Showing posts with label Linda Hopkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Linda Hopkins. Show all posts

December 14, 2021

20,000 vinyl LPs 322: Hellen Miller & Linda Hopkins ~ Inner City

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             Linda Hopkins ~  
        Inner City
      vinyl LP front cover detail 
 detail photo by Styrous®
 

Inner City was an album cover purchase; I bought it because of the cover graphics. I would do that a lot when purchasing an album. I was not disappointed; it was how I discovered Linda Hopkins.            
 
Today is her birthday. Linda Hopkins is a blues and gospel singer who was born Melinda Helen Matthews on December 14, 1924, in New Orleans, Louisiana. When she was performing at the Slim Jenkin's Night Club on 7th Street, in the West Oakland area (link below), she met Johnny Otis as well as Little Esther Phillips who created her stage name, "Linda Hopkins".                 
 
 

photo by Sue Story  

 
During the 1970s, Matthews (Hopkins) performed in the Broadway musical, Purlie, with Sammy Davis Jr. for nine months. In addition, she performed at President Jimmy Carter's 1977 inaugural ball.      
 
Miller had a love of rhythm and blues music and in 1971, she collaborated with poet and lyricist Eve Merriam to write an R&B-influenced score for the musical Inner City, which was conceived by Tom O'Horgan who had previously directed Hair and Jesus Christ Superstar.. Based on Merriam's widely banned book, The Inner City Mother Goose, the show had a successful run of 97 performances on Broadway. It was described as "the musical that rocked Broadway with its distinctly untraditional take on modern urban life," with Matthews's music being compared to that of The Chi-Lites. In 1972 she was awarded a Tony and Drama Desk Award for her performance in Inner City.               
 
Matthews (Hopkins) first saw Bessie Smith perform Empty Bed Blues at The New Orleans Palace Theatre in 1936. She greatly admired Smith and later won critical plaudits for her rendition of Smith in the 1959 theatrical presentation Jazz Train. In 1974 she starred in Me and Bessie, a one-woman show paying homage to the blues icon, conceived and written by Hopkins and Will Holt.        
 
 
 
Hellen Miller ~ Inner City
vinyl LP front cover
Cover Artwork – Lenny Meyer
photo of cover by Styrous®
 
 
Hellen Miller wrote the music for Inner City and some of the songs were sung by Hopkins. One of those tunes is the absolutely beautiful Deep In The Night; my favorite song of the show (link below).  
          

Hellen Miller ~ Inner City
vinyl LP front cover detail
Cover Artwork – Lenny Meyer
detail photo of cover by Styrous®


Hoplins goes back to her gospel roots with the song It’s My Belief a bouncey, gentle tune with a fine piano and horn backup.            


Hellen Miller ~ Inner City
vinyl LP back cover
Cover Artwork – Lenny Meyer
photo of cover by Styrous®
 
 
 
The album cover is a gatefold with a lot of good photographs of the production by Bert Andrews included in it.         


Hellen Miller ~ Inner City
photo of inner gatefold by Styrous®




 
Hellen Miller ~ Inner City
vinyl LP inner gatefold detail
photos by Bert Andrews
detail photo of inner gatefold by Styrous®





Hellen Miller ~ Inner City
vinyl LP inner gatefold detail
photos by Bert Andrews
detail photo of inner gatefold by Styrous®




Hellen Miller ~ Inner City
vinyl LP inner gatefold detail
photos by Bert Andrews
detail photo of inner gatefold by Styrous®







Hellen Miller ~ Inner City
vinyl LP inner gatefold detail
detail photos of inner gatefold by Styrous®























 
 Hellen Miller ~ Inner City
vinyl LP, side 1
photo by Styrous®








 Hellen Miller ~ Inner City
vinyl LP, side 2
photo by Styrous®


  
Tracklist:

Side 1:

A1 - Fee Fi Fo Fum/Now I Lay Me    1:12
A2 - Hushaby/My Mother Said    2:50
A3 - Nub Of The Nation    1:47
A4 - Urban Mary/City Life/One Misty Moisty Morning    2:42
A5 - If Wishes Were Horses    2:07
A6 - Deep In The Night    4:56
A7 - Jeremiah Obadiah/Riddle Song    2:58

Side 2:

A8 - Shadow Of The Sun - 3:00
A9 - Boys And Girls Come Out To Play/Lucy Locket/Wisdom/The Hooker (“You Make It Your Way”) - 3:53
B1 - Law And Order - 3:07
B2 - The Dealer (“You Push It Your Way”) - 2:40
B3 - Kindness/As I Went Over/Apartment House/There Was A Little Man/Who Killed Nobody? - 6:17
B4 - It’s My Belief - 3:43
B5 - Street Sermon - 6:02
B6 - The Great If/On This Rock/The Great If (Reprise) - 4:44

Companies, etc.

    Published By – Sunbeam Music Inc.
    Recorded At – RCA Studio C
    Copyright © – RCA Records

Credits:

    Arranged By [Vocals] – Helen Miller
    Artwork [Cover] – Lenny Meyer
    Directed By – Tom O'Horgan
    Edited By – Don Miller
    Engineer – Bob Simpson
    Lyrics By – Eve Merriam
    Music By – Helen Miller
    Orchestrated By, Arranged By, Conductor – Gordon Harrell
    Photography By – Bert Andrews
    Producer [Associate] – Harvey Milk (2), John M. Nagel
    Sleeve Notes – Eve Merriam
    Stage Manager – Nicholas Russiyan
    Technician – Gus Mossler, Pat Martin
    Vocals – Allan Nicholls (3), Carl Hall, Delores Hall, Florence Tarlow, Fluffer Hirsch, Joy Garrett, Larry Marshall*, Linda Hopkins, Paulette Ellen Jones
    Written-By [story] – Eve Merriam

Notes:

Musical based on "The Inner City Mother Goose" by Eve Merriam
Gatefold sleeve contains notes and production photos.

Dynaflex vinyl.
 
Helen Miller, Eve Merriam – Inner City (The Original Broadway Cast Recording)
Label: RCA Victor – LSO-1171
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Gatefold
Country: US
Released: 1972
Genre: Funk / Soul, Blues, Pop, Stage & Screen
Style: Soul, Funk, Piano Blues, Musical
   
         
Viewfinder links:        
         
Sammy Davis, Jr.           
Linda Hopkins        
Harold “Slim” Jenkins         
Tom O'Horgan         
Johnny Otis        
Esther Phillips         
Bessie Smith         
        
Net links:        
        
         
        
        
         
        
        
YouTube links:        
        
Linda Hopkins ~    
            Deep In the Night          
            Deep In the Night (live) (1970)                
            It’s My Belief          
            It’s My Belief (live) (1972)               
        
         
         
        
 

        
         
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Tuesday, December 14, 2021       
       
















 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Tom O'Horgan articles/mentions

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Jobriath            
Hellen Miller & Linda Hopkins ~ Inner City  
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
Tom O'Horgan - 1968 
photographer unknown 



        
       
       
       
        
       














July 22, 2021

Harold “Slim” Jenkins ~ the "Mayor" of West Oakland

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date & photographer unknown
     
     
Today is the birthday of Harold “Slim” Jenkins who was born on July 22, 1890, in Monroe, Louisiana, and moved to Oakland shortly after World War I, where he found work as a waiter. He was a successful businessman, owning and operating several West Oakland restaurants, liquor stores, and night clubs which earned him the title of the "Mayor" of West Oakland and whose Slim Jenkins Cafe was popular in that area from the 1930s to the 1960s.
 
Jenkins opened his club at 1748 - 7th Street in West Oakland on December 5, 1933, the day Prohibition was repealed with the passage of the 21st Amendment
 
 
 Slim Jenkins nightclub and coffee shop 
E. F. Joseph Photograph Collection
 
 
 
 
Slim Jenkins Cafe 
photo: African American Museum &
 Library at Oakland
dare & photographer unknown
 
 
For many years, it was the premiere nightclub in Oakland and called the "Harlem of the West". From the thirties and into the forties, the Club featured many musicians including Bob Lewis (bass), Jimmy Buchanan (sax), Earl Watkins (drums), Eric Miller (guitar), Commodore Lark (bass) and Norvell Randall (piano).         


photos: African American Museum and Library at Oakland
 
Buchanan, Watkins, Randall, Miller & Lark
date & photographer unknown


Miller, Lewis and Randall
date & photographer unknown


Miller, Lewis and Randall
date & photographer unknown




saxophone players 
date & photographer unknown
















 
In the fifties and sixties it featured black musical icons such as Nat King Cole, Aretha Franklin, B.B. King, the Ink Spots, Earl Hines, Louis Jordan, Linda Hopkins, Dinah Washington performing for the racially mixed middle class audience. President Franklin D. Roosevelt visited Slims, and William Knowland, publisher of the Oakland Tribune, was a frequent customer at the supper club.
     
Harold “Slim” Jenkins was a charter member of the Port of Oakland Community Club, and a member of the Men of Tomorrow, the Oakland Chapter of the NAACP and the Boys Club of Oakland. He was also active in a number of social and civic organizations.        
 
French photographer Michelle Vignes shot many of the musicians performing in the West Oakland night clubs in the sixties and published, The Blues (link below), a book of those and other amazing images of America, which was published by artist/photographer, Lon Clark, Jr. (link below).    
 
The Seventh Street district was forever altered during the 1960s when the United States Postal Service demolished twelve blocks of property to erect a new postal facility and even more was destroyed in the 1970s, through eminent domain, with the arrival of BART, Oakland’s public transit system.    
 
It is interesting that after destroying a whole way of life and culture; the directors of BART renamed the West Oakland station, Oakland West (to make it sound more aristocratic or high-toned, maybe?) This raised the hackles of Oakland residents who protested the name, created a furor and the signs on the station were changed back to West Oakland.      
 
After the Slim Jenkins Cafe in West Oakland was razed in 1962, Jenkins opened Slim Jenkins Cafe at 310 Broadway, also in Oakland, which he ran until his death in 1967.        
     
     
     
     
     
Viewfinder links:       
        
Lon Clark, Jr.        
Nat "King" Cole                 
Aretha Franklin         
Linda Hopkins      
Ink Spots         
Harold “Slim” Jenkins     
B.B. King         
Michelle Vignes ~ The Blues       
Dinah Washington        
     
Net links:       
         
African American Museum at Oakland ~ Collection         
Black Past ~ Harold “Slim” Jenkins             
Calisphire ~ Slim Jenkins Cafe patrons        
Geoffreys Live ~ Slim Jenkins, Oakland Black Entrepreneur        
Local News Matters ~ ‘Harlem of the West’        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
Styrous® ~ Thursday, July 22, 2021        
        















 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Harold “Slim” Jenkins articles/mentions

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mentions:     
Hellen Miller & Linda Hopkins ~ Inner City     
     
      
     
     
     
      
date & photographer unknown     
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Linda Hopkins articles/mentions

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Hellen Miller & Linda Hopkins ~ Inner City         
      
     
mentions:     
      
     
     
      
     
     
     
      
Linda Hopkins     
date & photographer unknown     
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
      
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

November 7, 2020

Johnny Otis articles/mentions

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mentions:            
Hellen Miller & Linda Hopkins ~ Inner City   
Ike Turner ~ Bad Dreams    
     
     
     
     
     
     
photo by Billy Vera


     
    
    
     
      
     
      
  
Viewfinder links: