Episode 96: “The Loco-Motion” by Little Eva
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Transcript
A History of Folk Music in 500 Songs
by Andrew Hinkey.
Episode 96.
The Locomotion by Little Eva.
A quick note before this begins.
There is some mention of domestic violence in this episode.
If that's something that might upset you, please check the transcript of the episode at 500songs.com, that's the numbers 500 songs.com, if reading it might be easier than listening.
A couple of months back, we talked about Goffin and King, and the early days of the Brill Building sound.
Today we're going to take another look at them, and at a singer who recorded some of their best material, both solo and in a group, but who would always be overshadowed by the first single they wrote for her, when she was still working as their childminder.
Today we're going to look at Little Eva, and The Locomotion, and the short history of Dimension Records.
Everybody's doing a brand new dance now.
Come on, baby, do the locomotion.
I know you get to like it if you give it a chance now.
Come on, baby, do the locomotion.
My little baby sister can do it with me.
It's easy underlining your ABC.
The story of Little Eva is intertwined with the story of the Cookies, one of the earliest of the girl groups, and so we should probably start with them.
We've mentioned the cookies earlier, in the episode on What Did I Say, but we didn't look at them in any great detail.
The group started out in the mid-50s, as a group of schoolgirls singing together in New York.
Dorothy Jones, her cousin Beulah Robertson, and a friend, Darlene McRae, who had all been in the choir at their local Baptist church.
They formed a group and made their first appearance at the famous Harlem Apollo talent contests, where they came third, to Joe Tex and a vocal group called The Flares.
Not, I think, any of the Flares groups we've looked at.
They were seen at that contest by Jesse Stone, who gave them the name The Cookies.
He signed them to Aladdin Records and produced and co-wrote their first single, All Night Mambo.
That wasn't commercially successful, but Stone liked them enough that he then got them signed to Atlantic, where he again wrote their first single for the label.
That first single was relatively unsuccessful, but their second single on Atlantic, In Paradise, did chart, making number 9 on the RB chart.
Under
a tree in the garden of thee,
we're here, just my love,
and I'm me.
But the B-side to that record would end up being more important to their career in the long run.
Passing Time was the very first song by Neil Sadaka and Harry Greenfield to get recorded, even before Sadaka's recordings with The Tokens or his own successful solo records.
Oh why
And I find these lonesome nights just gone
ever.
Since you gone, I'm blue.
But then two things happened.
Firstly, one of the girls, Beula Robertson, fell out with Jesse Stone, who sacked her from the group.
Stone got in a new vocalist, Margie Hendrix, to replace her, and after one more single, the group stopped making singles for Atlantic.
but they continued recording for smaller labels, and they also had regular gigs as backing vocalists for Atlantic, on records like Lipstick, Powder and Paint by Big Joe Turner.
Now, here's you in, or here's you ain't.
That goes my baby up a tree.
Giggling and the wiggling the toes at me.
Let me put my glasses on.
It's too late by Chuck Willis.
It's too late.
She's home
late.
It's too late.
My
baby is gone too late.
Wish I had told her
she was my only one.
Lord, it's too late.
She's gone.
It's a weak man
that cries.
And Lonely Avenue by Ray Charles.
I could cry, I could cry, I could cry.
I could guide you down.
Lonely
and room.
Oh,
yes, sir.
Now you know my covers, they feel like leather,
and my pillow, it feels like stone.
Well, I toss and turn so every night.
I'm not used to being alone.
I live on a lonely hand room.
It was working with Ray Charles that led to the breakup of the original lineup of the cookies.
Charles was putting together his own group and wanted the cookies as his backing vocalists.
But Dorothy was pregnant and decided she'd rather stay behind and continue working as a session singer than go out on the road.
Darlene and Margie went off to become the core of Charles's new backing group, the Raylet, and they would play a major part in the sound of Charles's records for the next few years.
It's Margie, for example, who can be heard duetting with Charles on The Right Time.
Dorothy stayed behind and put together a new line up of cookies.
To make sure the group sounded the same, she got Darlene's sister Earl Jean into the group Darlene and Earl Jean looked and sounded so similar that many histories of the group say they're the same person
and got another of her cousins, Margaret Ross, to take over the spot that had previously been Beulah's before Margie had taken her place.
This new version of the cookies didn't really start doing much for a couple of years, while Dorothy was raising her newborn and Earl Jean and Margaret were finishing high school.
But in 1961 they started again in earnest, when Neil Sadaka remembered the cookies and called Dorothy up, saying he knew someone who needed a vocal group.
Jerry Goffin and Carol King had become hot songwriters, and they'd also become increasingly interested in record production after Carol had been involved in the making of Will You Love Me Tomorrow.
Carol was recording her own demos of the songs she and Goffin were writing, and was increasingly making them fully produced recordings in their own right.
The first record the New Cookies sang on was one that seems to have started out as one of these demos.
Halfway to Paradise by Tony Orlando sounds exactly like a drifters record, and Orlando was, at the time, a 16-year-old demo singer.
My guess, and it is only a guess, is that this was a demo intended for the drifters, that it was turned down, and and so the demo was released as a record itself.
You leave me half away
to
paradise
so near,
yet so far
away.
That made the lower reaches of the Hot 100, while a British cover version by Billy Fury made number three in the UK.
From this point on, the new lineup of the Cookies were once again the premier session singers.
They added extra backing vocals to a lot of the Drifters records at this time, and would provide backing vocals for most of Atlantic's artists, as the earlier line-up had.
They were also effectively the in-house backing singers for Aldon music.
As well as singing on Ethere Goffin and King demo, they were also singing with Neil Sadaka.
I beg of you,
don't say goodbye.
Can't we give that love another
try?
Come on, baby, let's start anew.
Cause breaking up is hard to do.
But it was Goffin and King who spent the most time working with the cookies, and who pushed them as recording artists in their own right.
They started with a solo record for Dorothy, Taking That Long Walk Home, a song that was very much Will You Love Me Tomorrow, Part 2.
Though you are leaving,
I won't be grieving.
I know someday when you are on your own,
you're gonna find yourself on a lonely street
taking
that long.
The Cookies were doing huge amounts of session work, working twelve hours a day, seven days a week.
Dorothy Jones described being in the studio working on a King Curtis session until literally fifteen minutes before giving birth.
They weren't the only ones working hard, though.
Goffin and King were writing from their Aldon officers every single day, writing songs for the Drifters, the Sherelles, Bobby Rydell, Bobby V, Gene Pitney, the Crickets, the Everly Brothers, and more.
And on top of that, they had a child, and Carol King was pregnant with a second one.
And this being the very early 1960s, it never occurred to either Goffyn or King that just because Carol King was working the exact same number of hours as Goffin, that might mean she shouldn't also be doing the housework and looking after the children with no help from Goffin.
There was only one way they could continue their level of productivity, and that was to get someone in to help out Carol.
She mentioned to the cookies that she was looking for someone to help her with the children, and Earl Jean mentioned that a 19-year-old acquaintance, her friend's husband's sister, had just moved to New York from North Carolina to try to become a singer, and was looking for any work she could get while she was trying to make it.
Eva Narcissus Boyd, Earl Jean's acquaintance, moved in with Goffin and King and became their living childminder.
for $35 a week plus room and board.
Goffin and King had known that Eva was a singer before they hired her, and they discovered that her voice was rather good.
Not only that, but she blended well with the cookies and was friends with them.
She became an unofficial fourth cookie, and was soon in the studio on a regular basis, too.
And when she was, that meant that Eva's sister was looking after the kids, as a subcontracted babysitter.
During this time, Don Kirshner's attitude was still that he was determined to get the next hit for every artist that had a hit.
But that wasn't always possible.
Cameo Parkway had, after the success they'd had with The Twist, fully jumped on the dance craze bandwagon, and they'd hit on another dance that might be the next twist.
The Mashed Potato was a dance that James Brown had been doing on stage for a few years, and in the wake of The Twist, Brown had had a hit with a song about it, Through the Mashed Potatoes, which was credited to Nat Kendrick and the Swans, rather than to Brown, for contractual reasons.
Cameo Parkway had picked up on that dance and had done just what Kirshner always did, and created a sound-alike of a recent hit.
And in fact, they'd mashed up, if you'll pardon the expression, two recent hits.
In this case, they'd taken the sound of Please Mr.
Postman, slightly reworked the lyrics to be about Brown's dance, and given it to session singer D.
D.
Sharp.
it's the night.
That had gone to number two on the pop charts and number one on the RB charts, and even inspired its own rip-offs, like The Monster Mash by Bobby Boris Pickett.
So Kirshner just assumed that Sharp would be looking for another dance hit, one that sounded just like Mashed Potato Time, and got Goffin and King to write one to submit to her.
Unfortunately for him, he'd assumed wrong.
Cameo Parkway was owned by a group of successful songwriters, and they didn't need outside writers bringing them hits when they could write their own.
D.D.
Sharp wasn't going to be recording Goffin and King's song.
When he listened to the demo, Don Kirshner was astonished that they hadn't taken the song.
It had hit written all over it.
He decided that he was going to start his own record label, Dimension Records, and he was just going to release that demo as the single.
The cookies went into the studio to overdub another layer of backing vocals, but otherwise, the record that was released was the demo Eva, now renamed Little Eva, had sung.
baby, do the hole-o-motion.
Do it holding hands until you get the notion.
Come on, baby, do the hook-o-motion.
There's never been a day that's so easy to do.
It even makes you happy when you're feeling blue.
So come on, come on, do the love for motion windy.
Come on, you gotta swing up on the side.
That record went to number one and made Little Eva a star.
It also made Jerry Goffin a successful producer, because even though Goffin and King had co-produced it, Goffin got sole production credit on this, and on other records the two produced together.
According to King, Goffin was the one in the control room for their productions, while she would be on the studio floor, and she didn't really question whether what she was doing counted as production two until much later.
And anyway, getting the sole credit was apparently important to Jerry.
The Locomotion was such a big hit that it inspired its own knockoffs, including one song cheekily called Little Eva by a group called The Locomotions.
So the record label would say Little Eva the Locomotions, and people might buy it by mistake.
You'll be shocked to learn that that one was on a Morris Levy label.
That group featured Leon Hough, who would later go on to make a lot of much better records.
Meanwhile, as Little Eva was now a star, Carol King once again had to look for a childminder.
This time, she insisted that anyone she hired be unable to sing, so she wouldn't keep having to do this.
Dimension Records was soon churning out singles, all of them involving the Cookies and Eva and Goffin and King.
They put out Everybody's Got a Dance But Me by Big D Irwin, a song that accepted the locomotion Wahwa Toosi, Hully Gully, and Twist and Shout, among many others, with the Cookies on backing vocals and with Goffin as the credited producer.
Bobby ride down, he did the bitch.
But here I am,
That wasn't a hit, but Dimension soon released two more big hits.
One was a solo single by Carol King, It Might As Well Reign Until September, which went to number 20, even though its only national exposure was a disastrous appearance by King on American Bandstand,
which left her feeling humiliated.
as it can be.
Although it doesn't really matter much to me
for all the fun I'll have while you're so far away,
it might as well rain until September.
I don't need sunny skies for things I have to do.
Her solo performing career wouldn't properly take off for a few more years, but that was a step towards it.
The Cookies also had a hit on dimension around this point.
Goffin and King had written a song called Chains for the Everly brothers, who had recorded it, but not released it.
kind
that you can
see.
Whoa,
these chains of love
got a hold of me.
Yeah.
So they gave the song to the cookies instead, with Little Eva on additional vocals, and it made the pop top 20 and the RB top 10.
Well, I can't break away from these chains.
I can't run around
cause I'm not free.
Whoa, all these chains of love
won't let me be.
Yeah,
now believe me when I tell you
I think you're fine.
Several people have pointed out that that lyric can be read as having an element of BDSM to it, and it's not the only Goffin and King song from this period that does.
There's a 1964 B-side they wrote for Eva called Please Hurt Me, which is fairly blatant.
If I
had to
be a black maid,
that's what I'll be
sad.
But the BDSM comparison has also been made, wrongly in my opinion, about one of the most utterly misguided songs that Goffin and King ever wrote, a song inspired by Little Eva telling them that her boyfriend beat her up.
They'd asked her why she put up with it, and she said that he only hit her because he loved her.
They were inspired by that to write He Hit Me and It Felt Like a Kiss, an utterly grotesque song which, in a version produced by Phil Spectre for the Crystals, was issued as a single, but soon withdrawn due to general horror.
I won't be accepting that one here, though it's easy enough to find if you want to.
Having said that, I should also say that while people have said that Goffin and King's material at this point flirts with BDSM, my understanding of BDSM, as it has been explained to me by friends who indulge in such activities, is that consent is paramount, so I don't think that he hit me should be talked about in those terms.
I don't want anything I've said here to contribute to the blurring of distinctions between consensual kink and abuse, which are too often conflated.
Originally, Eva's follow-up to the locomotion was going to be One Fine Day, another Goffin and King King song.
But no matter how much Goffin and King worked on the track, they couldn't come up with an arrangement, and eventually they passed the song over to the Tokens, who solved the arrangement problems, though they kept King's piano part, and produced a version of it for the Chiffons, for whom it became a hit.
mamma,
and you will be no
one.
Many do we need
one fine day
for your girl.
Instead, Goffin and King gave Eva Keep Your Hands Off My Baby.
This is, in my opinion, the best thing that Eva ever did, and it made the top 20, though it wasn't as big a hit as the locomotion.
Oh, keep your hand
your hand,
off of my baby.
Will you get it through your head?
And Eva also appeared on another cookies record, Don't Say Nothing Bad About My Baby, which made the top ten.
Don't you tell me, my baby's just a playbook to me.
Don't you tell me, my baby's just a playbook to me.
I'm always
single word to say, He's my girl.
My baby's just a playboy.
He's true, he's true, he's true to me.
So girl, you better shut them up.
Everybody says he's lazy.
Running up when he's kissing me.
The Cookies, Eva, and Goffin and King were such a package deal that Dimension released an album called Dimension Dolls, featuring the first few hits of each act, and padded out with demos they'd made for other artists.
This hit-making hit-making machine was so successful for a brief period in 1962 and 63 that even Eva's sister Idalia got in on the act, releasing a song by Goffin, King, and Jack Keller, Hula Hoppin.
For Eva's third single, Jerry Goffin and Jack Keller wrote a song called Let's Turkey Trot, which also made the top 20.
But that would be the last time that Eva would have a hit of her own.
At first, the fact that she had a couple of flop singles wasn't a problem.
No artists at this time were consistent hit makers, and it was normal for someone to have a few top ten hits, then a couple at number 120 or something, before going back to the top.
And she was touring with Dick Clark's Caravan of Stars, and still in high demand as a live performer.
She also, in 1963, recorded a version of Swinging on a Star with Big D Irwin, though she wasn't credited on the label, and that made the top 40, and made number seven in the UK.
One more thing, two moon beams.
Big is an animal with dirt on his face.
His shoes are a terrible disgrace.
But everything changed for Little Eva, and for the whole world of Brill Building Pop, in 1964.
In part, this was because the Beatles became successful, and changed the pop landscape, but by itself that shouldn't have destroyed the careers of Eva or the Cookies, who the Beatles admired.
They recorded a cover of Chains, and they used to play Keep Your Hands Off My Baby in their live sets.
But Don Kirshner decided to sell Aldon music and dimension records to Columbia Pictures, and to start concentrating on the west coast rather than New York.
The idea was that they could come up with songs that would be used in films and T V, and make more money that way.
And that worked out for many people, including Kirschner himself.
But even when artists like Eva and the Cookies got hit material, the British invasion made it hard for them to get a footing.
For example, Goffin and King wrote a song for Earl Gene from the Cookies to record as a solo track, just after Dimension was taken over by Columbia.
That record did make the top 40.
Last night I met a new boy in the neighborhood.
But then Hermann's Hermits released their version, which became a much bigger hit.
That sort of thing kept happening.
The cookies ended up splitting up by 1967.
Little Eva did end up getting some TV work.
Most famously, she sang a dance song in an episode of the Hanna-Barbera cartoon, McGilla Guerrilla.
Beat on your chest and shake the rest, scratch your side when you're doing the McGilla.
But Dimension Records was not a priority for anyone.
Columbia already owned their own labels and didn't need another one, and the label was being wound down.
And then, Al Nevins, Don Kirshner's partner in Aldon, died.
He'd always been friendly with Eva, and without him to advocate for her, the label sold her contract off to Bell Records.
From that point on, she could no longer rely on Goffin and King, and she hopped between a number of different labels, none of them with any great success.
After spending seven years going from label to label, and having split up with her husband, she quit the music business in 1971 and moved back to North Carolina.
She was sick of the music industry, and particularly sick of the lack of money.
She had signed a lot of bad contracts and was making no royalties from sales of her records.
She worked menial day jobs, survived on welfare for a while, became active in her local church, and, depending on which reports you read, either ran a soul food restaurant or merely worked there as a waitress.
Meanwhile, the locomotion was a perennial hit.
Her version recharted in the UK in the early 70s, and Todd Rundgren produced a version for the heavy metal band Grand Funk Railroad, which went to number one in the US in 1974.
Come on, let it do the locomotion.
I know you'll get to like it if you give it a chance now.
Come on, let it do the locomotion.
My little rabbit sister can do it with ease.
It's easy up to line in your ABCs.
So come on, come on, and do the locomotion.
And then in 1988, an Australian soap star, Callie Minogue, recorded her own version, which went top five worldwide and started Minogue's own successful pop career.
Everybody's doing a brand new dance now.
I know you'll get to like it if you give it a chance now.
That record becoming a hit got a series of Where Are They Now articles written about Eva, and she was persuaded to come out of retirement and start performing again.
Though having been so badly hurt by the industry, she was very dubious at first, and she also had scruples because of her strong religious faith.
She later said that she'd left the contracts on her table for eight months before signing them, but when she finally did, she found that her audience was still there for her.
For the rest of her life, she was a popular performer on the Old East circuit, performing on package tours with people like Bobby V and Brian Highland, playing state fairs, and touring Europe.
She continued performing until shortly before her death, even after she was diagnosed with the cancer that eventually killed her, as she once again connected with the audiences who had loved her music back when she was still a teenager.
She died aged 59 in 2003.
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