Wednesday, April 21, 2010

And That's That



Tom Clay (née Clague) was a popular Detroit radio personality in the '50s and '60s. Years before hitting with the social commentary piece "What the World Needs Now Is Love/Abraham Martin and John," Clay was entertaining Detroiters with his Jack the Bellboy character at radio station WJBK-AM, and sponsoring record hops with popular artists, where people came to see Tom Clay as much as they did the artists. The payola scandal of 1959 temporarily hurt his career; he was fired for accepting 6,000 dollars to play records, but found another job at CKLW-AM in Windsor, Canada.

He left CKLW in 1965 on the heels of a questionable promotional scheme, one of many Clay masterminded over the years. Over CKLW's airwaves, Clay offered a membership card to what he called the Beatles Booster Club for one dollar and an SASE. What donators were supposed to receive was a card or a decal. The responses were overwhelming, lining Clay's pockets with more than 86,000 dollars, as there were more than 86,000 letters in Clay's recently rented P.O. box. With cash in hand, Clay resigned from CKLW and lived lavishly for awhile.

He returned to radio and worked greater Detroit stations like WWWW-FM, WQTE-AM in Monroe, and WTAK-AM in Garden City. Leaving the area, he dabbled at various other stations before arriving in Los Angeles, CA, in 1971, where he landed a three-week substitute DJ gig at KGBS for a vacationing jock. At KGBS, Clay put together a medley of "What the World Needs Now Is Love/Abraham, Martin and John"; the narrative included sound bites from speeches of John and Robert Kennedy, and Martin Luther King Jr., and made a heartfelt social/political comment, that featured the Blackberries (Oma Drake, Jessie Smith, and Clydie King) on backing vocals.

Clay aired his creation with no thought of releasing it on a record. His timing was excellent; Berry Gordy, an old admirer of Clay's from his Detroit days, caught wind of the recording and offered Clay a recording deal. Gordy owed Clay a favor for breaking Marv Johnson's "Come to Me" (Motown's first hit) when he worked at WJBK, and for introducing him to Barney Ales who became a key piece in Motown's success.

The record took off, zooming all the way to number eight on August 14, 1971. The success, however, didn't help Clay get a permanent gig at KGBS, and Clay wasn't a singer or entertainer so there were no road gigs. Motown issued What the World Needs Now Is Love in 1971 on its Mowest label; it peaked on Billboard's pop 200 album chart at number 92, not bad for a first timer. A follow-up, "Whatever Happened To" b/w "Baby I Need Your Loving," released on October 14, 1971, flopped, ending Clay's association with Mowest, and the one-hit-wonder was soon living on unemployment compensation and intermittent jobs. In late '80s and '90s, Tom Clay found work doing voice-overs in Los Angeles, and made a decent living, until his untimely passing at age 66, on November 11, 1995, from lung and stomach cancer.


ANDREW HAMILTON, ALL MUSIC GUIDE



Because I have all 12 volumes of the relentless Complete Motown Singles collection which clocks in at over 5000 minutes of music, and because I decided to listen to it all at random on my computer while I worked, and because the first song that came on was not "My Girl" or "Dancing In The Streets" or "Love Child" or "Tears Of A Clown" or some unknown gem like the Smokey track I mentioned a few posts back, but the douche-chill inducing "Whatever Happened To," and because I've been unable to close my mouth or shake the creepy feeling since hearing it and because this abomination was a single, I give you, "Whatever Happened To."




WHATEVER HAPPENED TO

6 comments:

steve simels said...

"Whatever happened to sugar sandwiches?"

Jeebus, Sal, there's a part of me that's gone forever; there's a part of me that's never coming back.

steves said...

I have a vague recollection of hearing this on the radio in my youth, and wondering in my childlike way at the time...what is this shit?

Ken D said...

Good track to warm up the crowd at a Sarah Palin rally, no? A real record for the real America...

But I'm surprised to read the description of "Come To Me" as Motown's first hit. I suppose it depends on your definition of hit but a quick search turns up Barrett Strong's "Money" (#2 R&B and the one I always thought of as Motown's first hit record), "Shop Around" (first #1 R&B) and "My Guy" (first #1 pop).
"Come To Me" reached #6 R&B and #30 on the Billboard Hot 100 — certainly a hit by most definitions — but seems to have lost its place in history...

Mark Pollock said...

Is it just me, or can you hear Glenn Beck doing this same smarmy shtick, nostalgic for a never was (or perhaps longing for a return to the womb)?

soundsource said...

i think you like it cause when the singing comes in it sounds like the move/roy wood with weird narration

Sal Nunziato said...

Did I say I liked it? (Never desecrate Roy Wood on these pages again, Mister Source.)