Out To Get You - Tamla Motown 1965
FUNCTION AT THE JUNCTION - 1966
Night Fo' Last
CHANTILLY LACE (orig Big Bopper) - Tamla
Motown 1966
Here Come The Judge - Tamla Motown 1968
Devil With The Blue Dress On (covered superbly well by Mitch Ryder)
A
small man with a descriptive nickname; Shorty Long. Function At The Junction
was by far the best remembered and most played of Shorty Long's recordings. It
was one of those recordings that defined the soul music
scene in Manchester in the mid sixties.Tragically, he was killed in a sailing accident in 1968.
HERE COME THE JUDGE was covered by Pigmeat Markham
- Here Comes The Judge/The Trial (CRS 8077), UK,
in 1968
CD SLEEVE NOTES: SHORTY LONG: ESSENTIAL COLLECTION
Standing a little over five feet in height, Frederick Earl Long
(aka Shorty Long) was one of the funkiest singers to record at Motown Records. Long
was born on May 20, 1940, in Birmingham, AL. While growing up he learned about
music from people like Alvin 'Shine' Robinson and W.C. Handy. The
multi-talented singer could play piano, organ, drums, guitar, trumpet,
harmonica, and was probably an excellent hand clapper. In Birmingham he worked
as a DJ, toured with The Inkspots,
and gigged at club called Old Stables. In 1959, Long moved to Detroit, caught
the ear of Harvey Fuqua and cut two singles for the
Tri-Phi label. 'I'll Be Here,' backed with 'Bad Willie,'
came out in 1962 and went unnoticed; the follow-up, 'Too Smart,'
released later in the year, stiffed as well. Harvey,
tired of fighting with distributors and doing all the things it takes to run a
label, decided to sell his operation to Berry Gordy
and Shorty Long
became a Motown artist.
His first release, 'Devil With the Blue Dress On,' was a
slow bluesy grinder with a stinging solo guitar that accented the break. Long
and William 'Mickey' Stevenson wrote 'Devil' and it had all the ingredients of a
hit but, for some reason, didn't chart. (Detroiter Mitch Ryder
recorded 'Devil' at a frantic pace, and the energy propelled the song
to the fourth position on Billboard's pop chart.) His next release, 'It's
a Crying Shame,' did nothing. Then came what should have been a million
seller -- Long's funky name-dropping soulful 'Function at the
Junction'; written by Shorty Long
and Eddie Holland, the song had it all -- funky beat, soulful singing, good
lyrics, danceability, everything -- yet, it only climbed to the number 97
position on the pop chart in 1966. His classic remake of the Big Bopper's
'Chantilly Lace' received some spins but failed to impact, despite a
cool spoken intro by Long and a rollicking honky tonk piano. Ironically, his
next release, 'Night Fo' Last,' went to number 75 on Billboard's Top
100, 22 slots better than 'Function,' and the song isn't half as
good, a good effort that got lost in the mix.
Shorty had to wait until 1968 before he had his first bona fide hit in
the music business. 'Here Comes the Judge' was a popular catch
phrase, partly because of Flip Wilson,
but it was funnyman Pig Meat Markam who really coined the phrase years earlier.
'Here Comes the Judge,' a funky record (all of Shorty's
recordings are funky), had some nifty lyrics and a percolating, bubbling beat,
and zoomed all the way to number eight on the charts. An excellent LP was released,
which included his hits, should-have-been hits, and some new stuff like
'Don't Mess With My Weekends' and 'Here Comes Fat Albert.'
Oddly, 'It's a Crying Shame' and 'Chantilly Lace' weren't
included, nor were the Tri-Phi singles. Sadly, just when Shorty's
career was about to take off and his talent recognized, he died in a boating
accident with friend Oscar Williams on June 29, 1969, on the Detroit River.
Motown released a second LP, The Prime of Shorty Long, and like the first it
showcased the many talents of the diminutive singer. Before his death, Motown
allowed Shorty
to produce himself; the only other Motown singer allowed to do this was Smokey
Robinson.
The late Earl Van Dyke, Motown's session pianist, says Shorty
used to come in and say, 'Today we ain't playing nuthin' but funk, if you
don't feel funky, take a drink of this,' and then he'll reach in his coat
and pull out a bottle of liquor.
SHORTY LONG: ESSENTIAL COLLECTION - UK compilation:
Here Comes The Judge,
Don't Mess With My Weekend,
Night Fo' Last,
Function At The
Junction,
Sing What You Wanna,
Here Comes Fat Albert,
Ain't No Justice,
Lillie
Of The Valley,
Baby Come Home To Me,
Devil With The Blue Dress On,
Out To Get
You,
People Sure Act Funny,
Your Love's Amazing,
Another Hurt Like
This, I
Cross My Heart,
I Had A Dream,
I Wish You Were Here,
Night Fo' Last
(Instrumental)
Pigmeat and Shorty battled it out in the charts with Here Come The Jude which
became a catch phrase on the TV Comedy Show Rowan And Martins Laugh In -
very interesting - and I DO like it!