A song-poem obscurity for you today, two early, jolly,
Preview tracks from the great Rodd Keith from what would have been only the
eleventh (or possibly twelfth, should a PV 1000 turn up) 45 issued by the company.
This disc does not appear in Phil Milstein’s American Song-Poem Music Archives
discography, so I’d guess it’s one of the harder-to-find releases from their early
years. Although neither song is particularly spectacular, I’ve decided to
share it with you because of its rarity.
The rather fun, upbeat coupling of My Heart Lives,
backed with A Song For You was issued by Rodd Keith and the Raindrops
sometime around February/March 1966.
The more pop-centric of the two tracks, My Heart Lives was
penned by J.V Davidson. Jessie Davidson wrote or co-wrote several other
song-poems, including at least one further song that was recorded by Preview, ‘Sweetheart
Steve’, recorded by Bonnie Graham and issued sometime in 1967. Other titles
include the rather magnificent False Love Has Thrown Our Hearts Out of Time,
So Happy Together, Those Happy Days, and My Sweetheart, all copyrighted in April 1967. I would hazard a guess that My
Sweetheart and Sweetheart Steve, both co-written by Preview staffer Gene
Brooks, are the same song.
Jessie had form as a song-poet: she had previously sent her
lyrics to Buddy Bregman Music Productions; in the summer of 1965 Bregman
registered copyright in her songs Down the River, and Long Live
Together. Jessie (again with Preview’s Gene Brooks) also wrote The River
of Love that same year. A few years earlier there existed another amateur
lyricist named J.V. Davidson-Houston: could this have been our Jessie too?
The flip side, the vaguely bossa nova-ish A Song For You was
written by Billie Colbert. Featuring some nice, Herb Alpert-inspired trumpet
and a slightly discordant female backing vocalist, Billie had previously submitted
the same song to Buddy Bregman in 1965. This leads me to ask, were Billie and
Jessie friends, or was Bregman connected to Preview? I’ve not come across a
connection before, but it seems too much of a coincidence to me. Another
Bregman songwriter, Jewell Perry, also wrote the lyric to an early Preview 45, Gravy
Train, so there may have been some crossover between the two companies in
Preview’s early days… it definitely deserves some further investigation.
Anyway, for now, enjoy both sides of this rare Rodd Keith
45, and I’ll be back soon with some more terrible tunes for you to endure!
Download Heart HERE
Download Song HERE
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