Showing posts with label Band Box label. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Band Box label. Show all posts

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Jimmy Wilkins on Band Box



 Jimmy Wilkins And The Blue Falcons
Vocal Background By The Sarands

12945 ~ Goodby, Baby
12946 ~ It's All Right

Band Box 356
 


Jimmy Wilkins and the Sarands

15139 - Move Over
15140 - Crying Tears

Band Box 364


From 1964-1965.  Zilch on Jimmy Wilkins, on The Blue Falcons or on The Sarands.  "Crying Tears" has been played on WWOZ radio in 2010, but I can't find the archive of this show.




Thursday, July 29, 2010

Hank Jarman on Band Box




Hank Jarman

Band Box 361

14181 - Mule Skinners Blues 
 14182 - Tomorrow Breakfast With The Blues



One more version of the classic country song written by Jimmie Rodgers and first recorded by him in 1930.


.

.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

The Lidos on Band Box


The Lidos

Band Box 359

13555 ~ Since I Last Saw You

13556 ~ Trudi
(G. Nole-G.Fick, D.Silvis-R.Saunar)

Audio clip (both sides)

"A primitive dance hall thrash that even predated the British Invasion sound. It's eminently forgettable"
[Fuzz Acid and Flowers Revisited, Vernon Joynson ed.]


.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Vangie Gonzales

Vangie Gonzales with Gonzales Brothers Orch.

Band Box 370

17301 - Negra Surumata
17302 - That Same Old Love

.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Dick Bailey at the Hammond organ


Band Box 350 (EP)

11759 - Bill Bailey Won’t You Please Come Home / Siboney
11760 - Colonel Bogie’s March

Monday, June 29, 2009

the Shelltones (Band Box 355


12757 - Blue Castaway
12758 - Mark's Blues

"A Denver-based group, the Shelltones would likely have participated in the vibrant teen rock ‘n’ roll scene that extended north to Boulder and Fort Collins and south to Colorado Springs in the early and mid-‘60s.

The eerie “Blue Castaway,” written by Cary Theil, the group’s bassist, would be the Shelltones’ only commercial release. The perfect vessel for the cavernous production qualities of Band Box’s south Broadway studios, “Blue Castaway” takes the tremolo-driven atmospherics of the Islanders’ “Enchanted Sea” and the Safaris’ “Lonely Surf Guitar” and, to a certain degree, the Viscounts’ “Harlem Nocturne” to some new, lonelier place.

Flipside “Mark’s Blues,” another instrumental, features the hot fretwork of guitarist Mark Bretz. After the Shelltones, Bretz would play keyboards with Denver-area garage band the Wild Ones in the mid-‘60s before joining, as guitarist, a late incarnation of Boulder’s nationally-known rock ‘n’ rollers the Astronauts in 1967. Bretz would remain with the Astronauts through their name change to SunshineWard before settling in Denver for a career as a music teacher."

Office Naps


.


Friday, February 27, 2009

Sab Florence E.


Sab Florence E.

Band Box 389

22737 - I Need Your Love
22738 - Why Must It Be


One of the last releases on this Colorado label. Both sides written by the singer, Florence Espinoza.




.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Jimmie James (Band Box 377)


Jimmie James
Band Box 377
Denver, CO
19601 - Too Many Mini Skirts
19602 - Is It A Crime, Is It A Sin

The label was owned by Vicky Morosan.

From a Denver Post Article written by Nick Groke :
Vicky Morosan, who immigrated to America in the '30s from Transylvania, Romania, answered a for-sale ad in the paper for a recording studio at East Sixth Avenue and Ogden Street called Columbine Records.

A dispute over the name with behemoth Columbia Records got Morosan to change the label's name to Band Box Records. She moved to 220 S. Broadway and went into business. Denver had its Sun Studio.

"She loved music, opera especially. So it was funny for her to get into rock 'n' roll." said Morosan's daughter, Frances. Morosan died [...] in 2006. She was 97.

"She would make demo records for whoever would come in the door," Frances said. "She loved the business so much. She put those records in her trunk and hauled them all over the country, the hard way. She was just a working old fool."

Band Box turned out about 350 masters, mostly rockabilly, country and Western, and R&B, from bands including Orlie & the Saints, Lee Chandler & the Blue Rhythms, and Jimmy DeKnight, co-writer of "Rock Around the Clock." The label nearly hit big with Freddie & the Hitch-Hikers' "Sinners" in 1961 — a song later covered by the Cramps — and with Sonny Russell's "50 Megatons" in 1963.

Band Box label discography


-