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52nd Street (band) |
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| 52nd Street | ||
|---|---|---|
| Background information | ||
| Origin | Manchester, UK | |
| Genre(s) | jazz funk |
|
| Years active | 1980 - 1985 | |
| Label(s) | RCA Records Factory Records |
|
| Members | ||
Derrick Johnson John Dennison Tony Thompson |
||
| Former members | ||
| Rose
Williams Eric Godden Desmond Isaacs Beverly McCloud |
||
52nd Street was a jazz funk band formed in Manchester
UK in late 1980, around the period in which both punk/new wave and jazz
funk rocked the club scene. Throughout the 1980s they would enjoy success not only in the
UK, but also on the Billboard
charts stateside.
The original line-up consisted of
Contents
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The band played gigs around the Manchester scene in many dingy
and trendy venues, whilst at the same time recording demo tapes in
local studios. Local funk DJ
Whilst recording demos for RCA, the band was also put into Strawberry
Studios to record tracks for Warner Brothers
52nd Street’s first release on Factory Records in 1982 was "Look into My Eyes", backed with "Express", produced by Donald Johnson. Journalist Paul Morley, then reviewing singles for the NME, made it his single of the week, but his approval did very little to get daytime radio play or enhance sales.
Towards the end of 1982, 52nd Street started experimenting with electronic sounds and drum machines, after being influenced by productions from New York City’s hip hop community and Bill Laswell’s work with jazz keyboardist Herbie Hancock. In the early weeks of 1983 a rough cassette demo was played to Rob Gretton in his Chorlton home by both Tony Henry and Derrick Johnson, after Gretton requested the band forward material for a new single. That track was "Cool as Ice".
Around that same period the band New
Order, formed in 1980 from the remaining members of Joy
Division after their lead singer's suicide, was also experimenting with
electronic sounds. New Order's Bernard
Sumner was at the forefront of 52nd Street's culture change.
They were due to fly to New York to start work with producer
This studio session helped create foundations that were to become the New Order techno sound. Sumner was credited under the pseudonym 'Bemusic' and Johnson under 'DoJo'.
With Gretton absent in New York with New Order, "Cool as Ice" (backed with "Twice as Nice") never officially received a release in the UK, although BBC Radio 1 DJs John Peel and Janice Long were playing the track on evening and late night shows from white label pressings that Factory Records had made available.
A few bootlegs started to appear in the United States. Michael
Shamberg, who headed Factory’s United States office in New York City,
stepped in. Within the space of six weeks he had secured 52nd Street a
major US deal with
Meanwhile in the UK, Wilson was not one to shy away from publicity and began to include the band on Factory’s more extravagant publicity materials and talk them up in interviews. They also appeared twice on his Granada Reports news programme.
The success of "Cool as Ice" in 1983 led A&M US to demand a second single immediately to maintain momentum. Meanwhile in Manchester, Factory’s premier gold machine New Order were scoring worldwide breaking all kind of records with monster hits; "Blue Monday" and the Arthur Baker produced "Confusion". Many acts in this period at Factory suffered in the shadow of the New Order revolution, due to lack of label manpower. Creative decisions could not be made at short notice within the company as both principal executives Wilson and Gretton were constantly on tour with the group.
52nd Street became restless and started to implode. Major labels including A&M UK were starting to show interest, but certain band members felt loyal to the Factory organisation. On Rob's return from the New Order tour, where 52nd Street supported on some dates, a heated debate about commitment between band members and Gretton resulted in the suggestion that Wilson’s ex-wife Lindsay Reade become their full time manager. This plan was supposed to speed things up; she could make decisions on behalf of Factory Communications once this was clarified by either Rob Gretton or Tony Wilson. This very decision was soon to cause eruptions within the whole Factory Communications organisation).
Reade had returned to Factory Records in 1984, after her divorce from Tony Wilson, to run the Overseas Licensing Department. Gretton suggested that Reade needed something more challenging to do and that people tended to underestimate her abilities. He also overheard Reade tell another staff member that the only other band on the label worth spending money on was 52nd Street. "At least they made music that ordinary people would buy." Reade had not at that time met the band.
Once manager, she put together a strategy to hasten productivity. After a short non-productive period, the band regrouped and reorganised. Vocalist Beverly McDonald was removed from the band and promptly began contributing to Quando Quango's LP Pigs and Battleships. Although not the strongest of singers, she had the Factory look and ethos which Tony Wilson loved. She was "rugged cool" (not unlike Macy Gray) and had an image that wouldn’t have looked out of place had she been lead vocalist with Joy Division. Wilson wasn’t happy with the change and stated that this decision would lead to the quick demise of 52nd Street.
McDonald was replaced by
New Order’s Stephen Morris was called in by Rob to help out on production for 52nd Street’s 3rd single "Can’t Afford". Morris also completed production on two other tracks that were suppose to appear on a later EP. Like Sumner, Morris was now a deep philosopher in electronic funk and his ideas, intercut with Tony Henry’s sequenced bass lines and Charlemagne’s potent vocal delivery, excited everyone at Factory except for Wilson, who was still grieving the loss of McDonald. Both those additional tracks "Look I’ve Heard it all Before" and "Available" were re-recorded and release on the band’s 1986 Virgin debut album titled Children of the Night.
Eleven months had passed since A&M US requested a
follow up single. They finally lost patience with the unprofessionalism
of Factory Records. Reade, implementing what she thought was agreed
company policies and procedures, mailed copies of the new single to
A&M US. They rejected the track, more on a business footing
than artistic, thus leaving the band free to negotiate with other
interested parties. Profile Records (home to
Reade’s business dealings caused eruptions not just with Wilson and Gretton, but Michael Shamberg who ran Factory US. 52nd Street was caught in the middle and the band members' allegiance to Reade were beginning to fragment. They knew her aims and objectives were sincere and her method was for their artistic benefit. In December 1984, a crucial Factory Records Management meeting was hastily arranged with all directors in which Reade was subsequently sacked and told to leave the offices immediately without the band. [1]
"Can't Afford" was an even a bigger US success than "Cool as
Ice", entering the Top 15 on the
Loyalties within the band were being truly tested. Derrick Johnson was a die hard Factory Records man. He not only played bass for 52nd Street, but was also session guitarist alongside his brother Barry Johnson (former bass player with Sweet Sensation) in Mike Pickering’s upcoming band Quando Quango. Also, Derrick’s other brother Donald was also starting to take on a more leading role in the band A Certain Ratio since the departure of both Simon Topping and Peter Terrell. After deliberation and much soul searching, against the wishes of both Gretton and Wilson, 52nd Street followed Lindsay Reade and left Factory Records in January 1985. Derrick Johnson refused to follow and stayed with the organisation.
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