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The Kool Gents

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One of the most interesting groups to emerge from Chicago in the 50's was the Kool Gents. An early incarnation called the Golden Tones had a couple of releases on two fly-by-night labels. The original members consisted of Cicero Blake, James Harper, Howard McClain, Teddy Long, and John Carter. Delecta "Dee" Clark, John McCall, and Doug Brown replaced Harper, McClain & Blake. McCall, not Clark originally sung lead until Vee Jay's A&R man Calvin Carter recommended that Clark sing lead. Long served as the groups' main songwriter. Clark, from Arkansas, had previously recorded "Hambone" with the Red Saunders Orchestra, as a member of the Hambone Kids. They renamed themselves after disk jockey Herb "Kool Gent" Kent who introduced them to Calvin Carter and Vee Jay Records. Their first release "This Is The Night" b/w "Do Ya Do" sold locally in 1956. A second release "I Just Can't Help Myself" b/w "You Know" did fine in Chicago also, but fail to make any inroads outside the city. The Kool Gents didn't burn up the charts, but they sounded good, so Calvin Carter and Ewart Abner decided to spoof the Democratic National Convention by releasing "The Convention" as the Delegates a.k.a. the Kool Gents. It received a tremendous amount of airplay which unfortunately didn't transform into a tremendous amount of sales. A second Delegate single, "Mother's Son" b/w Teddy Long's "I'm Gonna Be Glad" didn't even excite Chicagoans. In 1957 Dee Clark, with Calvin Carter's O.K., decided to go solo, and the Kool Gents and the Delegates recording activity ended. Some members of label mates, the El Dorados ("At My Front Door") left leaving only lead Pirkle Lee Moses, so Calvin crowned the Kool Gents the New El Dorados and they backed Moses for two fruitless years. John Carter resurrected the Kool...

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