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ABOUT US
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Of all the
sweet and
satin-voiced
groups to
grace the
R&B charts
in the early
to mid-'70s,
The Escorts
have one
distinction
(which some
consider
somewhat
dubious) of
being the
one and only
team to have
started
their
recording
career
behind bars!
Any
discussion
of the
seven-man
group has
inevitably
focused on
that fact
but beyond
the
circumstances
of their
recording
situation,
The Escorts'
work
actually
merits
considerable
acclaim and
praise. The
Escorts -
aided by
renowned
producer
George Kerr
- made some
fine music,
from covers
of tunes
popularized
primarily by
The Miracles
such as "Ooh
Baby Baby,"
"We've Come
Too Far To
End It Now"
and "I Can't
Stand To See
You Cry"
(the latter
two
post-Smokey
charted
singles) to
original
songs such
as "All We
Need Is
Another
Chance" and
"Disrespect
Can Wreck"
written
specifically
for the
group.
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The Escorts'
history
dates back
to 1969. In
a rare 1974
interview
for
Britain's
"Blues &
Soul"
magazine
completed
just one day
after a
week-long
stint at the
famed Apollo
Theater in
New York,
original
member
Reggie
Haynes
recalled,
"It started
when I was
transferred
to Rahway
Prison in
New Jersey.
While all
the other
guys were
playing
basketball
or
baseball...
a group of
us used to
get together
and sing all
the time..."
The change
in The
Escorts'
fortunes
began two
years later
when
producer
Kerr came to
the prison.
Kerr had
been invited
to check out
an annual
Inmates
Variety show
in the
facility by
singer Linda
Jones, whose
brother was
incarcerated
at the time.
A former
Motown
songwriter
and producer
who had also
been a
member of
the group
The
Serenaders
and spent a
period of
time
replacing
Little
Anthony with
The
Imperials,
Kerr had
been working
with Linda
for a couple
of years,
enjoying
success with
such hits as
"Hypnotized"
and "That's
When I'll
Stop Loving
You."
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Recalls
Kerr, who
masterminded
all of The
Escorts'
work,
"Originally,
I didn't
feel like
going but
once I was
in the
prison and
I heard
all these
musicians,
I liked
what I
saw. I
remember
turning to
my wife
and
telling
her I
thought it
would be
great to
record the
group. She
thought I
was out of
my mind
and that I
was never
going to
get it
done. I
started
talking to
the prison
warden and
explained
that I was
a
professional
record
producer
and he had
the same
reaction.
The moment
he said,
"you
can't!" I
remembered
a time
when I'd
said that
same thing
to
(producer)
Richard
Barrett
when he
was doing
a session
with me
and The
Imperials.
He told
me, "don't
ever use
that word
around
me!" and
when the
warden
said the
same thing
to me,
that gave
me the
incentive
to show I
could do
it, I
could
record
these
guys, even
in
prison."
Kerr
persisted
in his
mission
and five
hundred
letters
and two
years
later, a
mobile
recording
truck
pulled up
outside
Rahway
Prison. "I
did some
research
and found
out that
it cost
about $964
to house
an inmate
and that
if the
authorities
let me
record
them, they
could pay
for
themselves,"
says Kerr.
"I went
before the
Superintendent
of Prisons
in
Washington
DC and
explained
that to
them. It
took a lot
of work
but they
eventually
gave me
permission
to record
The
Escorts."
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As Reggie
Haynes
explained in
his 1974
interview,
"During
those two
years, guys
came and
guys went
and the
group that
actually
recorded the
first
LP, 'All We
Need Is
Another
Chance' was
almost
completely
different
from the
group that
George saw
at the
Variety
show.
Happily, we
always had
the good
fortune to
find good
singers and
as the
project
grew, the
guys
involved
took it more
and more
seriously."
The actual
line-up for
the first
album
consisted of
Haynes,
Lawrence
Franklin,
Robert
Arrington,
William
Dugger,
Stephen
Carter,
Frank Heard
and Marion
Murphy, with
Carter -
obviously
influenced
by Smokey
Robinson -
as lead
singer on a
number of
songs.
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Kerr worked
with
arranger
Bert Keyes
on preparing
the tracks
at Venture
Sound
studios in
nearby
Somerville,
New Jersey
after
rehearsing
the group on
regular
visits to
Rahway over
a period of
five months
at a piano
in the
prison
auditorium.
"We actually
did the
vocals in
the
psychiatric
ward because
it was
sound-proofed!"
says Kerr.
"Before we
did the
sessions, I
was on the
phone to all
of the New
York
newspapers
and
television
stations to
tell them
what we were
doing and
when I got
to the
prison,
there were
all these
newsmen with
cameras..."
After seeing
Kerr on the
news, a
construction
company that
was planning
to start a
record label
contacted
him and The
Escorts
became the
first act
signed to
Alithia
Records.
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In all, Kerr
cut eleven
tunes on the
group over a
fourteen-hour
period.
Included on
that first
album were
remakes of
two songs
the produced
had cut with
The O'Jays,
"Look Over
Your
Shoulder"
and "I'll Be
Sweeter
Tomorrow"
and those
two cuts
ended as the
first two
charted
singles for
The Escorts,
both
reaching the
R&B Top 100.
Haynes was
the first of
the inmates
to be
released and
in June
1973, he
began
promoting
the group's
work. As he
stated in
'74, "People
were aware
of The
Escorts and
of course,
we were
somewhat
unique so
press people
and radio
stations
listened.
They were
naturally
inquisitive
and some
were for us
and some
hostile
towards us.
You have to
understand
that we were
in a maximum
security
prison and
some folk
don't
understand
that we have
paid for our
mistakes."
Other tunes
from the
group's
first album
included
covers of
"By The Time
I Get To
Phoenix,"
"Little
Green
Apples" and
the doo wop
classic "I
Only Have
Eyes For
You" along
with "All We
Need Is
Another
Chance," a
song that
referenced
the group's
personal
situation as
inmates
hoping to
return to
society to
lead
productive
lives, which
became the
obvious
title track
for The
Escorts'
debut. The
album did
manage to
gain airplay
most up and
down the
East Coast
and not
content with
recording
the group,
Kerr felt
that a live
concert
would also
be a
milestone:
"After the
album came
out, we got
all these
letters from
people who
wanted to
see them. I
went back to
the
Superintendent
of Prisons
and asked if
we could do
a show..."
With much
negotiation
and with
thirty
policemen on
duty to
ensure
security,
The Escorts
performed at
Newark
Symphony
Hall,
shackled on
the way to
and from the
venue but
clad in
tuxedos and
dress shoes
for the
show, which
was a
sell-out
and major
success.
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On the heels
of the
concert,
Kerr decided
to make
second
album: three
of the
members of
the group -
Haynes,
Franklin and
Willie
Quick, a
longtime
friend of
Haynes who
had replaced
Stephen
Carter (then
serving a
life
sentence) -
were out of
prison while
the other
four
remained
inside hence
the title of
the group's
sophomore
project, "3
Down, 4 To
Go." In a
twist of
irony, the
three freed
former
inmates had
to go back
into Rahway
for the
recording of
the album
which
included the
R&B-charted
singles
"Disrespect
Can Wreck"
and the
ballad
"Let's Make
Love (At
Home)."
Recalled
Haynes in
'74, "...Who
do you know
that walked
into a
prison of
their own
free will!
We recorded
[the second
album] in
exactly the
same way as
before
except that
I was able
to be there
when the
tracks were
recorded
this time."
The album
featured a
cover of
'The
Delfonics'
"La La Means
I Love You"
along with
several
original
tunes such
as "Brother"
and
"Corruption"
and after
its release
in 1974,
Haynes,
Franklin and
Quick did
some dates
including
the
afore-mentioned
stint at The
Apollo.
Reginald
Haynes
resurrected
"The
Legendary
Escorts" in
1985 and
while the
group's
recording
legacy is
limited. to
Four albums,
The newest
CD's, that
they have
are "Back To
Love" and
"The R&B
Menagerie"
which was
recorded
Featuring
Reginald
Haynes,
William
"Billy"
Martin, and
La'Grant
Harris,
these CD'S
and DVD's of
their shows
can Be
Purchased
through
their
Myspace page
or you can
E-mail them
at
lagrantharris@aol.com
and purchase
them that
way.
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The Most
Recent
members
Harris and
Martin Have
spent the
last 20
years
singing with
Reginald
Haynes, the
Group's
vocal
harmonic
skills still
make
listening to
The Escorts'
music nearly
thirty years
later after
it was first
cut inside
the walls of
Rahway
Prison a
veritable
treat.
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