Episode 24: “Ko Ko Mo” by Gene and Eunice

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Welcome to episode twenty-four of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs. Today we’re looking at “Ko Ko Mo” by Gene and Eunice. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode.
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A history of folk music in 500 songs

by Andrew.

Episode 24

Kokomo by Gina Munis.

A Ruba Jamaica.

No, sorry.

This is not that Kokomo, which, much as I love the Beach Boys, is not going to make this history.

Instead, it's a song that is now almost completely forgotten, but which was one of the most important records in early rock and roll.

And I do mean both that it has been almost completely forgotten and that it was hugely important.

This song seems just to have fallen out of the collective memory altogether, to the extent that I only found out about it by reading old books and asking, what is this Kokomo they're talking about?

Because it was important enough that all of the best books on R and B history,

most of which were written in the sixties or seventies, when the events I'd been talking about were far fresher in the memory, mentioned it and said it was one of the most important records of 1954.

And the fact is, there is an interesting story buried in there.

The story of how Kokomo by Gene and Eunice was two of the most important records in early rock and roll.

But there's another story there too.

The story of how a record can completely disappear from the cultural memory.

Because even in those books which mention it, that's all they do.

They just mention this record's existence, giving it no more than a few sentences.

On most of these podcast episodes, I end up cutting a lot of material, because there's far more to say than will fit into a half-hour podcast.

Here there's nothing to cut.

The sum total of all the information in the whole world, as far as I can see, is in a single eleven-page CD booklet.

To talk about Kokomo, first we're going to have to talk about Shirley and Lee.

Shirley and Lee were the sweethearts of the blues, a New Orleans R and B duo who recorded in Cosimo Matasa's studio.

They weren't a real life couple, but their publicity suggested that they were, and their songs made up the continuing story of an on-again, off-again romance.

Their first single, I'm Gone, reached number two on the RB charts.

please come back and stay.

Oh,

baby,

I'll give you one

more chance.

All it cause I need your romance.

They were,

as far as I can tell, the first people in any genre to do this kind of couple back and forth singing, as opposed to duets by singers who clearly weren't in a real relationship.

You can trace a line from them through Sonny and Cher, or Johnny Cash and June Carter, duet partners whose appeal was partly due to their off stage relationships.

Of course, in Shirley and Lee's case, this was faked, but the audiences didn't know that, at least at the time.

Shirley and Lee were popular enough that they inspired a whole host of imitators.

We've mentioned Icantina Turner before, and we're likely to talk about them again.

But there was also Mickey and Sylvia, whose Love is Strange we'll be looking at later.

The three duo acts I've just mentioned all knew each other.

For example, Mickey and Sylvia sang back up on Icantina Turner's I think it's going to work out fine.

I keep on telling, don't you think it's gonna work out fine?

I've been feeling so feeling it's gonna work out.

I keep on telling, don't I know it's gonna work out.

I'm so quiet that you're my own mind.

Yes, those were cold.

But there was one other bureau act who tried to make a success out of the Shirley and Lee formula and who didn't know those other groups.

And it's them we're going to be talking about today.

Unlike Shirley and Lee, Gene and Eunice were a real-life couple, and so they didn't have to fake things the way Shirley and Lee did.

Gene Forrest had been a jobbing singer for several years.

He He started out recording solo records for John Dolphin's label, Recorded in Hollywood.

The label recorded in Hollywood was a bit of a misnomer, but that label name itself tells you something about the rampant racism of American society in the nineteen fifties.

You see, John Dolphin wasn't actually based in Hollywood, because when he'd tried to open his first business there, a record shop, he'd been unable to, because Dolphin was black, and black people weren't allowed to own businesses in Hollywood.

So he named his record shop Dolphins of Hollywood anyway, and opened it in a different part of Los Angeles.

But even though Dolphin was a victim of racism, he was also a beneficiary of it.

And this just goes to show how revoltingly endemic racism was in the US in this time period.

Because the original location for Dolphins of Hollywood was on Central Avenue, which at the time was the centre for black businesses in LA, in the same way that Beale Street was in Memphis, or Rampart Street in New Orleans.

But Central Avenue only became a centre for black business because of one of the worst acts of racism in America's history.

Most of the businesses there were originally owned by Japanese people.

When, during World War two, Japanese people in America and Japanese Americans were interred in concentration camps for the duration of the war, those businesses became vacant, and the white owners of the properties were desperate for someone to rent them to, so they allowed black people to rent them.

There was a big campaign in the black local press at the time to encourage black entrepreneurs to take over these vacant properties, and part of the campaign was to tell people that if they didn't start businesses there, then Jews would instead.

Yes.

Sadly, society in the US at that time was just that

fractally racist.

But John Dolphin managed to build himself a very successful business, and he essentially dominated rhythm and blues in Los Angeles in the nineteen fifties.

As well as having a record shop, which stayed open twenty four hours a day, he also owned a radio station, which broadcast from the front window of the record shop, with DJs such as Hunter Hancock and Johnny Otis.

Those DJs would tell everyone they were broadcasting from dolphins, so the listeners would come along to the shop.

And Dolphin innovated something that may have changed the whole of music history.

He deliberately targeted both his radio station and his record shop at white teenagers, realizing that they would buy music by black musicians if they knew about it, and that they had more money than the black community.

As a result, his record shop often had cues out the door of white teenagers eager to buy the latest R and B records, and through the influence of his DJs, the whole of the West Coast music scene became strongly influenced by the music people like Otis and Hancock would play.

And then, on top of that, in what, depending on how you look at it, was a great act of corporate synergy, or something that should have brought action by antitrust agencies, Dolphin owned record labels, and his promise to artists was: We'll record you today and you'll have a hit tonight, because anything recorded on his labels would instantly go into heavy rotation on his radio station and be pushed in his record shop.

Gene Forrest's records were an example.

Everybody's got money

And I don't have a dark

unfortunate

Every time I think about it

Who you'll not have met again

What that didn't mean for the musicians though was any money.

Dolphin paid a flat fee for his recordings, took all the publishing rights and wouldn't pay royalties.

But for many musicians this was reasonable enough at the time.

The idea for them was that they'd make records for Dolphin to build themselves a name, and then move on to a label which paid them reasonable amounts of money.

As Dolphin never signed anyone to a multi-record contract, they could easily move on after making a record or two for him.

Sadly for Gene, the promise of A Hit Tonight didn't pay off, and after three singles for Recorded in Hollywood, he moved first to RPM Records, one of the many blues and RB labels that was operating at the time, and then to Aladdin Records, for a one-off single backed by a band called The Four Feathers.

That would be the only record they would make together, but the connection with Aladdin Records would prove to be important.

Shortly after that record came out, Forrest met a young singer named Eunice Levy, after she'd done well at Hunter Hancock's talent show.

Initially, they started working together because the Four Feathers were looking for a female harmony vocalist, but soon they became romantically involved, and started working as a duo rather than as part of a larger group and recording for combo records.

Combo was a tiny label owned by the trumpet player Jake Porter, and most of the records it released were recorded in Porter's basement.

A typical example of a combo release is Ting Ting Boom Scat by Jonesy's Combo.

Got the feeling.

Ting Ting Boom.

Man, what sacks you got?

Tick-tank red beef in the pot.

Turn that desk go way up high.

And dick, tank, beat, let it forgive him by.

I got the real good warm on.

I'm with a 55 car.

Cheese, beat, meat, chicken.

And that's a little cavalry.

She gives me one floller patience and meat.

That the $20 gonna last me all week.

Gene and Eunice's only record for combo, Kokomo, is a fairly typical rhythm and blues record for 1954.

It varies simply between a verse in Trajill rhythm, trying for something of the sound of Fat Stomino's records, and a more straightforward shuffle on the corvices, going between them rather awkwardly.

whisper in my ear.

Come a little closer, don't have no fear.

Don't you know

I love you so

don't you know

I love you so

now

the reason for the awkward transition is simple enough.

It's a song made up from ideas from two different songwriters bolted together.

Gene came up with the verse while Eunice came up with the chorus.

She was inspired by the town of Kokomo, Indiana.

Jake Porter is the third credited songwriter, and it's not entirely certain what, if anything, he contributed.

Porter was the owner of the record label, and label owners often took took credit they didn't deserve.

But, on the other hand, Porter was himself a musician, and he'd performed with Lionel Hampton and Benny Goodman, among others.

So it's not unreasonable that he might have actually contributed to the songwriting.

The record was backed by Jonesy's Combo, who are credited on the record along with Gene and Eunice.

Now, listen to this.

Don't you know

I love you so

don't you know

I love you so

That record is Gene and Eunice doing Kokomo.

The record is credited to Gene and Eunice with Johnny's Combo.

The Johnny in this case is Johnny Otis, whose band backs the singers on that version.

As you can tell, it sounds very close to identical to the original, even though I'm sure Johnny Otis could easily have got the record sounding smoother and with more of a groove groove if he had been allowed.

You see, Gene was still under contract with Aladdin Records as a solo artist following his one single with them and when they found that he had put out a record that might have some success with the competing label they decided that they had to have their own version and pulled rank.

getting him to re-record the track as closely as he could to the original recording.

Eunice wasn't contracted to Aladdin, but given that the alternative was presumably a lawsuit, she went along with it.

Gene and Eunice were now an Aladdin Records Act, and their next few records would all be released on that label.

The recording replicated the original as closely as possible, and both records even had B-sides, which were identical sounding recordings of the same song.

Once Combo Records found out, they started an advertising war with Aladdin.

It was bad enough that other people were recording the song and having hits with it, but the same act putting out the record on two different labels.

That was obviously unacceptable, and the two labels started to put out competing adverts in the trade journals.

Aladdin's adverts saying, Don't be fooled, this is the Gene and Eunice Kokomo, while Combo said, This is it, the original Kokomo.

Billboard counted the two records as the same for chart purposes.

No one could be bothered keeping track of which version of Kokomo it was that was played on the radio or on a jukebox.

As far as the public were concerned, it was all one record, and that one record ended up going to number six on the RB charts.

But Gene and Eunice weren't the only ones to have a hit with Kokomo.

The song became the subject of almost a feeding frenzy of cover versions.

The first, by Marvin and Johnny, came out only a month after the original recording.

you know

I love you so

But there were dozens upon dozens of them the Crew Cuts, Louis Armstrong, the Flamingos, Rosemary Clooney's sister Betty.

Everyone was recording a version of Kokomo within a month or two of the single coming out.

The best explanation anyone can come up with for the massive, improbable success of the song in cover versions is that it was one of the few RB singles of the time to be completely free of sexual innuendo.

While RB records of the time mostly sound completely clean to modern ears, to radio programmers at the time, records like The Wallflower and Hound Dog were utterly scandalous.

and required substantial rewriting if they were going to play to white audiences.

But Kokomo had such a simplistic lyric that there was no problem with it, and the result was that everyone could record it and have a hit with the white audience, leading to it even being recorded by Pericomo.

Oh, talk to me, baby, whisper in my ear.

Talk to me, baby, whisper in my ear.

I come come a little closer, don't have no fear

Don't you know

I love you so

Don't you know

I love you so

And that was the biggest hit of all Como was the person with whom this song became associated, although thankfully for all concerned he made no further rock and roll records.

And even Cromo's version is probably more rocking than that by Andy Griffith.

Yes, that's Andy Griffith, the 50s sitcom actor.

She says I heard what you told me, heard what you said.

Don't worry, my birdie won't lose my head.

See, he ain't worried about her head.

What he actually said to her friends was, sweetheart, I'd love to come over there and hug you one time, but I'm scared you'll caulifly my other ear.

There's dimples on her elbows, dimples on her knees.

Actually, they want real dimples, friends.

It's notable that the trade magazines advertised Como's version of Kokomo as a rock and roll record.

This was in very early 1955, after Rock Around the Clock had been released, but well before it became a hit.

But rock and roll was already a phrase that was in use for the style of music, at least among the trade magazines.

Normally, this kind of cover version would have brought at least a reasonable amount of money to the songwriters, and as Gene and Eunice were the writers, that should have given them a large amount of money.

However, after they sold the song to one publishing company, Aladdin claimed that they owned the publishing, again due to their existing contract with Gene Forrest.

So everybody got a share of the money from the hit record, except for the people who wrote and sang it.

Gene and Eunice's next single was This Is My Story.

This

is

my

story,

I have

no song

on,

Just a lone and broken heart

Just because I fell in love

In love

with you

I pray There was a problem though Kokomo was going up the charts and this is my story was about to be released.

They needed to go out on tour to capitalise on the first, promote the second, and generally get themselves into a position where they could have a career with some sort of possibility of lasting.

And Eunice was pregnant, with Jean's child.

Obviously, she couldn't go out on the road and tour, especially in the kind of conditions in which black artists had to tour in the 1950s, often sleeping on fans' floors, because there were no no hotels that would take black people.

There was only one thing for it.

They would have to get in a replacement Eunice.

They auditioned several singers before eventually settling on Linda Hayes, the sister of Tony Williams of the Platters.

Hayes didn't sound much like Eunice, but she looked enough like her that she could do the job.

We heard from Linda Hayes last week when we looked at one of the Johnny Ace tribute records she sang on.

But she had a relatively decent minor career herself, singing lead on several records with her brothers group, before putting out a few records of her own.

Here, for example, is one of her records with the platters.

dying.

Please

have mercy

on a fool

like me.

Oh, darling.

So Jean toured with Linda as a substitute Eunice, while Eunice was on what amounted to maternity leave.

And that worked well enough.

This Is My Story went to number eight on the RB charts, and it looked like Gene and Eunice were on their way to permanent stardom.

Unfortunately, that wasn't the case, and by the time Eunice got back from Maternity Leave, the duo's career stalled.

They recorded several more records for Aladdin and tried various different tactics to repeat their early success, including having their records produced by the great Earl Palmer.

Cupid's can be a witness, you see.

I'm on one knee, so come to me.

The angels gave you, the angels gave you to me.

None of that did any good as far as charting goes.

This Is My Story was their last chart hit for Aladdin Records, and after the recordings with Earl Palmer in 1958, the label dropped them.

They recorded for several more labels, with mixed results.

For a while, Eunice returned to Combo Records.

Unsurprisingly, after what had happened with Gene's contract, Jake Porter didn't want to have anything to do with Gene, but Eunice released a couple of unsuccessful tracks with them.

Love just makes them feel that way.

So, why did Gene and Eunice become completely forgotten?

Why, outside the liner notes for a single out-of-print CD booklet, and a Wikipedia article based substantially on that booklet, have I been able to find a grand total of four paragraphs or so of text about them in any reliable source?

And why does even that set of liner notes start with the sentence, Gene and Eunice's story story is muddled, confusing and largely unknown.

I think this comes back to something that has been an underlying theme of this podcast from the start.

The fact that great art comes from scenes as much as it does from individuals.

This is not the same as saying that great artists aren't individuals, but that the music we remember tends to come out of reinforcing groups of artists, not just collaborating, but providing networks for each other, acting as each other's support acts, promoting each other's material.

I mentioned when I was talking about Mickey and Sylvia, Shirley and Lee, and Icantina Turner, that all three of these acts knew and worked with each other.

None of them worked with Jean and Eunice, and Jean and Eunice just don't seem to have had any particular network of musicians with whom they collaborated.

The collaboration with Johnny Otis just seems to have been a one-off job for him, and bringing in Linda Hayes doesn't seem to have led to any further connections with the people she worked with.

With almost every act we've talked about, you find them turning up in unexpected places in biographies of other acts, and even the one-hit wonders, who had hits that people remembered, continued being parts of other musicians' lives.

Gene and Eunice just didn't.

But without those connections, without making themselves part of a bigger story, they didn't become part of the cultural memory.

Most of the acts that covered Kokomo were people like Perry Como or Louis Armstrong, who aren't part of the rock and roll canon, and so the record seems to have turned into a footnote.

But that wasn't quite the end of their influence.

Jamaica always had a soft spot for US RB of the Fats Domino type, and Gene and Eunice, with their adaptations of Dave Bartholomew's New Orleans style, became mildly successful in Jamaica.

In particular, their record The Vow, which had been one of their last Aladdin releases, got covered on Coxone Dodd's Studio One Records, the label that basically pioneered Ska, Rocksteady, and reggae music in Jamaica.

In nineteen sixty-five, Studio One released this.

I

made a bow

to you.

Yes, yes, my darling.

All

I know

in our hearts is

That's performed by Bunny and Rita, as in Bunny Wailer of the Wailers, and Rita Anderson, who would later also join the Wailers and become better known by her married name after she married Bunny's bandmate Bob Marley.

Jean and Eunice attempted a reunion in the 80s.

They didn't get on well enough to make it work, but Eunice did get to record one last single as a solo artist under her new married name, Eunice Russ Frost.

On Real Real Switcher, she was backed by the classic 50s rhythm section of Red Calendar and Earl Palmer.

I always feel so empty.

Whenever you pack to leave.

I thought

I really.

Jean remained out of the spotlight until his death in 2003, but Eunice would occasionally perform at conventions for fans of Doo Wop and RB until she died in 2002.

She never got to recapture her early success, but she did at least know there were still people out there who remembered Kokomo.

A history of rock music in 500 Songs is written, produced and performed by Andrew Hickey.

Visit 500songs.coms.com to see transcriptions, liner notes, and links to other materials, including a mixed cloud stream of all songs accepted in this episode.

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