$15.00 LP BLM0219
Big
Legal Mess is proud to announce that they've
secured the rights to release the entire Designer Records back catalog.
Designer Records Presents Together is the first release from this
classic soul gospel catalog. Together features tracks by the Jubilee
Humming Birds, Union Gospel Singers, Madam Andrews and the Heavenly
Echos and the Mosby Family Singers. Produced by Designer Records
label head Style Wooten.
DESIGNER
The story of gospel music in the 1960s and 70s is strewn
with small record labels. Most produced only a few discs, usually
of one or two local artists and selling only a few hundred copies
around their home areas. But a few were run on a larger scale.
One was Designer, from Memphis, Tennessee, which between 1968
and 1978 produced between 400 and 500 singles and a few albums.
Yet less than 30 years after the last issue, Designer has faded
into the mist, and little is known of its story. The printed labels
tells us it was run from at least two addresses in Park Avenue,
Memphis No 3373, then later No 3109 by Style Wooten
and Charles Bowen. Designer was, in effect, two labels in one.
The main one was the vanity or custom
label available to anyone who could pay the cost of a recording
session and having anything between 100 and 1000 45rpm singles
pressed. But as well, Wooten and Bowen signed promising artists
to contracts, carrying the costs, marketing the discs and
reaping the profits. In 1992, Rev Johnny Shaw, who with his wife,
Opal, sang as the Shaw Singers, recalled how they recorded for
Designer under both systems. Opal saw an ad in the newspaper
or some kind of magazine. If you want to make a record.....for
$425 you can become a star. And she followed up on it. It
was Style Wooten and Designer Records, in Memphis.
We went to Style Wooten, told him we wanted to cut a record and
gave him $425 ... He took us in the studio and we cut a single,
thinking that the number one song was going to be I Made a Promise.
In fact, it was This Old Life that caught on. We cut the record
[Designer 6792] and took 500 copies home.
They didn't last long. People in the community bought them, and
we would sell them wherever we went to sing
And Brother
Theo Wade, of WDIA played it.
|
Designer
Records Presents Together
-Side 1-
The Jubillee Humming Birds
1. Will the Lord Be With Me - Feat. Rev. Al Banks
2. I Love the Lord - Featuring E.L. Whitaker
3. Beautiful Thought -
Feat. Rev. Al Banks & Clyde Isom
Union Gospel Singers
4. If You Miss Me From Singing - Featuring J.D. Foster
5. Jesus on the Line - Featuring Rev. W.J. Glaspy
6.New Burying Ground - Featuring J.D. Foster
-Side 2-
Madam Andrews and the Heavenly Echoes
1. Somebody Help Me - Featuring
Madam Andrews
2. Service For the Lord - Featuring Lana Wilson
3. Nobody Could Do It - Featuring Rev. Harold Guss
The Mosby Family Singers
4. Come We That Love the Lord - Featuring Irene Mosby
5. Eternal Life - Featuring
Irene Mosby (MP3)
6. The Life I Enjoy (Jesus Gave to Me) - Featuring Rochelle Mosby

He started playing the song on WDIA, and we started getting calls
from around the Mid-South, places we'd never been to before, like
Arkansas, Alabama and Missouri
By this time, we'd made such
a name for ourselves that Style wanted to do a contract no
more paying. 'We want to get you in the studios, and don't worry about
the 425 bucks. Another who recorded as a paying customer
was Melvin Mosley, who in 1978 took over from Jethroe Bledsoe as lead
singer of the Spirit of Memphis quartet, a position he still holds.
But five years earlier, he was a young soloist, looking for a way
to boost his reputation. He went to Designer. I recorded a gospel
record in 1973, "The Day I Was Converted." The flipside
was "It is Real." [Designer 7085] It did pretty good. I
had a thousand pressed and I sold a thousand, so I was proud of that.
I sold every one of them. Wooten had several other custom
labels, including Camaro, Pretty Girl (also the name of one of his
music publishing companies, which claimed rights to fairly much anything
the stable issued), Allendale, JAce and Styleway, which issued
country, rock, and some blues and R&B. Designer appears to have
been purely a gospel label. Most of its artists were African American
quartets and small groups from Memphis and the Mid-South, although
half a dozen choirs appear in the lists and artists from as far away
as New Jersey, New York and Illinois had records issued. Some white
artists were also recorded; at least two groups The Gospel
Melodies and The Happy Time Singers had Designer issues. The
dual nature of the label means its artists are of widely varying quality,
ranging from semi-professional acts such as the Shaws, the Jubilee
Hummingbirds, the Memphis Harmonizers and the Gospel Songbirds to
family groups whose budgets and ambitions perhaps exceeded their musical
abilities. Designers last issue appeared in 1978. The reason
for the labels closure is as obscure as the rest of its life-story,
although rumour has it that Wooten and Bowen were pressured out by
rival local labels and recording studios which didnt like the
competition. But the Designer legacy survives a wonderful wide-angle
snapshot of grassroots gospel through a fascinating decade of change.
Alan Young
|