Recently I’ve had the great privilege of corresponding
with Annette Palazzo. Annette is a
talented rock photographer who has taken pictures of some of the biggest acts
in music: her shots of Led Zeppelin, the Police and XTC on stage in New York
are just amazing. Better still, for lovers of bad music, Annette is the niece
of the late James ‘Jack’ Covais,
founder of the Tin Pan Alley
song-poem company, and she and her mother have been kind enough to not only
share their memories with me but to allow me to share them with you.
A quick recap: Busy since the early 50s, and now with a
reputation among serious doo-wop collectors for the quality of some of the
company’s earliest output, Tin Pan Alley
churned out hundreds of singles over the next three decades – so many that
no-one has yet managed to pull together a complete discography: given the company’s
confusing cataloguing system (especially in their later years when they
introduced the imprints TPA and Pageant Records) that’s hardly a
surprise. Tin Pan Alley was founded,
initially as a sheet music operation, in 1941 by Jack Covais a songwriter who, unable to hook up with an established
publisher, wound up self-publishing instead. By 1943 he was already dabbling in
song-poem publishing and by 1952 Tin Pan
Alley had become a full-blown record company: their first release came out
on both 10” 78 and 7” 45 that year, with both sides penned by Covais himself.
Initially the company began by providing custom pressing and musical
arrangement work for small bands and artists keen enough to get a record out to
self-finance the project. It’s some of these records (by acts like the Melloharps and Teacho Wiltshire) which can now fetch hundreds of dollars and,
because of that, have been widely bootlegged.
jack, it should be noted, was pretty serious about his business, forming his own publishing company (Juke Box Alley) and copyrighting his compositions. He was not adverse to taking the big boys to court either if he felt his copyright had been infringed: in 1957 he sued Atlantic Records over their Laverne Baker hit Tra La La, which he claimed copied his own Check Your Heart and CBS over their tune I Hope You Don't Know What You're Doing which, he believed, ripped off his composition What's It Gonna get You. Litigious he may have been, but it didn't seem to bother the Brooklyn-based Covais too much that
there was already an outfit called Tin Pan Alley, run by Frank Capano in
Philadelphia, which issued its first recordings in 1946.
Says Annette: “Jack
Covais, who owned Tin Pan Alley,
was my uncle through marriage. He was married to my dad's sister Lena. As a
kid, my Aunt Lena would give all her adult siblings, as well as her nieces and
nephews, Tin Pan Alley 45s.
“It was difficult to gauge what my aunt actually thought
about these songs, she was a woman of few words, though I do remember that the
family would always put these recordings on for a laugh during the Holidays and
for family get-togethers! There are some real doozies in the TPA catalogue: Are You Willing/Working Overtime by Teacho Wiltshire (TPA 142/3) was a
particular favourite of mine. ‘Performing the One and Only Rock 'n' Roll Waltz!’
was added to the A side!
“When I got older, I'd make mix tapes for work, adding on
some of the Tin Pan Alley tunes.
Teacho worked with King Pleasure, Solomon
Burke and Wilson Pickett, it was
clear Teacho was a professional, but not from the sounds of this recording! He
was more of a band leader and pianist, than a singer. Since Teacho is the only
one listed on this single, the assumption was that he was the singer, whoever
was singing on this 45. We LOVED these songs at work; they really got us
through the monotony of the day and 'working overtime'! When I Found Love, by Phil
Celia (TPA 279), is another awesomely horrible tune; a guy at my former
office would croon along when I put on the tape. I always wonder, had my Uncle
Jack lived longer, perhaps he would have worked with Weird Al or some other
music parody artist, because I still cannot believe Jack truly thought these
inept recordings were serious, well-made pop music!
“My Uncle Jack, who died around 1964, actually worked
with some famous musicians. He recorded a song with R'n'B singer Pearl Woods. It was called My Donkey Wouldn't Walk (TPA 149/150; the
B-side, by Pearl Woods, was You’re
Getting Old, Charlie). There was a rumour that Jack Covais actually wrote Paper
Roses, a hit for Marie Osmond,
but no one in the family ever verified it (he didn’t. Paper Roses was written by Fred
Spielman and Janice Torre and,
before Marie Osmond’s 1973 version
had been a hit in 1960 for Anita Bryant).
“My understanding is that Jack's nephew, Sal Covais, who
took over the TPA family business, remained in the music business. I'm not sure
in what capacity nor the time frame. According to information from my father, Jack Covais died in 1964 in Richmond
Hill, New York, definitely not in Fort Lauderdale in 1991, as reported on the American Song-Poem Music Archive
website. I think there was some confusion, because, Jack, at one point, ran the
TPA business with one of his brothers. Jack was a fairly young man when he
died, he was either in his late 40s or early 50s; my dad doesn't remember his
exact age, although he remembers he died of cancer. His son Jack Jr. was a
young teen when Jack died.
“Since both Jack and Lena Covais, as well as their
daughter Carolyn Donato, have passed away, we no longer have much contact with
that side of the family. His son Jack Jr. is still alive, but we only see him
at weddings and funerals. As far as I know, Jack Jr. never worked in the music
business.
“Hope you enjoyed my personal Tin Pan Alley story! I always get a huge laugh when I see one of
those TPA 45s for sale on eBay!”
Since this first email, Annette and I have continued to
correspond. Although she has asked me not to reprint her other emails in their
entirety (lots of personal family detail) she does confirm, via her mother,
that Jack must have passed away in either 1964 or 1965, not in 1991 as
previously believed. This would explain why his name, ubiquitous on the early
TPA releases, suddenly disappears from the label around 1965. Annette’s mother,
now in her 80s, is still in touch with one of the Gugliotta Sisters, one of the many acts that recorded for Tin Pan Alley.
Annette, I know I have already thanked you personally for
sharing these memories with me, but thank you once again for allowing me to
pass them on to other Tin Pan Alley
fans here at the World’s Worst Records. And thanks for the photo of Andy Partridge on stage at the Ritz too!
Here, for your enjoyment, is a selection of some of my
favourite Tin Pan Alley releases: I Never Knew by Verle Clapper and the Sunset Boys, which was written by Jack Covais and issued as the very first
Tin Pan Alley release; Goody, Goody,
Good! by Fran Gold (co-written
by Jack Covais); from the company’s
later years I Tried John (Joan), a
slice of silly sub-Dylan nonsense from Mike
Yantorno, and, especially for
Annette’s mother, Nina and the Gugliotta
Sisters with Teenage Rock And Roll.
Enjoy!
Enjoy!
Whoah! Thanks!!!!!
ReplyDeleteBest/Worst Tin Pan Alley offering = Eleanor Shaw TPA 44-512A "Love is a Dream of Heaven" & TPA 44-512B "CHARLIE MANSON". Exceptionally terrible. "Charlie Manson was cold, cold, cold, ...".
ReplyDeleteWild stuff.
I need a copy! Any chance you could rip it as an MP3 for me?
DeleteI need a copy! Any chance you could rip it as an MP3 for me?
Deleteanyone know the value or is interested in a 45 rpm of phil celia on tin pan alley label, it says on this black label juke box alley, i looked it up and it said # 321 wasnt known. Songs are '''I couldn't bear to resist you'' and other side is song '''l'arpo d'oro'' im cuc 73 @ aol.com
ReplyDeletemy 45 rpm is just in vg condition, maybe better. ttyl
ReplyDeleteNot a huge amount I'm afraid Johnny: most collectors pay between $8-15 for TPA 45s from that period. If the composer is rare or collectable, or the song is particularly weird or oddball you might get $20 or so
DeleteHi Darryl,
DeleteHope all is well. It's been awhile!
My old Mac died, I lost most of my email contacts, I don't have your email. Hope you still have my email.
I have some info re Jack Covais. Please email me.
Thanks,
Annette
Hi Annette... great to hear from you. Sadly i no longer have your email address (I too have had Mac issues!) but you can drop me a line at dwbullock (at) sky.com
DeleteHi Darryl,
DeleteWhen I initially contacted you, I don't actually remember how I found your email, lol
I was a bit shocked that so many people were interested in my late uncle's record company.
I'll contact you later today,
Annette
Oh my gosh, THANK YOU for posting this interview, holy moly, I almost got chills when I happened upon it.
DeleteTHANK YOU, ANNETTE!!!!!!!! I have "Working Overtime", so I'm so excited that out of all the many Tin Pan Alley records that I DON'T have, you have a nice memory of one that I do!
Fascinating. I'm listening to a bunch of Tin Pan Alley records today, and doing a quick search led me to this fantastic blogpost. Thanks SO MUCH.
Hey JW... you're more than welcome! I'm just glad you enjoyed reading it :-)
Delete