Richard Barrett

Reporting the
passing of RICHARD BARRETT, the legendary singer-songwriter-producer who was
responsible for literally hundreds of classic vocal group harmony sounds from
the 1950s and 1960s. The original lead singer of the Valentines, Barrett was
among the most creative and talented individuals of the era, and was
instrumental in the careers of the many talented artists that were signed to
George Goldner's plethora of successful labels including the Chantels, Dubs,
Teenagers, Little Anthony and the Imperials, the Flamingos, Cleftones, and
others. He served as a producer, A&R director, manager, and successful
songwriter well into the 1970s, working with artists including Harold Melvin and
the Blue Notes and the Three Degrees. Richard died early this morning of
prostate cancer at age 70. He passed away peacefully with his family by his
bedside.
Todd
Baptista
Westport,
MA
The following was written by Bruce Eder, All Music Guide:
One of the most important figures in 1950s and early-'60s rock & roll to come
out of New York, Richard Barrett has been badly served by history in terms of
the recognition he is due. A singer/songwriter turned producer, he became an
essential part of
George Goldner's
Rama, End, and Gone Records operations, as well as
Morris Levy's
Roulette Records, and brought along several legendary groups of the period. He
was one of the first successful independent black record producers and also
became a pioneering black producer on Broadway.
Richard Barrett (then known as Ritchie Barrett) was born and raised in
Philadelphia and began singing with an R&B harmony group called the Angels
during the early '50s. A charismatic singer with a fine voice, he was also a
skilled dancer and choreographer, and had many good ideas about arrangements,
even in those early days. Philadelphia in the early '50s wasn't the hotbed of
music industry activity that it would become in the second half of the decade.
Barrett took off for greener pastures in New York City sometime around 1952 or
early 1953, eking out a living as a day laborer, primarily in landscaping, and
trying to find a music gig that would pay. He crossed paths with a group called
the Dreamers, a local quartet that he heard singing at a party, and began
talking with them about the idea of expanding by one; he also presented them
with a song that he'd written entitled "Summer's Love," and the group was so
taken with the song that they added Barrett to the lineup just to get it. A
quick name change to
the Valentines
seemed to jump-start their new configuration and the quintet began getting
noticed locally; one of those who enjoyed the band's sound was Raoul Cita of
the
Harptones,
who arranged an audition for the quintet with Monte Bruce, who was trying to
start up a label called Bruce Records. A recording session yielded a tape of
"Summer's Love," which Bruce proved unable to release, but it did get airplay
from Harlem-based DJ
Willie Bryant.
With his over-the-air help,
the Valentines
built up a following in Harlem and got a single release of a new version of
"Summer's Love" backed with "Tonight Kathleen" on Old Town Records in November
of 1954. Despite the quality of the song and its popularity on the radio, the
official release of "Summer's Love" never charted, largely owing to Old Town's
being a barely established label, but "Tonight Kathleen" extended the local
popularity that "Summer's Love" had already earned the quintet. The group's next
stop was
George Goldner's
Rama Records, another relatively new label, but one with better capitalization
and distribution connections.
The group's debut Rama release, "Lily Maebelle," co-authored by Barrett, was
issued in October (some sources say September) of 1955 and was picked up by DJ
Alan Freed,
who turned it into a regional hit that, in turn, transformed
the Valentines
into stars in Harlem. Even then, Barrett had begun pursuing other goals
involving music from within Rama Records. He was just as interested in the
talent and business sides of the music business as he was in performing. He saw
his opportunity to learn something and perhaps do something in those areas with
Goldner,
who had five years' success behind him and, thus, knew the essentials of the
business and then some, but who was also entering a field of music -- rhythm &
blues -- that was new to him.
Goldner,
in turn, didn't want to discourage Barrett, recognizing him early on as a
potentially serious music talent beyond his singing;
Goldner
had already enjoyed an unexpected national hit with "Gee" by the Crows, and was
hoping to find acts that were good for more than a single hit record. Barrett
began serving as a sometime go-fer, chauffeur, and jack-of-all-trades at
Goldner's
office and he was soon making suggestions on creative and promotional matters as
well. What's more, even before
the Valentines'
record was released, Barrett was allowed to bring prospective artists in to
audition and, if they were signed, work with
Goldner
producing the recording sessions that followed. Barrett also found that he fit
in well working with what became the Rama (and later Gee Records) house band,
led by saxman
Jimmy Wright,
and their method of working up arrangements on the fly.
During the second half of 1955, Barrett paid back
Goldner's
faith in him when he heard a quintet of Harlem teenagers doing a version of
"Lily Maebelle" in the street outside of the apartment building where he lived.
This was his introduction to Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers (as they were later
called), and he brought them to
Goldner,
who duly signed them up. In late November or early December of 1955, the group
recorded "Why Do Fools Fall in Love," one of the defining hits of the early rock
& roll era and the biggest-selling record that
Goldner
ever released. Meanwhile, Barrett and his group enjoyed a second local hit in
the spring of 1956 with "Woo Woo Train," but their fortunes were clearly on the
wane, in part because of Barrett's lessening attention to their work. The group
released two more singles without success in 1956, but by the end of that year,
Barrett's involvement with
the Valentines
was receding rapidly as he began concentrating much more on his production
activities for
Goldner.
Most notable was his connection with a newly signed group called
the Cleftones,
whose vocal arrangements and stage choreography Barrett had a major hand in
shaping. Early in 1957, not long before
the Valentines
disbanded, he brought in another discovery in the guise of
the Chantels,
a quintet from New York -- that he'd literally heard singing on the street --
who are generally regarded as the first identifiable "girl group" in rock & roll
history. Barrett became their manager and producer, and their second release,
"Maybe," was not only a huge hit, selling in excess of a million copies, but
became an enduring classic and second only to "Why Do Fools Fall in Love" in the
Goldner
library. That same year, he also produced and arranged both sides of debut
single by yet another R&B vocal group,
the Channels,
for
Goldner's
Gone Records.
Barrett made one more major discovery, this time within the orbit of Roulette
Records -- a successor to the Rama, Gee, End, and Gone labels, formed by
Goldner's
partner
Morris Levy
-- in the form of
Little Anthony &
the Imperials.
He finally left
Goldner
and Levy
in 1960 to start his own label, Princeton Records, on which his major signing
was the Veneers, a group similar to
the Chantels.
The Veneers never sold many records, but having them under contract served
Barrett well when Arlene Smith,
the Chantels'
original lead singer, decided to leave. He tried taking over as lead singer on a
pair of singles, "Come Softly to Me" and "Summer's Love," but those singles
didn't sell; finally, Barrett moved the Veneers' lead singer, Annette Smith,
into Arlene Smith's spot in
the Chantels,
and he later moved this version of
the Chantels
to Carlton and Ludix Records, where they enjoyed more hit singles. He also
produced early recordings by
the Isley
Brothers
and Harold
Melvin & the Blue Notes,
and crossed paths with Kenny Gamble and
Leon Huff
before either was very well known. After returning to Philadelphia three years
later, he began producing
the Three Degrees,
the most enduring act with which Barrett has ever been associated. They enjoyed
hits well into the 1970s, including a number one record in 1974 of "TSOP (The
Sound of Philadelphia)," produced in association with Kenny Gamble and
Leon Huff.
Barrett also worked in the late '90s producing the group Rap Machine. ~