Saturday, July 03, 2004


CLICK ON THE LINK AT THE BOTTOM OF THIS POST TO READ MORE FROM PAPA DON

How did you find "Let Love Come Between Us"?

A guy named Fred Stiles played in a band called the Five Minutes. The Five Minutes, out of Muscle Shoals. They were a great little band. And I had Papa Don Surf Stomps every weekend. I had them on Friday and Saturday nights, and Sunday afternoon. I rented this big huge place, a casino, right on the Pensacola beach. And I had Papa Don Surf Stomps. I mean, everybody from the Allman Joys (later know as the Allman Brothers) to the Five Minutes, Dan Penn & the Pallbearers, they all came down and played for me. And Fred Stiles and I got to be good friends…nice guy.
Fred Stiles brought me this song. He said, ‘Man, I found you a hit!’ I think a friend of his wrote it, and Al Gallico published it.
I always wanted to cut a song for Al Gallico’s publishing company. I just loved him. He was a great publisher out of New York. And Gallico did his little number as a publisher, and really helped promote it too.
I was cutting a beach song. I was cutting a Papa Don Surf Stomp song. A real good beach hit. It’s one of my favorite records that I cut on the Purifys.http://216.239.39.104/search?q=cache:7OyFcOvFH4wJ:www.sundazed.com/scene/exclusives/papa_don_exclusive.html+casino+pensacola+beach+papa+don&hl=en


THE LONG BEACH RESORT AT PCB IN THE '30s


THE HANGOUT AT THE LONG BEACH CASINO
http://www.jdweeks.com/LongBeachResortHx.html

Subject : Small world

| | | Inbox


Hello Robert,

It's been about a hundred years or so! Last time I saw
you was at Richard Burke's apartment in Dothan around
'76??? Richard sang a couple of songs you wrote ....
one was "Foster Grants"????? My memory isn't what it
once was! I was with Robert Dean. (Robert is younger
brother of James Dean, bass player of the original
James Gang.)

I lost all my James Gang 45s & Candymen LPs at my
Mother's about 6 years ago when a storm blew down a
huge oak tree and crushed her backyard barn where I
had my record collection stored. Ruined by rain &
mold. My sister threw everything away. I hated losing
the James Gang 45s - "Georgia Pines" "Satin & Lace"
"Wrong Yo-Yo" - more than I did any of the others ....
will probably never be replaced.

The last time I heard Wilbur Walton sing was around
1973 in Robert Dean's Checkers Lounge on Montgomery
Highway. Obie Lee (another damn good singer) was
playing that night and Wilbur went on stage with him
and sang "The Thrill is Gone." BB would be honored.

Anyway, I found your site by searching for the James
Gang .... feeling a little nostalgic. And surprise!
Glad to know you're still kicking hard!
Brought back
many fine memories of the summer dances (Rockin
Gibralters, Pieces of 8, Swinging Medallions, James
Gang) at the Rec Center, the Big Bam shows at the
Coliseum, the Old Dutch & the Red Rooster in PCB, the
Capri Lounge(we always had to sit in the balcony - I
still appreciate the irony).

I'm living in Southern California, Oceanside, just
north of San Diego. Seems like I only get back to Bama
when someone dies. Hope I'll get back for other
reasons one day.

Take Care Robert,

Jim



Friday, July 02, 2004

cuba ,, what a site ,, i can't quit checking it out ,,,,,,,, i love the action shot of the allman joys ,, duane was killed that guitar,,, slugger


GUARANTEED TO MAKE YA WANNA CLIMB UP ON TOP OF YOUR INNER TUBE!!!!


LOVE AND REGARDS FROM THE SWAMP!!!!

your Cuba,Alabama site is stirring up memories and warming my heart.
thanks for all of your effort.

love and regards from the swamp,
betty b.
aka
swampmamalama



Here I stand near Nickajack where Alabama,Georgia and Tennessee intersect. Please send all suggestions and other unwanted comments to robertoreg@hotmail.com.


Muchas gracias a mi buen amigo, babbs, para el t-shirt. Git yur skypilotclub t-shirt @ http://www.skypilotclub.com


WELCOME TO "CUBA,ALABAMA" [dat's me on dah left]

Re: georgia pines

| | | Inbox


BABY CRIMINAL REG, I GOT A LETTER FROM THE UNLUCKEST PERSON WE KNOW, BOB .I HAVE BEEN PRINTING OUT YOUR BLOG AND SENDING IT TO YAZOO CITY.HIS LETTER SAID IT WAS SOMETHING HE REALLY ENJOYED READING.THE GOVERNMENT HAS HIM AND WILL FOR YEARS TO COME.NOW THEY ARE MOVING IN ON HIS LAND AND HOME. ************ THE 4TH OF JULY ************* REMEMBER THE REVOLUTION


From : jedmc jedmc
Sent : Friday, July 2, 2004 3:31 AM
To :
Subject : georgia pines

| | | Inbox


Robert:
I enjoyed viewing your web site! I did Google search for "james Gang/Ga. Pines" and came up with your site. Do you know where I could a mp3 file of " Ga. Pines " ? James Gang or Candymen?
thanks;
Ed McRee
Albany Ga.

Thursday, July 01, 2004


TUSCALOOSA BLACK BEARS[see if you can identify Johnny Townsend,Eddie Hinton and Tim Parker,Jr.]
photo courtesy of Dean Smith

From: "John Townsend" View Contact Details
To: "robert register"


Robert,
Regarding the basketball picture, I just wanted to let you know who's who, just in case you didn't know. Front row L-R is (as you know) Tim Parker Jr, My big brother Jeff Townsend (one of the best all around atheletes I ever knew. Man was I proud of him. Still am.). Harry Hammonds ( the star of the team and owner of Harry's Bar in Tuscaloosa), Jim Riley, (standing is Coach Billy Henderson's son Bill) and Danny Morgan.
Second row L-R Ernie Houck, Bill Clements, John Pickens, Jim Marlow and Hank Herrod. Back Row L-R is the immortal Eddie Hinton, Coach Pete Pierson, Coach Tom Tarleton (one of the finest men I ever knew and a damn fine Round Ball coach) and little ole Johnny Townsend. Noticably absent from this photo is starting point guard Tim Pearson. Tim got a very bad concussion when he went up for a lay up and was undercut by an opposing player and was in the hospital at the time of this picture. The photo was made sitting on the bleachers at Foster Auditorium after the dust had settled and after the championship game. Eddie and I got injured during football season and as we were signed up for sports during 6th period, we were involuntarily volunteered to be towel jockeys and score keepers for the team. That year I remember as being one of the most exciting of my youth. I saw every game and kept score and stats among my other duties. That white grease pencil marking across the photo is the team record for that season. 34 - 0. They played a pressure defense that just smoked other teams and they got almost as many turnovers as the other team had baskets. I remember the first game against Holt HS. The never saw it coming. I think the final score was something like 102 to 14 and it set the tone for the season. The closest game was at the THS gym with Robert E. Lee of Montgomery. They had a really good team. The second half tip off went to Robt. E. Lee and they drove down the court and instantly made the first basket of the half. Only problem was, it was in the other team's basket. 2 points for THS Black Bears. It turned out to be the difference in the game. 50-48 was the final as I remember. That game was written up in newspapers all over the country and we even had folks sending us clippings from as far away as Okinawa. What a year that was and what a team that was. It was right around then that Eddie started bringing an old firewood guitar to school and keeping it in a locker. On afternoons when things were slow Eddie used to find an empty corner of the gym and start banging away on some 3 chord blues. I can still hear Eddie's voice and that old beat up ten dollar guitar echoing through that cavernous old gym...."I'm a King Bee........buzzin' around your hive.........stang it then..

Johnny Townsend

http://www.JohnTown.com

"The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side."
- Hunter S. Thompson

To: "robert register"
Subject: Fw: [MFV] Tippy Armstrong Cat Tale #3
Date: Thu, 1 Jul 2004 00:00:01 -0500


Chap IV
----- Original Message -----
From: Dean White
To: MIGHTYFIELDofVISION@Yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 2003 2:52 PM
Subject: Re: [MFV] Tippy Armstrong Cat Tale #3


Came in off the towboats one time- my momma said "Tippy's been calling here for the past couple days lookin' for you".

When I got hold of him, he said "Cap'n! (he hung Cap'n on me)-" they want me to play a solo gig at DownUnder (on the UA campus) tonite. I ain't got a guitar. I ain't got an amp. Got nobody t' hep me with the sound. But I got this bottle a' tequila..."

Question: "Tippy, where's your guitar?"
Answer: "Loaned it t' Joe Rudd."
Question: "I can get guitars. Where's your amp?"
Answer: "Loaned it t' Glenn Butts."
Question; "Can we go by Glenn's and get the amp?"
Answer: I couldn't do that, Cap'n- that just, well, it just wouldn't be right."
Question: "Why not?"
Answer: "Cause I, well, just cause I loaned it to him."
Question" Can we go by Glenn's, and I'LL ask him if we can borrow it?"
Answer: "Well, that'd be mighty nice of ya."

Couple rounds thru T-town, that bottle of Tequila, and one bottle Mateus Rose' later, he entertained a crowd of mostly students, ('cause he wouldn't tell anyone else 'bout the gig), and I was blessed to have been there to experience it. Everything from "Hideaway", to "Malaguena" to "El Condor Pasa" to "Don't Stop the Honeymoon in my Heart". Told everyone he and I were workin' on a song called "This Ain't Love, but it'll Have to' do 'til we can get Some Sleep", but it wasn't ready yet (it never was). Closed with "You Send Me".

We traveled in the Lincoln- at one point during a break I wanted t' 'round up Duke, and a few others, to come see him, so I asked to use his car. His response: "MAH LINCOLN?" It was as if I'd asked t' see Miss Goldie (his mamma) nekkid. I never asked again.

Got a picture I'll try to scan and send around- it's my first wedding, and Tippy's standing there beside me with his hand on my shoulder...
...and that far-away look in his eyes...

Capndean

----- Original Message -----
From: Wyker
To: MightyFieldofVision

Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 2003 11:49 AM
Subject: [MFV] Tippy Armstrong Cat Tale


Dean,
I sure do remember that old black Lincoln that Tippy drove...I did not know he traded it for the suicide weapon...there are still lots of folks that don't think Tippy offed himself.....I do not know many details at all..

I rode to Tuscaloosa with Tippy once from Muscle Shoals in that old black Lincoln...he was wearin' a big wide and straight brimmed light gray Stetson hat...and a pair of reflector aviators goggles...sunglasses....he had a quart ofbeer between his legs as he drove...may have been wine or The Whip or shine...but he did not seem to be impaired at all by it...

The movie EASY RIDER had been out for a while...and Tippy wanted me to help him write a movie titled HARD WALKER...the story of Hardin Walker...some imaginary character that he dreamed up...Tippy had a funny dry sense of humor and that titled started about as the punchline to one of his jokes....after he said somethang funny or offbeat like that he'd look at you with this crazy almost smile...but his eyes would have a look that said it all....

anyway as we were motivatin' along in that old black late 50's or early 60's Lincoln on a two lane black top at speeds around 70 or 80 miles and hour I saw a truck about to pull out into the road at a 90 degree angle....we would have hit it broadsided....I pointed to the truck and tried to remain calm...and said somethang like "Watch out...a truck !"

Tippy never flinched or even looked like he thought about hittin' the breaks or slowin' down....at the very last moment as this movin' target was half way blockin' the road cool hand Tippy just whipped the wheel with one hand....looked like one finger on a suicide knob and we went around that truck like stunt driver in a thriller movie.....it felt like the car bent to shape itself around the truck so we would not have to get all 4 wheels off the hardtop.....

Tippy never flinched or said a damned thang afterwards...and I'm like boucin' up and down in my sit like a little kid beatin' on the dash board sayin' "Holy shit we almost got creamed good...death on the highway was almost our last scene....and TIppy seemed to allow the corners of his mouth to turn up in a little smile...but his eyes were shielded by those reflector sunglasses glass so couldn't read his mood as well.....he was so cool under the pressure of that moment...and played that big Lincoln like a fine guitar lick !

Hard Walker...Tippy Armstrong...he looked like a movie star with his square jaw and blond hair and blues eyes....and was born to play the guitar....such a short life...if there is a heaven I hope he's playin' there if I make it !

wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwyker
MIGHTY FIELD of VISION

From: ned mudd
To: Wyker
Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 2003 12:28 PM
Subject: Tippy tale No. 2


Here's another Tippy tale from circa 1974.

Bill Marshall and I were recording a duo project called "The Truck Stop Opry" and Tippy would wander in from time to time, just checking out what was up, seeing if we were making progress etc. I recall he had an old sedan and carried his Fender bass around by sticking the back end on the rear dashboard, the tuning keys on the front seat. No case. That means, the bass was sorta flying in the car as he drove thru Tuscaloosa.

One day he came by and said he'd gotten a call from Jimmy Cliff. This was after "The Harder They Come". I said "What did he want?" Tippy says something about Jimmy wanting him to go on a big tour. I think it was a world gig but we're stretching my memory banks here.

"You going?" we said.
Tippy says, "I asked Jimmy if that meant I'd have to leave Tuscaloosa."
At that point, Tippy had no interest in leaving home. I reckon he told Jimmy "no."

Another time, shortly after that, I was working the door at Jumpin' Johnny's, downtown Tuscaloosa. I think Locust Fork was playing.

Tippy saunters up with this old gut string guitar on his shoulder, no case. The back end is dangling out behind him. Like everybody carried their guitar that way.

We chatted and he said "You think I could sit in?"
Locust Fork was one hell of a loud-assed band.
I looked at Tippy and figured he could work it out with the band somehow. No cover charge.

The guy who owned Jumpin' Johnny's, Alex Kontos, came by my place the other day with a CD. There was Tippy, jamming with Locust Fork, "live" at Jumpin' Johnny's.

I took one guitar lesson from Tippy. He decided to show me a cool lick and call it a day. The lick was a little 3 chord thing that was a mix of Appalachian with Muscle Shoals R&B thrown in.

Tippy said "Eddie Hinton taught me that."

Mudd

To: Johnny Wyker
Sent: Tuesday, July 01, 2003 5:43 PM
Subject: The Magnificent Rubbers Pt. 1


Johnny,
I just got these photos from a new acquaintance in Mississippi who took these pics at a gig we did at The Country Club in Brookhaven Miss.
He also enclosed captions which I'm including. I guess he thinks I'm Tippy

John Townsend

http://www.JohnTown.com

Hey John,
The first shot is of the guitar player, who I assume to be you, showing
some licks to some of the locals, none of whom were ever musicians to my
knowledge, but they were obviously captivated by your efforts......

Don
[BLOGMASTER NOTE: I HOPE TO GET THE PICTURES SOON!]

photo courtesy of Dean 

GREGG ALLMAN IN MACON,GEORGIA

photo courtesy of Dean 

DUANE ALLMAN

photo courtesy of Dean 

GREGG ALLMAN IN '66
"THE ALLMAN JOYS"- 1965 TO 1967

photo courtesy of Dean
THE ALLMAN JOYS!!!!
GREGG ON KEYBOARDS, DUANE ON GUITAR, BILL CONNELL ON DRUMS AND BOB KELLER [thanx,johnny] ON BASS

From: Bobby Dupree
To: MIGHTYFIELDofVISION@Yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 2003 9:50 AM
Subject: RE: [MFV] Fw: The Magnificent Rubbers Pt. 1


Johnny,

Don’t know if you ever heard this, but Tippy was asked by Janis Joplin to join her band, Full Tilt Boogie Band. This was around the first part of 1969. The band “Heart” had gone through some member changes, and Tippy was playing with us out in LA. We did some gigs at The Whiskey and she saw him there. I believe I have a slightly blurry photo of him on stage………………Bobby


Group Picture from Capn Dean's Wedding:
Tippy is third from left,followed by his wife,Nancy Derrington,Fluker, THE NOTORIOUS Crockett Roberts and Eve Owen
photo courtesy of Dean Smith

Rob't-

Gonna fwd you a strang of Tippy stories that ran on MFV about a yr. ago.

Plus sum extra pitchers.

I miss that guy ever day...

Capndean


George Fluker, yours truly, and Tippy Francis Armstrong at my 1st wedding- Greensboro, AL Aug. of '75.
- Dean 


Left to Right:
MY OLD BUDDY FROM LIVINGSTON, THE LATE GREAT GEORGE FLUKER,FORMER HEAD OF D.U.D., CAPN DEAN, AND TIPPY

Hey Robert,

Tippy was a big inspiration to me. He had "the magic". Thanks for
including my thoughts on your site, which is
MAJOR COOL, by the way.
Having lots of fun reading through it.

Later,

Rick Hirsch


Rick,
> Hope ya don't mind me copying your comments about Tippy Armstrong
> but I am putting some Tippy stuff on my weblog "Cuba, Alabama" and
> this fits. You can find it at http://robertoreg.blogspot.com
> I will give you credit and also pass the info along to Johnny Wyker's
> MightyFieldofVision webgroup at yahoo.
> Thanks and if ya object, let me know and I'll delete it.
> Best wishes,
> Robert Register
http://www.ktb.net/~insync/
CHECK OUT FORMER WET WILLIE GUITARIST RICK HIRSH'S WEBSITE BY CLICKING ON THE ABOVE

Wednesday, June 30, 2004

http://www.soul4u.net/webspace/13.rm
LIVE FROM THE OLD DUTCH![just kidding,tee-hee]THE FABULOUS WILBUR WALTON JR.!!!!

http://f2.grp.yahoofs.com/v1/EGLjQCaKE8nZm_uWOyEn72V_FAqyu0xOCBfKmwR7rdjSrA-b7kKKIq-MpRu0J4pM8ScWCrjGV-4NP5tTnXpk5WXd387EGJg9BPs/K-Otics%20-%20Double%20Shot.mp3
DOUBLE SHOT! BY THE K-OTICS

http://www.geocities.com/louiewear/

IF YA LOVE THAT OLD TIME BEACH PARTY MUSIC, CLICK ON LOUIE WEAR'S PAGE. LISTEN TO THE RUBBERBAND PLAY "CHARLENA" or EDDIE HINTON SING "SAD AND LONESOME" AND IMAGINE YOURSELF BACK AT THE OLD HICKORY IN PCB OVER 35 YEARS AGO!!!!

[that is a cool link ,, coleman was married to my cousin about the same time as the coleman hinton project ,, her name is philomena ,, i checked out the cuba alabama site is this your own site ?? i like it ,,, i love the history of the bands of t-town ,, our band use to play down there ,, i love that place,,, slugger]

Slugger!-

Yo' cousin was the delectable Ms Philomena...??!!


COOOOOOLL....!

t.h.e. capt.




Lost And Found
The Coleman-Hinton Project 1969-71

Produced and Engineered by Eddie Hinton and Jim Coleman
String Arrangements: Jim Coleman and Eddie Hinton

Recorded at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio, Muscle Shoals, Alabama
Quad Studio, Nashville, Tennessee; and
Olympic Studio, London, England



-----------------------------------------------------------------
1. I Wanna Die (J. Coleman)
2. Just Like The Fool That I Was (J. Coleman)
3. Before I Left Home (J. Coleman)
4. What Goes On (J. Coleman)
5. The Angels (J. Coleman)
6. Sha Na Boom Boom (Barry-Bloom)
7. He Kept It In The Family (J. Coleman)
8. Where You Come From (Hinton-Coleman)
9. In The Beginning (J. Coleman)
10. Never, Never, Never Again (J. Coleman)
11. Got Down Last Saturday Night (E. Hinton)

In the summer of 1969, Eddie Hinton and I began a project that was to be a turning point in both of our lives. Eddie had signed me as a writer with his publishing company and I had come up to Muscle Shoals, Alabama to try and get a song on the album being recorded there by Lulu of "To Sir With Love" fame. At the time, Eddie was the guitarist at Muscle Shoals Sound Studio and had recorded on many great R&B tunes by Percy Sledge, Wilson Pickett, Aretha Franklin, Joe Tex and others. When I got to town, Eddie said he wanted to save my songs for an album he had decided to produce on me.

It was summer and I was out of school so I moved to Muscle Shoals and began going to the studio with Eddie. We would usually get in the studio on Friday night and stay up until Monday morning recording. During our formal recording sessions we used the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section with Barry Beckett on piano, Roger Hawkins on drums and David Hood on bass with Jimmie Johnson helping Eddie out with the engineering.


Lost And Found
Copyright 1995 Breathe Easy Music


Jim Coleman - Vocals, Guitar, Bass Eddie Hinton - Vocals, Guitar, Piano, Harmonica
Tippy Armstrong - Electric Guitar, Vocals Roger Hawkins - Drums David Hood - Bass
Barry Beckett - Piano, Organ John Hughey - Pedal Steel Guitar King Curtis - Soprano Saxophone
Chuck Swartz - Clarinet The London Symphony - Strings


Eddie's good friend and former roommate, Duane Allman, was asked to played guitar, but, I told Eddie I wanted Tippy Armstrong to play guitar instead. Tippy was a great player and a great friend of mine. He played on albums for Bobby Womack, Albert King, and Jimmy Cliff among others. Duane was planning to leave town anyway and had asked Eddie to join him in a new band he was putting together with his brother, Greg, to be called "The Allman Brothers Band." Eddie turned him down for his studio gig and to finish the album we had decided to call "The Coleman-Hinton Project." Eddie had also picked Tippy to replace him as the staff session guitarist at Muscle Shoals Sound when he and I left to go on the road to promote our record.

In addition to recording in Muscle Shoals, we also recorded at David Briggs' Quad Studio in Nashville and at Olympic Studio in London where we recorded the strings. We used the same string players from the London Symphony who had played on the Beatles' records. Other notable musicians on this record include the late, great King Curtis on Soprano Saxophone and John Hughey on pedal steel guitar. I was a big fan of Conway Twitty at the time and wanted to use Hughey who was Conway's steel player. John Hughey now plays for Vince Gill. King Curtis was very popular in the 60's and was actually the opening act for the Beatles during their 1965 US tour when I saw them in Atlanta. King Curtis and Tippy have both been gone now for many years along with Duane.

Of the many stories I recall from these recording sessions the one about the string session in London remains particularly vivid in my mind. Eddie had refused to allow either of us to begin writing the string parts until we were on the plane headed for England. We got on the plane with only blank music paper and began writing the arrangements for string quartet and string ensemble with 11 strings. This was all done in our heads without guitar or other instrument to help play the parts as they were being written. We had never heard the arrangements until we were conducting the sessions with the London Symphony string players. When we did the song "Where You Come From," an arrangement that Eddie had written for the string ensemble, everything was going fine until they got to the short instrumental part at which time everyone stopped playing. The conductor turned to Eddie and said, "Mr. Hinton, the notes you have written are not on the viola and go off the fingerboard." Eddie responded without hesitation saying, "When they get there just have them transpose down an octave." They did and it worked out fine.


Eddie Hinton was a great producer and a great guitar player, and, he was just about the most un- compromising man I have ever known. He was so full of talent but couldn't seem to find a way to get his feelings across without alienating someone along the way. He was one soulful dude with his own, intense 'philosogie' of life. His vocal on the Staple Singers' "Heavy Makes You Happy (Sha Na Boom Boom)" on this CD is to me the essence of Eddie Hinton. I'll never forget watching him scream like Mavis at the end. He was always in the pocket. Famed producer Jerry Wexler said in a letter to Eddie's mother, "He remains unique, a white boy who truly sang and played in the spirit of the great black soul artists he venerated. With Eddie, it wasn't imitation; it was totally created, with a fire and fury that was as real as Otis Redding's and Wilson Pickett's."
For a number of reasons this album never came out. We had worked out a deal with Ahmet Ertegun and Atlantic Records but Eddie refused to accept Ahmet's offer. Eddie then contacted Chris Blackwell of Island Records and we actually left Muscle Shoals and moved to Atlanta to be where Island was going to be based. But, the deal with Island also fell through. Eddie and I grew farther and farther apart and I never actually got to hear the final mix of the album after we returned from England. I went on to play guitar on the road for a couple of years waiting for word from Eddie. Eventually, I went back to college and then medical school and now practice Internal Medicine in Nashville, Tennessee. As the years slipped by, turning into decades, we communicated very rarely and Eddie went down his star-crossed road. I last talked to Eddie in 1979. I had all but forgotten about this album but not Eddie and the influence he had on my life.

Eddie Hinton died July 28, 1995 at his mother's home in Birmingham, Alabama. About eight weeks after his untimely death, I got a call from Eddie's second cousin in Tuscaloosa who told me that Eddie's mother, Deanie Perkins, had said she wanted to talk to me. I later called Eddie's mother and she told me that after Eddie died she and her husband had gone into Eddie's room and had taken out all the tapes and music manuscripts and other personal things that he left behind and had completely cleaned the room out. She said a few weeks later they realized that they were still bothered by the way the room looked because it reminded them so much of Eddie. They decided to go back in and rearrange the furniture. When they started to take Eddie's bed out of the room they picked up the box springs and found a tape underneath. This tape was the only known copy of the long lost Coleman-Hinton project. With help from Marc Harrelson at Boutwell Studio in Birmingham, Alabama, I was able to restore the tape to its present condition and the finished product is contained on this CD.



I want this CD to be a tribute to Eddie Hinton. It was really his album anyway. All I did was write a few songs and try to sing and play a little guitar. Like Eddie use to sing to me, "I once was lost but now I'm found, was blind but now I see," finding this album after 25 years makes me see those early days in a much different light. Those really were magic times when our dreams and innocence were great. Eddie Hinton got lost in this life. I hope he's found peace in the next. "You don't miss your water 'til your well runs dry," he used to say. We'll all miss you, Eddie.

Jim Coleman
http://www.jjcoleman.com/LostAndFound.htm



From Rick Hirsch's(guitarist for Wet Willie) website:

In particular, I have to mention the late Tippy Armstrong, a virtually unsung guitar champion from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, who performed an enormous body of session work in Muscle Shoals during the '60's. Tippy had a "touch" all his own and my intention is to begin a page dedicated to him, including soundbytes. Tippy could grasp the essence of virtually any style of music and perform it in an amazingly convincing way. I've been accumulating a nice volume of anecdotal info from those who were around him most. Incidentally, it was Tippy who sold me my first electric guitar, a Fender Musicmaster that I wish like hell I'd never sold.
http://www.ktb.net/~insync/index3.html


Check out Capn Skyp [a.k.a. Ken Babbs] at
http://skypilotclub.com

To: MIGHTYFIELDofVISION@yahoogroups.com
From: JDWyker@Charter.net Add to Address Book
Date: Wed, 30 Jun 2004 0:42:31 +0000
Subject: Re: [MFV] The Eddie Hinton- Tippy Armstrong Connection


Brutha Robert !
I could not open your link...but as evryone knows my pC has been screwed for weeks,,,

If I'm not mistaken The Mag Seven aka The RUBBER BAND was
the opening act at The Old Hickory for the Swinging Medallions in the summer of 1965.


THE MAGNIFICENT 7 IN FRONT OF THE OLD HICKORY ON PANAMA CITY BEACH

Eddie and The 5 Men-its may have played some at The Old Dutch or other P.C.Clubs,,,,but I maily remember them playing on Pensacola Beach at The Casino...it was a big
place owned by the city or state that Papa Don promoted bands in the summers.

I've got at great picture of Tippy on stage at The Old Hickory somewhere...and I'm behind him playin' his red es350...I've got on Madras pants and my eye balls are red...

I've posted that picture several times and it might even be in our MFV files or photos section.

Nice to have youy aboard Robert ! Maybe I can find away to open your site.

wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwyker
MFV
>
> From: robert register
> Date: 2004/06/29 Tue PM 10:59:47 GMT
> To: MightyFieldofVision@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: [MFV] The Eddie Hinton- Tippy Armstrong Connection
>
> Wyker's message about Robinson buying the Hinton stuff in B'ham inspired me to tune up dah blog. Thanks go out to John Townsend for sending me the pictures. Check it out at "Cuba, Alabama" http://robertoreg.blogspot.com
>
> Back in the mid 80s, Eddie was living in Tuscaloosa and we hung out together at the Chukker and Egan's. I have some great memories of riding around town with Eddie behind the wheel of his big Cadillac. He played a few solo gigs at the Chukker back then. Bruce Hopper, who owned the Chukker at the time, has a lot a details about that episode in Eddie's life.
>
> I talked to John Curry the other night. He played in Eddie's first band, The Spooks. He has a lot of early Eddie stories. Eddie spent a lot of time over at John's parent's house back in the day.
>
> If you scroll down my blog, you'll see postcards of "The Old Dutch" where Eddie played with the "Five Men-ites" in the summer of ' 65.
> best,
> roberto

Tuesday, June 29, 2004


TIPPY ARMSTRONG AT N.Y.C. RECORDING SESSION WITH THE RUBBER BAND

From: Wyker
To: MightyFieldofVision
Sent: Tuesday, July 01, 2003 6:14 PM
Subject: [MFV] Fw: The Magnificent Rubbers Pt. 1


The one with the guitar is the legendary Tippy Armstrong...even Jimmy Hendrix was a fan of his..he later went on to play some famous sessions in Muscle Shoals...and some say that over the years he drank too much bad wild cat whiskey...some makers put old batteries and other crap in the mix when they are cookin' it up....but anyway... sadly...they say Tippy committed suicide with a rifle....even The FBI got into the act....I think he had some debts...like with a studio owner and a couple of other shady cats...and of course there is always the jealous lover theory...Tippy was a handsome man and not shy with the ladies...wwwwwwwwyker


TIPPY ARMSTRONG WITH JOHNNY WYKER IN THE BACKGROUND AT THE OLD HICKORY ON PANAMA CITY BEACH IN THE SUMMER OF '65. WYKER AND JOE SOBOTKA CO-WROTE "LET LOVE COME BETWEEN US".


TIPPY ARMSTRONG

The late guitarist, Tippy Armstrong, is a legend in Tuscaloosa. It is said that the great Eddie Hinton told Tippy to tie weights to his fingers on his left hand during sleep so they'd grow longer at night during puberty. They did!

Tippy played with the Rubber Band and later with SouthCamp.

http://www.great-music.net/hinton.html


EDDIE HINTON

http://www.zanerecords.com/artists/hinton/biog.html

A MESSAGE FROM J.D. WYKER:

The owner of a B'ham record store called me the day after City Stages and said that lead singer CHRIS ROBINSON of The Black Crows was in his shop and bought 2 copies of The Wyker/Hinton Video and 2 CD's of The MFV version of LETTERS
FROM MISSISSIPPI !

I would love to do a movie about Eddie's life...Chris might be just the cat to play the lead...his wife and mother-in-law make movies.....that would be great !

mO' LATER !
lOVE TO ALL Mighty Field Hands !

Monday, June 28, 2004


THE CANDYMEN

Lyrics

Georgia Pines by: The Candymen
Lyrics by: Peter DeRose/Joe Trent
[according to John Rainey Adkins bio in the Alabama Music Hall of Fame: "John Rainey also wrote or co-wrote most of the material on The Candymen's two LPs including "Georgia Pines" with Buddy Buie."]
1967




The trees grow tall
Where I come from
The leaves are green and fine
I was born in a one room shack
In a field of Georgia Pines

I grew up and I got tired
Of that one room shack
So I went a wandering
And now I wanna go back

(CHORUS)

Georgia Pines, Georgia Pines
How I missed that home of mine
Up here in the city
Just a wasting my time
There ain`t nothing green
But the rich man`s money
The buildings are so tall
The sun can`t shine
Oh, how I wanna go home
To my Georgia Pines

I remember long ago
Blue eyes and golden hair
When I get home
I`ll make her mine
Oh, God, please let her be there

(CHORUS)

Georgia Pines, Georgia Pines
Georgia Pines, Georgia Pines
Georgia Pines, Georgia Pines
Georgia Pines.........


Georgia Pines
??????????
by The Candymen



YOUNG JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL, DUSY STREET, DOTHAN, ALABAMA

What precious memories this old building has for me. The first six years of my life I lived less than one block north of Young Junior on Dusy Street.One afternoon I almost died when I locked myself in an old refrigerator Helm's Bait Beds had for growing worms or crickets. Thank God my hide and seek partners got me out in time but I remember losing my air, pounding on the door and feeling that cool breeze when they opened the latch like it was yesterday. Helm's Bait Beds perfected cricket growing before Auburn even knew what it was and the bait bed was in my backyard for the my first six years of life.
The Girard Junior High bunch made fun of us. They were from across Silk Stocking Avenue and they called us the Young Junior Baby Criminals even though we were the Baby Tigers and most of their parents had gone there. My seventh grade homeroom teacher was Miss Ferguson. She taught my Daddy. Rip Hughes taught down the hall. He coached my Daddy when Earl was second string quarterback of one the greatest Dothan High teams, '38.Seniors '39. Miss McCallum was the librarian and she taught my Daddy. Miss Jernigan, my eighth grade math teacher, taught my Daddy.
Not just my earliest memories but some of my most precious memories come from this old building, what we called THE ALAMO. I whipped some ass and I got my ass whipped but I learned about life just like my Daddy did back during The Depression. I still remember Miss Ferguson's Social Studies classes in October of ' 62 when she showed us how to duck and cover but she also showed us the power of prayer.
I will always be a YOUNG JUNIOR BABY TIGER!!!!

Sunday, June 27, 2004

I am really interested in Wilbur Walton Jr. & The James Gang, The Candymen, The Pieces of Eight, The Swingin' Medallions, The Rubber Band, The Allman Joys, The Five Minutes[Men-ites] [the Minutes], The K-Otics, The Rockin' Gibraltas, The Omen and Their Love, Big Ben Adkins and the Nomads, Buttermilk, Sailcat, Misfits, Gents, Southcamp and This Side Up. Tiger Jack Garrett is on the radio again in Tuscaloosa, 9 till noon on Saturdays on WTBC. He's already playing some of this stuff, especially "Georgia Pines" by the James Gang and "Come On Over" by Big Ben.

THE JAMES GANG AT FT. BRANDON ARMORY

Check out the WTBC history at
http://www.wtbc1230.com/history.html

Wilbur Walton Jr. is still big in England. His "24 Hours of Loneliness" 45 sells for between 20 and 30 pounds. I think it's posted at http://www.soul4u.net/webspace

Also would love anything connected to The Beach Party, The Old Hickory, The Old Dutch and The Red Rooster in Panama City Beach.

Thank you for your interest and always review our progress at "Cuba, Alabama" http://robertoreg.blogspot.com
best,
roberto

eldredge wear wrote:
Robert
I am the record collector of this list and is their
other music you are looking for . I sent Johnny T the
mp3 of the rubber band .Do you have some of the
Stanford Towsend Band or is their any othe band 's
music you are looking for ???
from the linux box
http://www.wtbc1230.com/history.html


http://www.soul4u.net/webspace


THE OLD DUTCH



THE OLD DUTCH TAVERN


The Hangout, looking east.


The Old Dutch

Date: Mon, 09 Dec 2002 16:48:23 -0600
From: Richard Burke III
Subject: hoyhoy: Firstly and Lastly.

Hoys in numerosity,
Got a rock, gonna' see how many fowls I can eliminate with one chunk.

First concert, Roy Orbison and the Candymen, 1964, Houston County Farm
Center, National Peanut Festival, Dothan, Al. The Candymen opened the show
with a number they learned on tour in Britain from their opening act, Ticket
to Ride by the Beatles. At tour completion in Australia, the Candymen and
Roy were opening for the Beatles. Oh, Pretty Woman was doing good for Roy.
The Candymen's lead Guitar player was Dothan's own John Rainey Adkins, God
Rest His Soul, a great reduced to songs that (as one person put it) could be used to teach sightreading to those who don't know how to sightread, with lyrics that belong to hippies, and musical value just above "Louie, Louie."

"I guess I am


The high school gym in Eau Claire, Wisconsin: November 11, 1964

found at http://www.jlindquist.com/rockit.html


November 11, 1964
FRESH OFF THE BEATLES TOUR AND INSPIRING MY FOURTEEN YEAR OLD ASS AT THE NATIONAL PEANUT FESTIVAL IN DOTHAN

From a Robert Christgau column: December '67...

The day when a group could walk into a record company singing last year's top ten and expect to get past the receptionist has passed. "You don't write your own material!" today's receptionist is trained to sneer. "Whatsamatter, you think we're some commercial outfit? You're not creative. Get out."

This problem has been solved neatly by five musicians called the Candymen, who backed Roy Orbison for years before going on alone. For various good reasons they got to a club in New York with two original songs. So they opened their act with a letter-perfect version of "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band," followed by "With a Little Help from My Friends."

Followed by "Gimme Some Lovin'," almost as good as Stevie Winwood.

Followed by "Good Vibrations," which is more than the Beach Boys can do.

Followed by "Thunderball."

Their ambition is to step on stage some night and do all of Sgt. Pepper live, with every studio effect pat. They may succeed. Meanwhile, they are writing their own ma-teerial.

From an interview with Neil Young

I interviewed Roy Orbison just before his death and he told me you'd approached him once and told him that after seeing a gig in Winnipeg when you were a teenager you'd decided to become a Professional musician. Is that true?

"Oh absolutely yeah! This was years ago - '62 maybe. I saw him in Winnipeg, saw him all over the place that year. Got to talk to him once outside a gig. He was coming out of his motor-home with his backing band the Candymen. That had a profound effect on my life. I always loved Roy. I looked up to the way he was, admired the way he handled himself. That aloofness he had influenced me profoundly. It was the way he carried himself, y'know, with this benign dignity... His music was always more important than the media. It wasn't a fashion statement. It wasn't about being in the right place at the right time making the right moves. That didn't matter to Roy. Just like it doesn't matter to me.

"Anyway I've always put a piece of Roy Orbison on every album I've made. His influence is on so many of my songs... I even had his photograph on the sleeve of Tonight's The Night for no reason, really. Just recognizing his presence. There's a big Orbison tribute song on Eldorado called Don't Cry. That's totally me under the Roy Orbison... spell. When I wrote it and recorded it I was thinking 'Roy Orbison meets trash metal' ( laughs). Seriously."



http://www.heybabydays.com/photos_01.htm


GREAT PICTURE OF JOHN RAINEY ADKINS AND THE CANDYMEN
http://www.wtbc1230.com/history.html

Guitar:
John Rainey Adkins

Vocals:
Rodney Justo

Keyboards:
Dean Daughtry

Bass:
Billy Gilmore

Drums:
Bob Nix


That's John Rainey on the right with the beer and I'm pretty sure that's Rodney Justo with his forearm covering his mouth.
rr

I'll have to get back on the sho nuff' ID, checking with Frank and David
Adkins. Believe thats Robert Knix on the left and Dean Daughtry center.
Later..
rbiii


The picture came of WTBC of Tuscaloosa's website. Check it out at....

http://www.wtbc1230.com/history.html


CANDYMEN.

John Rainey Adkins - guitar; Dean Daughtry - keyboards; Bill Gilmore - bass; Rodney Justo - vocals; Bob Nix - drums.
Formed in Alabama. Started life as Roy Orbison's backing band before deciding to go it alone in 1967. They were better under someone else's direction than there own and sank into obscurity. Nix went solo but commercial success eluded him.

Two antennas meet on a roof, fall in love and get married. The ceremony wasn't much, but the reception was excellent.

Two hydrogen atoms walk into a bar. One says, "I've lost my electron." The other says, "Are you sure?" The first replies, "Yes, I'm positive..."

A jumper cable walks into a bar.

The bartender says, "I'll serve you, but don't start anything."

Two peanuts walk into a bar, and one was a salted.

A sandwich walks into a bar. The bartender says, "Sorry we don't serve food in here."

A dyslexic man walks into a bra.

A man walks into a bar with a slab of asphalt under his arm and says: "A beer please, and one for the road."

Two cannibals are eating a clown.

One says to the other: "Does this taste funny to you?"

"Doc, I can't stop singing 'The Green, Green Grass of Home.'" "That sounds like Tom Jones Syndrome." "Is it common?" "It's Not Unusual."

Two cows standing next to each other in a field, Daisy says to Dolly, "I was artificially inseminated this morning." "I don't believe you," said Dolly. "It's true, no bull!" exclaimed Daisy.

An invisible man marries an invisible woman. The kids were nothing to look at either.

Deja Moo: The feeling that you've heard this bull before.

A man takes his Rottweiler to the vet and says, "My dog's cross-eyed, is there anything you can do for him?" "Well," says the vet, "let's have a look at him." So he picks the dog up and examines his eyes, then checks his teeth. Finally, he says, "I'm going to have to put him down." "What? Because he's cross-eyed?" "No, because he's really heavy."

Apparently, one in five people in the world are Chinese. And there are five people in my family, so it must be one of them. It's either my mom or my dad, or maybe my older brother Colin or my younger brother Ho-Cha-Chu. But I'm pretty sure it's Colin.

I went to buy some camouflage trousers the other day but I couldn't find any.

I went to the butcher's the other day and I bet him 50 bucks that he couldn't reach the meat off the top shelf. He said, "No, the steaks are too high."

A man woke up in a hospital after a serious accident. He shouted, "Doctor, doctor, I can't feel my legs!" The doctor replied, "I know you can't - I've cut off your arms!"

I went to a seafood disco last week ... and pulled a mussel.

Two Eskimos sitting in a kayak were chilly; but when they lit a fire in the craft, it sank, proving that you can't have your kayak and heat it too.

What do you call a fish with no eyes? A fsh.

Two termites walk into a bar. One asks, "Is the bar tender here?"