FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 11, 2007

SHOUT! FACTORY READIES ‘VEE-JAY: THE DEFINITIVE COLLECTION’
FOR AUGUST 21 RELEASE
Deluxe four-CD box set with extensive liner notes features such Vee-Jay
Records hitmakers as Jimmy Reed, John Lee Hooker, The Four Seasons,
Jerry Butler & the Impressions, The Staple Singers, Betty Everett,
Little Richard, Billy Preston, Gene Chandler, Rosco Gordon, J.B. Lenoir,
Joe Simon, The El Dorados, The Dells, Jimmy Hughes, The Spaniels and
more
LOS ANGELES, Calif. — Vee-Jay Records was the first successful
African-American-owned record company. At various times in its 13-year
tenure, it was bigger than Motown Records and its Chicago rival, Chess
Records. With origins in blues and doo-wop, the label quickly expanded
into rhythm and blues, soul, jazz and gospel. Though it is perhaps
best known as the first American label to release The Beatles’
first album and singles, it is the classic records by Jimmy Reed,
Jerry Butler, John Lee Hooker, The Staple Singers, The Four Seasons,
and countless others that are the label’s most enduring contributions
to popular music.
A hearty selection of Vee-Jay Records’ legendary recordings
has been assembled by Shout! Factory for Vee-Jay: The Definitive
Collection, an 86-track, four-CD anthology with detailed liner
notes by music writers Gerald Early and Michael Ribas. The package
will list for $59.98 and will hit the streets August 21, 2007.
According to Shout! Factory CEO Richard Foos, “Vee-Jay Records
has as incredibly rich legacy, which hasn't always been well-served
in the 40 years since the company went out of business. Thanks to
our collaboration with Vee-Jay Limited Partnership, Vee-Jay: The
Definitive Collection is our attempt to finally do its music
justice, and hopefully introduce it to a new audience as well.
"Featured on the collection are such essential Vee-Jay artists
as Jimmy Reed (“Big Boss Man,” “Baby What You Want
Me To Do”), Jerry Butler & The Impressions (“For Your
Precious Love”), Gene Chandler (“Duke of Earl”),
The Staple Singers (“Will The Circle Be Unbroken”), The
Pips with Gladys Knight (“Every Beat of My Heart”), The
Dells (“Stay In My Corner”), John Lee Hooker (“Boom
Boom”), Dee Clark (“Raindrops”), The Spaniels (“Goodnite
Sweetheart, Goodnite”), Betty Everett (“You’re No
Good”), Elmore James (“It Hurts Me Too”), Little
Richard (“I Don’t Know What You Have But It’s Got
Me”), The El Dorados (“At My Front Door”), Rosco
Gordon (“Just a Little Bit”), Snooky Pryor (“Judgment
Day”), Billy Boy Arnold (“I Wish You Would”), Memphis
Slim (“Steppin’ Out”), J.B. Lenoir (Oh Baby”),
Billy Preston (“Billy’s Bag”), Eddie Harris (“Exodus”),
The Swan Silvertones (“Mary Don’t You Weep”), Hoyt
Axton (“Bring Your Lovin’”) and much, much more.
To give the fullest possible picture of the Vee-Jay story, Shout!
Factory has also licensed in key tracks no longer controlled by Vee-Jay:
The Four Seasons’ “Sherry”, Gloria Jones’s
“Tainted Love” (later a worldwide hit for Soft Cell),
The Honeycombs’ British Invasion hit “Have I The Right,”
and two deep-soul classics, Jimmy Hughes’s “Steal Away”
and Joe Simon’s “Let’s Do It Over.”
Until its demise, Vee-Jay represented the ultimate American success
story. It began in 1953 when husband-and-wife entrepreneurs Vivian
Carter (a DJ at a Gary, Ind., R&B station) and Jimmy Bracken (a
record store owner) borrowed $500 from a pawnbroker to record The
Spaniels’ “Baby, It’s You,” which rose to
the No. 10 position on Billboard’s R&B chart. Later
that year they chanced upon bluesman Jimmy Reed, a worker at a Chicago
slaughterhouse, who became the best-selling blues artist of the ’50s
and ’60s. Relocating from Gary to Chicago, Carter and Bracken
found the talent pool, networks and marketplace just right for a label
like theirs.
Over the next decade, Vee-Jay built itself into a black music powerhouse
that also made strong inroads into the pop market, with acts like
Jerry Butler and The Four Seasons. The label’s success came
to a soaring crescendo in 1964, when some records Vee-Jay had released
to little fanfare two years previous by a group called The Beatles,
suddenly became hugely successful as Beatlemania landed on U.S. shores.
Sadly for Vee-Jay, EMI’s American label, Capitol, promptly decided
that they were entitled to sign the Beatles, though they had passed
on them initially. Due to mismanagement and the vagaries of the music
business, Vee-Jay soon lost its second biggest act, The Four Seasons,
and the company went into financial freefall, though it continued
to release great records right up until its demise in 1966.
Vee-Jay’s achieved many things in its 13-year run: It helped
define the sound of urban blues from the industrial Midwest; it provided
a springboard for the region’s many doo-wop groups; it gave
rise to the sound of Chicago soul and jazz; it made early inroads
to the Southern soul later popularized by Stax and Atlantic; and it
was the first black-owned label to break a major white act, the Four
Seasons. Landing The Beatles came about almost by accident—all
of the rest of it took talent, hard work, and impeccable taste.
For the uninitiated, Vee-Jay: The Definitive Collection will
serve as an enthralling and instructive introduction to this essential
but oft-forgotten label, and savvy Vee-Jay aficionados are sure to
learn a thing or two as well.
Later in 2007, Shout! Factory will follow up the box set with compilations
of Vee-Jay material by Jerry Butler, The Staple Singers, John Lee
Hooker, and The Dells, and will also reissue key albums from the catalog.
DISC ONE:
1. JIMMY REED AND HIS TRIO — High And Lonesome
2. THE SPANIELS — Baby, It’s You
3. THE SPANIELS — Goodnite Sweetheart, Goodnite
4. FLOYD JONES AND BAND — Ain’t Times Hard
5. JIMMY REED AND HIS TRIO — You Don’t Have To Go
6. L.C. McKINLEY — Blue Evening
7. BILLY BOY ARNOLD — I Wish You Would
8. THE EL DORADOS — At My Front Door
9. MORRIS PEJOE — Hurt My Feelings
10. EDDIE TAYLOR — Bad Boy
11. THE HIGHWAY QC’S — Somewhere To Lay My Head
12. JAY McSHANN’S ORCHESTRA, VOCALIST PRISCILLA BOWMAN —
Hands Off
13. THE FIVE ECHOES — Fool’s Prayer
14. EARL PHILLIPS — Oop De Oop
15. THE EL DORADOS WITH AL SMITH’S ORCHESTRA — I’ll
Be Forever Loving You
16. JIMMY REED — Ain’t That Lovin’ You Baby
17. AL SMITH’S COMBO — Fooling Around Slowly
18. THE MAGNIFICENTS — Up On The Mountain
19. EDDIE TAYLOR — Big Town Playboy
20. CAMILLE HOWARD — Rock ’N Roll Mama
21. THE DELLS — Oh What A Nite
DISC TWO:
1. JOHN LEE HOOKER — Dimples
2. PEE WEE CRAYTON — The Telephone Is Ringing
3. SNOOKY PRYOR — Judgment Day
4. THE STAPLE SINGERS — Uncloudy Day
5. SONNY TIL’S ORIOLES — FOR ALL WE KNOW
6. THE DELEGATES — Mother’s Son
7. BILLY EMERSON — The Pleasure’s All Mine
8. JIMMY REED — Honest I Do
9. THE HARMONIZING FOUR — Farther Along
10. GENE ALLISON — You Can Make It If You Try
11. ELMORE JAMES — It Hurts Me Too
12. HANK BALLARD & THE MIDNIGHTERS — The Twist
13. PRISCILLA BOWMAN WITH THE SPANIELS — A Rockin’ Good
Way
14. LEE DIAMOND AND THE UPSETTERS — Hattie Malatti
15. BOBBY PARKER — Blues Get Off My Shoulder
16. JERRY BUTLER & THE IMPRESSIONS — For Your Precious Love
17. LEONARD CARBO — Pigtails And Blue Jeans
18. JOHN LEE HOOKER — I Love You Honey
19. THE ORIGINAL 5 BLIND BOYS OF MISSISSIPPI — Leave You In
The Hands Of The Lord
20. DEE CLARK — Nobody But You
21. SHERIFF & THE RAVELS — Shombalor
22. HAROLD BURRAGE — Crying For My Baby
DISC THREE:
1. THE SWAN SILVERTONES — Mary Don’t You Weep
2. MEMPHIS SLIM — Steppin’ Out
3. ROSCO GORDON — Just A Little Bit
4. JIMMY REED BABY — What You Want Me To Do
5. DONNIE ELBERT — Will You Ever Be Mine
6. THE STAPLE SINGERS — Will The Circle Be Unbroken
7. WADE FLEMONS — Easy Lovin’
8. JOHN LEE HOOKER — No Shoes
9. J.B. LENOIR — Oh Baby
10. JERRY BUTLER — He Will Break Your Heart
11. EDDIE HARRIS — Exodus
12. JIMMY REED — Big Boss Man
13. DEE CLARK — Raindrops
14. THE PIPS WITH GLADYS KNIGHT — Every Beat Of My Heart
15. THE SALLIE MARTIN SINGERS — Old Ship Of Zion
16. JIMMY REED — Bright Lights, Big City
17. THE DUKAYS — Nite Owl
18. GENE CHANDLER — Duke Of Earl
19. THE MOONGLOWS — Real Gone Mama
20. THE “5” ROYALES — Help Me Somebody
21. JOHN LEE HOOKER — Boom Boom
DISC FOUR:
1. CHRISTINE KITTRELL — I’m A Woman
2. JERRY BUTLER — Make It Easy On Yourself
3. THE FOUR SEASONS — Sherry
4. GENE CHANDLER — Rainbow
5. THE PYRAMIDS — Shakin’ Fit
6. BIRDLEGS & PAULINE AND THEIR VERSATILITY BIRDS — Spring
7. AKI ALEONG & THE NOBLES — Body Surf
8. BETTY EVERETT — YOU’RE NO GOOD
9. THE ORIGINAL BLIND BOYS OF ALABAMA — I Can See Everybody’s
Mother
10. BETTY EVERETT — The Shoop Shoop Song (It’s In His
Kiss)
11. JIMMY HUGHES — Steal Away
12. THE HONEYCOMBS — Have I The Right
13. JERRY BUTLER & BETTY EVERETT — Let It Be Me
14. HOYT AXTON — Bring Your Lovin’
15. BETTY EVERETT — Getting Mighty Crowded
16. THE CARAVANS — Walk Around Heaven All Day
17. GLORIA JONES — Tainted Love
18. BILLY PRESTON — Billy’s Bag
19. THE DELLS — Stay In My Corner
20. FRED HUGHES — Oo Wee Baby, I Love You
21. JOE SIMON — Let’s Do It Over
22. LITTLE RICHARD — I Don’t Know What You’ve Got
But It’s Got Me
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