”, a song written and produced by top British songwriters Tony Macaulay, Roger Greenaway, and Roger Cook, based on a traditional rhyme. The song rose to number 9 on the UK singles chart in 1971,and reached number 102 in the US. and number 41 in Australia.
Although its follow-ups were less successful, the group remained a popular live attraction in Britain for several years, though with several personnel changes. In 1972, they recorded “(Love Me) Love the Life I Lead”, written by Macaulay and Greenaway and produced by Greenaway, which reached number 86 on the US Billboard pop chart, but did not chart in Britain. Pitts left in 1972, later becoming a lecturer at the University of Huddersfield, as well as working with another vocal group, The Invitations. Pitts’ role in The Fantastics was part of a BBC Radio Four documentary by his son, the journalist and photographer Johny Pitts entitled ‘Something Old Something New’, named after the group’s hit record. Both Ramos and Cheatdom also left in the mid-1970s, leaving Donald Haywoode as the only original member. By 1986, the Fantastics were still performing in Britain, on the nightclub and cabaret circuit, as a trio comprising Haywoode, Elvin Hayes, and Emma St. John. More information here.
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