Mel Carter - When A Boy Falls In Love


Label:

Abkco

Genre:

R&B/Soul

Product No.:
AABK 99851
UPC: 018771998518
Availability:
In Stock
Category:

Vinyl Record



$25.98

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Mel Carter's album for Sam Cooke's label!

Rated 4 Stars by Billboard magazine

Unavailable and much sought-after since its 1963 release!

Mel Carter's first full-length album, When A Boy Falls In Love, originally released in 1963, will soon be back in print. ABKCO, steward of Sam Cooke's SAR Records catalog of which this title is part, is reissuing the album, including the hit title track and 11 other selections, on LP. When A Boy Falls In Love, originally awarded 4-stars by Billboard, has long been unavailable and much sought after by collectors over the decades since its initial release 58 years ago. The title track spent 10 weeks on the pop chart after its release.

Like Sam Cooke, Mel Carter's roots are in gospel music. He was a prodigy whose first recordings were made when he was a child in his hometown of Cincinnati. The two first met in the early 1950s, when Carter's group The Robert Anderson Singers shared a bill with Cooke's group The Soul Stirrers while touring on the gospel circuit.

Years later, Mel Carter moved to Los Angeles and reconnected with Cooke who was one of the biggest names in the business. Cooke, along with manager J.W. Alexander and former Soul Stirrer Senior Roy Crain had started SAR Records in 1959 and it was the label home of numerous artists including, 16-year-old Billy Preston, gospel stars The Soul Stirrers, The Valentinos, a group consisting of Bobby Womack and his four brothers, soul man Johnnie Morisette, Sam's brother L.C. Cooke, and secular R&B recordings by Johnnie Taylor who came to SAR with The Soul Stirrers.

J.W. Alexander saw Carter at a downtown Los Angeles jazz club and suggested he come to SAR's office on Hollywood Boulevard. Carter showed up the next day and Cooke soon signed him to a recording contract.

Now in his early 80s, Carter recalls, "Sam liked my phrasing as I was as adept as he was at fitting the lyric to the melody." Cooke wrote "When A Boy Falls In Love" and arranged for Carter to track it at United Recording in Hollywood with J. W. Alexander and Fred Smith producing. The February 25, 1963 session was engineered by Bones Howe, who would later work with a wide range of artists including The 5th Dimension, Johnny Rivers, Elvis Presley and Tom Waits.

"When a Boy Falls In Love" was not released on SAR, but rather on the newly established Derby label that Cooke and Alexander, at the urging of SAR office manager Zelda Samuels (and Carter's future manager), had earmarked for pop-oriented material. By the time summer ended, the single had spent 10 weeks on both the pop and R&B charts and was named a "Breakout Single" by Billboard in June 1963. To this day, Carter delights in noting, "It was the first crossover record from a black-owned company."

Wink Martindale, the disc jockey who was one of the first to play Elvis Presley on the air in1954 when he was with WHBQ in Memphis, was a popular personality at KFWB, the powerhouse LA Top 40 radio station whose studios were down the street from SAR's Hollywood office. Underscoring Mel Carter's pop/crossover appeal, Martindale was enlisted to write the album's liner notes, included with the faithfully restored package. R&B scholar Bill Dahl has been enlisted to add current-day liner notes to the LP.

 

 



Side A
1. Time Of Young Love
2. We'll Bless Each Day With Our Love
3. So Wonderful
4. When I Fall In Love
5. Twelfth Of Never
6. Why I Call Her Mine

Side B
1. When A Boy Falls In Love
2. Hold Me
3. For Your Love
4. Wonderful Love
5. After The Parting The Meeting Is Sweeter
6. You Can Count On Me

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