PONY TIME - Arnold 1960
MERCY MERCY - Atlantic
Sometimes
SEE SAW
SOOKIE SOOKIE
It's Better To Have
40 Days and 40 Nights
Shingaling '67 /I Was There (584082), UK, 1967, Red Atlantic
Donald Randolph was Don Covey and he was born on 24, March 1938, in Orangeburg, SC and
guess what, yes another gospel singer in his familiy's gospel group as a
teenager - the Cherry-Keys. He moved to Washington, D.C. and joined the
Rainbows with
Marvin Gaye, John Berry, and
Billy Stewart in the
1950s and did a
recording for
Little Richard -
Bip Bop Bip.
See Saw reached the charts in the UK and got to number 5
in the USA R 'n B chart. At the
Twisted Wheel in
Manchester by this time the
fulcrum of the Soul Scene in the North of England
this track was deservedly a gigantic success. It started a dance craze with people doing
the up down bits literally and others doing swaying left and right motions with
outstretched arms imitating a seesaw (yes, I know but you had to be there I
suppose).
See Saw was recorded at Stax, and you can
tell. It has the Mar-keys and
Booker T and the MG’s backing Don
which added depth to the track. It was re-recorded by Aretha and hers was distinctly
different.

In
1968 Don re-emerged as part of the
Soul Clan, with
Solomon
Burke,
Arthur Conley,
Ben E. King, and
Joe Tex for
Soul Meeting.
In
1973
I Was Checkin' out While She Was Checkin'
In, was his biggest hit.
The biggest chart success for one of his songs was
Pony
Time but not for himself, it was re-recorded by
Chubby Checker
and made it to number one in the USA.
Don Covay was also an R 'n B and soul songwriter as well as
an artist. He worked at the Brill Building as a songwriter when he met Jerry
Wexler who signed him to Atlantic records as a singer and a songwriter
- he did
Chain of Fools for
Aretha Franklin and
I Don't Know What You
Got But It's Got Me for Little Richard.
The Don Covay Story-
Billy Vera ©
August 1994
Talk about your cult figures. This is a guy who the public knows
almost nothing about, yet he has been worshiped and lionized by rock 'n' roll
musicians on both sides of the Atlantic for decades. Known primarily as a
facile and prolific songwriter-his tunes have been recorded by artists ranging
from Aretha Franklin to Bonnie Raitt, from
Lena
Horne to Fabian-Don Covey was also an influential singer and performer.Some of Don's more successful songs include "Pony
Time," Chubby Checker; "Letter Full Of Tears,"
Gladys Knight
& The Pips; "You Can Run (But You Can't Hide),"
Jerry Butler;
"Long Tall Shorty,"
Tommy Tucker, the
Kinks; "The Continenta
Walk,"
Hank Ballard & the Midnighters; and "Three Time
Loser,"
Wilson Pickett. Pop performers (like the
Small Faces with Rod
Stewart,
Robert Palmer, Phoebe Snow, Dave Edmunds, Paul Young, Steppenwolf,
Peter Wolf, Connie Francis and the
Spencer Davis Group) and R&B artists
(like Otis Redding,
Etta James,
Bobby Womack,
Ben E. King,
Solomon Burke, Randy
Crawford and Little Richard) all benefitted from Don Covay's extraordinary
songcraft.It is no secret that Mick Jagger has sipped at the font of
the Don. With the
Rolling Stones, Mick cut a version of Don's "Mercy
Mercy," a year after the version heard here, on the Stones'album "Out
Of Our Heads." Jagger's style and phrasing throughout his career can be
traced to that of Covay's, making the latter's singing style far more familiar
to the world at large than either his voice or his name.Born the son of a Baptist minister in Orangeburg, South
Carolina in March of 1938, Don moved with his mother, his seven brothers and
his sister to Washington, D.C. in the early fifties. While performing with the
family gospel group, the Cherry Keys, he discovered the joys of the devil's
music at places like the Howard Theater, D.C.'s stop on the
"Chitlin'Circuit"-that route of Eastern Seaboard theaters both loved
and despised by generations of travelling black vaudeville acts.
Ever since Duke Ellington, numerous important black
entertainers have called Washington D.C. home. In the fifties and sixties, the
Clovers,
Billy Stewart and Marvin Gaye
all came from D.C.
Additionally,
New Orleans'
Lloyd Price and
Chicago's
Bo Diddley each moved there for a time
at certain points in their respective careers. There were, too, dozens of
obscure acts who made one or two records through the efforts of record store
owners like Max Silverman (Waxie Maxie) of Ouality Records or Lilian Claiborne.
Acts like Frank Motley & his Crew, T.N.T. Tribble, the Heartbreakers and
the Topps never played at the White House, but were local favorites.
In 1953, the city's Lincoln Heights gave birth to a new
vocal group, one of many to form in the wake of the success of Washington's
Clovers and sister city Baltimore's Orioles. They
called
themselves the Rainbows. By 1955, the group released the
minor doo-wop classic, "Mary Lee," for Harlem record shop owner Bobby
Robinson's Red Robin label. The record was re-released a year later on Pilgrim
and saw some regional action.
Like so many teenage groups whose memberships were in
constant flux, after "Mary Lee" the Rainbows lost all of its members
except lead singer Ronald Miles and lead songwriter John Berry. Berry then
recruited Chester Simmons and young Don Covay for the group. These four
recorded "Shirley" for Pilgrim and "Minnie" for Rama. Both
recordings flopped, despite local airplay, courtesy of their manager Washington
disc jockey Jay Ferry who hosted a show on WOL. Don recalled, "Ferry was
one of the first 'ofay' DJs to play soul music and he had a hell of a
following."
Billy Stewart and Marvin Gaye occasionally filled in for
absent Rainbows on live gigs, giving rise to rumors that they recorded with the
group. Actually, Simmons, James Nolan (another former Rainbow) and Gaye became
members of the Marquees, a group produced for OKeh by Bo Diddley, where they
backed Stewart and had one release of their own. With the addition of the
Dolls' Chuck Barksdale, the Marquees became the new
Moonglows, backing Harvey
Fuqua. Fuqua took Marvin Gaye to
Detroit, where they each married one of
Berry Gordy's
sisters, which turned out to be a couple of good career moves.
Meanwhile, Covay had seen Little Richard in person and had
an epiphany. "Little Richard represented what I wanted to be. He was, and
still is, my idol," said Don in later years, "He was a $15,000 a
night act!" Don managed to get a job as Richard's chauffeur, doing double
duty as his opening act. This led to his first solo recording, backed by
Richard's band, the Upsetters, for Atlantic. Don had copied Richard's high,
processed pompadour, which led Richard to give Covay the moniker "Pretty
Boy"-a misnomer if there ever was one. "Bip Bop Bip," one of the
great overlooked-at-the-time rockers, came and went without causing a stir in
July 1957.
Next stop was Juggy Murray's Sue label, where he cut one
single as Don Covay (written under his real name, Donald Randolph), then to Big
Records for another record as Pretty Boy. The business at large saw Don's
talent and gave him chance after chance, but nothing seemed to click with the
public-yet.
Don began writing songs with his old pal from the Rainbows,
John Berry. Together, they came up with a tune based on the old Hank Ballard
& the Midnighters "Sexy Ways," a dance song called "Pony
Time." A Philadelphia label named Arnold put it out under Don's name and
it made enough noise to be noticed by the powers at Cameo/ Parkway, who
proceeded to cover the tune with their more famous (and more telegenic) artist,
Chubby Checker. As he had done with
his cover of Hank Ballard's "The
Twist,"
thanks to Dick Clark and American Bandstand, Chubby took "Pony Time"
to number one on both the pop and R&B charts in February of 1962. At BMI
royalty statement time, Covay and Berry quickly learned that the real money in
the music business was in songwriting.
Another Philly act quickly latched on to Covay-Berry gems. Fabian recorded their "Hold On" and
"Tongue Tied" on Chancellor. Still, various labels kept taking shots
with Don as an artist. Big Top released "I'm Coming Down With The
Blues," but Don was becoming better-known as a songwriter than as a
singer. Yet, Don still had eyes to become a star.
Then, after years of Mitch Miller's antirock'n'roll reign of
terror, Columbia decided to go into the rock'n'roll business. They signed
Dion and Don Covay. Dion, of course, hit big with
"Ruby Baby" and "Donna, The Prima Donna," while Cove failed
to score. The failure of Don's three Columbia releases says more about the
company's inability to promote R&B than about the quality of the records,
as a listen to the sides here will confirm. Frank Loesser's "(Where Are
You) Now That I Need You" (previously recorded on the Rainbows' old label,
Red Robin, by the Mello-Moods) is a nice slice of the retro doo-wop so popular
in 1961, the era of the first "oldies" revival. "See About
Me" is a Ben E. King-styled item, complete with faux Leiber & Stoner
production.
Back in Philadelphia, Don signed with Cameo/ Parkway for a
series of singles, one of which, "Popeye Waddle," a variation on the
1962 New Orleans dance craze, made it to #75. More hits to Covay as a writer
piled up:
Jerry Butler's "You Can
Run (But You Can't Hide)," Gladys Knight & the Pips'"Letter Full
Of Tears" and the ever-popular "Mr. Twister" by Connie Francis.
In 1964, Don's old boss, Little Richard, cut "l Don't
Know What You've Got But It's Got Me," witl guitar licks courtesy of a
fledgling Jimi Hendrix, then a member of Richard's Upsetters. Around this time,
Don also wrote, with
Wilson Pickett,
the Wicked One's first Atlantic side, "I'm Gonna Cry," which features
another great, but lesser known guitar player, the amazing master of tremolo
and former Ohio Untouchable,
Robert Ward-who has been recently rediscovered and
recorded by Black Top Records.
Around this time, Don started doing demos at A-1 Studio on
Broadway, owned and operated by
Herb Abramson,
one of the founders of
Atlantic Records. Herb says, "Don and I co-wrote
'Long Tall Shorty' as a follow-up to Tommy Tucker's 'High Heel Sneakers,' both
of which I produced. 'Long Tall Shorty' is still one of the most active songs
in my catalog' thanks to the constant reissuing of the
Kinks
record."
WWRL disc jockey the Magnificent Montague, backed the
session at A-1 which produced Covay's first major hit as an artist, "Mercy
Mercy." The record came out on Montague's Rosemart label, named after his
wife, Rose, and his son, Martin. Rosemart was picked up for distribution by
Atlantic and, after the second record, "Take This Hurt Off Me," the
artist was absorbed into the main label where he was to begin his most prolific
period. Montague moved on to
Los Angeles,
where he became infamous as the originator of the phrase, "Burn, Baby,
Burn," the rallying cry of the 1965 Watts Riots.
"Mercy Mercy" was one of those magical records
that turned both musicians and the masses on their ears. It was R&B; it was
soul and it was rock'n'roll, too. It was a guitar band's idea of the New
Orleans piano-driven rhythm of the line. The 1964
New
York World's Fair had brought
Joe Jones's Crescent City band to one of
the pavilions and, as I recall, those guys had all the club musicians in town
talking. The way the bass player (somebody named "Preacher") and the
drummer (Charles "Honeyman" Otis) had the beat turned around from the
way most musicians were used to playing, it was simply the dawn of a new era.
Chart positions can be misleading. there ares many
factors-not the least of which is payola- used in determining them. In 1964,
the relative popularity of black records was even more difficult to determine
because Billboard magazine had discontinued its R&B chart. Who knows
how "Mercy Mercy" might have
gone had there been a R&B chart at the time? As it was, all we have to go
by is the pop chart, where it reached #35. By comparison, in 1965, after
Billboard had reinstate their R&B chart, Don's'See Saw" reached #5
R&B with a mere #44 Pop showing.
At this point in the history of Atlantic Records there were
two camps.
Ahmet Ertegun had seen the writing on the wall and began to sign a
number of the white acts-which would turn the Companyinto a major label.
Jerry Wexler, on the other hand continued to
record the majority of the label's black artists. Wexler had begun to record
outside of New York in places like
Memphis. Wexler:
"I think dry-rot set in. The arrangers were out of ideas, the players were
out of licks. Our ears had become dull and we were making the same record.''
Like all of Atlantic's R&B artists of the period, Covay
was dispatched to the favored studio of the moment. First it was Stax, then
Chips Moman's American Sound (both in
Memphis). Then it was Rick Hall's Fame Studios in
Muscle
Shoals; when Hall's staff became dissatisfied with his pay structure,
Wexler bankrolled the band in their own studio, Muscle Shoals Sound.
At Stax, artists had the additional luxury of cowriters like
Steve Cropper, who assisted on "See Saw" and "Sookie Sookie,"
or Booker T. Jones and
Eddie Floyd, who,
with Cropper, wrote "Iron Out The Rough Spots." Don's work in the
Memphis and Muscle Shoals studios had that little something extra which set him
apart from other soul artists of the day, something which qualified him as a
rock'n'roll, as much as an R&B performer. I have always felt that, until
The Band came along, these were the last authentic rock'n'roll, as opposed to
'rock," recordings.
During his Atlantic period, Don continued to get tunes cut
by other artists, notably "Watch Dog" and "I'm Gonna Take What
He's Got" by
Etta James and
"Think About It" and 'demonstration" by Otis Redding. His
biggest songwriting successes were with a pair of top-tenners by Aretha
Franklin, her remake of ''See Saw" and a fifteen-year-old song Don had
submitted to Wexler for the Sweet
Inspirations,
"Chain Of Fools.'' Jerry says, "I crossed him up on that one... and
fattened his wallet in the process."
But Covay's own recording career had reached an impasse, so
he began taking what seems now like desperate measures. First, he organized the
Soul Clan, a one-off "group" of Atlantic stars including Solomon
Burke,
Arthur Conley, Ben E. King,
Joe Tex and himself for a minor chart maker
called "Soul Meeting." Again Wexler "He put that one together so
he could be in it."Another ill-conceived attempt was the Jefferson Lemon
Blues Band, which featured former
Shirelles
guitarist Joe Richardson and
John Hammond, a favorite of the Greenwich Village
coffee housefolk/blues crowd. The
album, recorded at Herb Abramson's A-1 Studio, was aimed at what was then called the "Underground"
audience. In 1970, Atlantic's brand of Southern soul wasbeginning to dry up as well. Jerry Wexler
had set up shop and residence in Miami, along with the company's master engineer,
Tom Dowd. Meanwhile, bands like
Led Zeppelin
and Crosby, Stills & Nash were turning Atlantic into a different animal. In
two years, the Spinners, as dished up
with the lush arrangements of
Thom Bell's Philly Sound, would forever change the premier
soul label. In 1972, Don left Atlantic
and cut a critically acclaimed album
for Janus which failed to sell. A
year later he took a job at Mercury as an A&R man, with the freedom
to make his own records as he desired.
Running counter to the current soul
trends, he made two masterful and unique albums," Super dude" and "Hot
Blood." One single, "Overtime Man," a take-off on
Betty Wright's "Clean-up Woman,"
didn't meet its sales expectations.
I remember in
the summer of 1973, driving in my car and hearing "I Was Checkin' Out
While She Was Checkin' In" and, not recognizing the artist, I thought I
was hearing the best record The Rolling
Stones had ever made. At the end, when the jock announced it was Covay, I was overjoyed, thinking my hero had just made the record of the
year. It reached #6 R&B and
#29 Pop, a respectable showing but
hardly the Grammy-winner it deserved to be. In 1974 "It's Better To Have
(And Don't Need)" copped the same gospel quartet feel as Paul Simon's hit,
"Love Me Like A Rock," but minus the huge pop success. This must have
brought Don back to his youth, when he sang gospel with his brothers John and
Sammy and his brother-in-law Julius in the Cherry Keys.
After Mercury, it was back to Philadelphia, where Covay
joined forces with Gamble & Huff, at their Philadelphia International label
for one album, "Travelin' In Heavy Traffic," which contained the
single "No Tell Motel." The album did not sell and, except for a
couple of small label items, not much has been heard from Covey since.
In 1993, Joe Ferry and Jon Tiven produced a tribute album of
various artists doing versions of Covay tunes. Also, the Rhythm & Blues
Foundation, honored Don Covay with one of its prestigious Pioneer Awards. Unlike
most "prestigious" awards, this one comes with a nice, healthy check.
Sadly, a combination of a recent stroke and a New York blizzard kept the Don
away from the night's festivities.
Don Covay's songs continue to be sung, played and recorded.
His records are still played by musicians, turning their friends on to yet
another unheard Covay gem, and now some of the best of Don's output has finally
seen the laser light of CD.
Billy Vera
August 1994