
On the Toddlin' Town label, Cash
scored his last hit record, 'Keep On Dancing' (#38 R and
B Cash Box).
He left Toddlin' Town in 1969, and thereafter his
releases were intermittent. Labels he subsequently recorded for included Chess,
Westbound, Seventy-Seven, XL, 'Dakar,
Midway, Gateway and Triple T.
Cash had a few bit parts in movies, playing the lead of The
Five Satins in The Buddy Holly Story (1978), and appearing in
Petey Wheatstraw (1978), Black
Jack (1979) and Freedom Road
(1979, with Muhammad Ali).
In the last 15 years, Cash sustained himself primarily in
the entertainment business as a blues club MC. Occasionally he would
perform, often on the same bill, with Ruby Andrews.
Indeed, his last job was MC'ing and performing with Andrews at a show at the
East Of The Ryan in
Cash's funeral was held in Chicago on Nov. 29. He will be interred in
Entertainers and musicians who attended the funeral included
Butler, Chandler, Thompson, Tyrone
Davis, Artie 'Blues Boy' White, Phil Guy, Lonnie Brooks,
A.C. Reed, Otis Clay,
Gene Barge, Willie Henderson, Chuck Barksdale (of the Dells), DJs Herb Kent
and Pervis Spann, and Greg Parker, founder of the
Chicago Blues Museum and currently playing guitar with Isaac Hayes.
Cash is survived by his wife, Delores Hammond Cash, six
daughters, two sons, six brothers, and one sister.
Robert P CHICAGO - Alvin Cash, who had a hit in 1963 with
the dance tune ``It's Twine Time,'' died Nov. 21. He was 60.
Cash died in his sleep at his Chicago home. The cause of death was not
determined, though he had been suffering from stomach problems.
A native of 'St. Louis,
Cash started his career as a tap dancer and performed with his brother in a
group called the Step Brothers. He started singing later, hitting the Chicago scene with his
group Alvin Cash and the Registers.
``It's Twine Time'' earned them appearances on shows hosted
by Dick Clark and Ed Sullivan. Follow-up dance tunes included ``The Funky
Washing Machine,'' ``The Ali Shuffle'' and ``The Philly Freeze.''
All together now: 'It's Twine...time! Ooh, ahh, ooh, ahh, ooh, ahh....'
Despite being an instrumental, 'Twine Time' was banned
from a lot of radio station because of its suggestive 'lyrics.' But
that didn't stop Alvin Cash's hunk o' funk from hitting #13 pop and #4 R and
B
in early 1965.
Cash was born Alvin Welch in St. Louis on February 15, 1939,
and formed the Crawlers as a song and dance troupe in 1960 with his brothers
Robert, Arthur and George (all ages 8-10). In 1963, Cash went to Chicago to see if he
could cut a record.
Andre
Williams (who had the 1957 R and
B hit, 'Bacon Fat') was
a producer and talent scout for George Learner's One-derful!/Mar-V-Lus/M-Pac
family of labels. He had caught the Cash brothers' act, and approached Alvin about yelling some
lines on a new dance disc that Williams planned to call 'Twine Time.'
Cash came in with the Nightliners, a band he was
touring with at the time. The back-up unit subsequently changed its name to the
Crawlers, and later to the Registers.