
Maurice
Williams & The Zodiacs
Maurice
Williams is one of the most extraordinarily durable figures in
the history of classic rhythm-and-blues and rock 'n roll. "Stay,"
became one of the classic singles in the history of rock 'n roll
and r&b-a No. 1 mega-hit upon its release in 1960 on Al Silver's
Herald label, and a popular favorite for decades since, revived
in 1987 with its prominent use in the movie Dirty Dancing. Williams
has remained active as a performer and, periodically, as a recording
artist and songwriter, ever since.
Maurice Williams
was born in Lancaster, S.C. in 1940 (one source indicates Apr.
26, 1938), and showed himself musically inclined from a very early
age-he started learning the piano from his older sister in the
late 1940's, practicing daily so that by the time he was 10 years
old he was having friends from elementary school over for informal
jam sessions at his house. Williams had sung in church, but his
interest lay more in popular music, and in 1953, he and his friends
were ready to form a group that they called the Royal Charms.
The group's original membership, in addition to Williams, included
Earl Gainey (tenor, guitar) Willie Jones (baritone), William Massey
(tenor, baritone, trumpet), and Norman Wade (bass). They played
school events and talent shows, winning several and acquiring
a local following, before they finally got a paying gig at the
local Veterans of Foreign Wars post. The year they'd started out,
1953, Williams had also written two songs that were to have a
pivotal effect on his life and career, and the group's history:
"Little Darling" and "Stay."
The Royal
Charms loved performing, and were popular locally, but working
the area around Lancaster, they found their prospects limited.
The group's first real break took place in 1956 when a Nashville
disc jockey hooked them up with Ernie Young, the head of Excello
Records-Williams, then only 16, bluffed his way into an audition
over the phone and then had to raise money from friends and local
merchants in Lancaster to make the trip to Nashville in December
of 1956.
"Little
Darling" impressed Young, although he altered it somewhat,
giving the song a calypso beat that it didn't originally have.
He also insisted on the group changing its name-it seemed as though
every r&b vocal group (the word "do-wop" hadn't
been invented yet) had either "Royal" or "Charms"
in its name, and bird-named groups were too common as well. Young
happened to like flowers, and selected the name the Gladiolas.
"Little
Darling" by the Gladiolas was released by Excello in January
of 1957 and was a hit on the r&b charts, rising to No. 11
in a four week run in the early spring of that year. It had a
more muted presence on the pop charts, lingering there for 11
weeks but never getting higher than No. 41.
What happened
next is a matter of interpretation. In some historians' eyes,
the Gladiolas' version of the song was undercut by a competing
rendition, recorded for Mercury by a white Canadian group called
the Diamonds, which rose to No. 1 on the pop charts and sold more
than a million copies, even becoming a definitive "do-wop"-type
single. On the other hand, some listeners, comparing the two versions,
say that the Diamonds' version is more fully realized than that
by the Gladiolas, not only with a more ambitious arrangement and
greater vocal virtuosity, but a better sound; the Gladiolas' single,
by contrast, almost seems like a demo, only partly realized in
technical terms.
Regardless
of the virtues of either, Williams, for his part, never minded
the Diamonds' version, because Young-in an example of honesty
all too rare in the record business in those days-told him that,
as writer of the song, all he should care about is that it sells
and gets played, not whose version sells. Young had also left
him with full rights as songwriter, rather than trying to buy
them away from him, which Williams admits he could've done for
practically no money at all in those days. It was a decision that
was to earn Williams a vast amount of money at the age of 17 and
beyond, and educated him painlessly and well about the business
side of the music business.
Williams was
a serious high school student, and he earned a music scholarship
to Allen University in Columbia, S.C. that he had to turn down-he
was simply doing too much in music to interupt his career, tempting
as it was. The Gladiolas kept performing, touring the west once
before returning to South Carolina, where they became a heavy
favorite among fraternities, especially at the University of South
Carolina. At the end of 1958, the group decided against re-signing
with Excello, which meant they had to give up their name, which
Young owned. This could have been a disaster, forcing them to
re-establish themselves in a new incarnation, but a name and a
song, courtesy of Williams, made that easy. According to Williams,
it was group member Bobby Gore who saw a German car called a Zodiac,
and immediately seized on the name-Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs
became the group's new identity.
Over the next
year, the original Zodiacs' line-up expanded to nine members,
including two saxmen (Calvin McKinnie, Harold Alexander). In 1960,
the band hooked up with Al Silver of Herald Records in New York,
by way of producers Phil Gernhardt and Al McCullough. The group
was supposed to provide demos, and Williams retrieved a song he
had written back in 1953, strangely enough, to the same girl for
whom he'd written "Little Darling"-called "Stay"
and present it to Silver.
The group
signed with Herald and "Stay," sparked by a stunning
falsetto performance by Shane Gaston, became their debut on the
label during the summer of 1960. It hit No. 1 that fall and easily
topped a million sales at the time, also becoming the biggest
hit in the history of Herald Records. Williams and the Zodiacs
never had another record nearly as big as "Stay," which
came out at just the right moment and seemed to sell in subsequent
years at the drop of a hat, as a romantic and nostalgia favorite-by
some estimates, their record has topped 10 million sales internationally.
Additionally, other artists, including the Four Seasons, Jackson
Browne, and Rufus & Chaka Khan, all made the top 20 or better
with their respective versions of the song, and the Hollies cut
it as a single at the outset of their career.
The Zodiacs
didn't fare as well as the song. "I Remember," also
released on Herald, never made it past No. 86 on the pop charts
and didn't appear on the r&b charts at all. Neither did "Come
Along," which was released in the spring of 1961 and only
climbed to No. 83 on the pop charts. During the mid-1960's, the
group hooked up with the New Orleans-based production team of
Marshall Sehorn and Allen Toussaint. With their guidance, the
group cut a passionate, soulful recording of Williams' "May
I," a dazzlingly beautiful song that held a lot of promise.
Unfortunately, they chose to license it to Vee Jay, which was
then the most successful Black-owned record company in the world.
But Vee Jay went into bankruptcy within days of the record's national
release, and "May I" never recovered-the record did
get out on the Dee Su label in New Orleans, which rescued it physically
from oblivion, and it found an audience on the radio. It has been
certified a million-seller by the RIAA, despite never managing
to appear on either the pop or r&b charts. Five years later,
it became a modest top 40 hit in a smoother version by Bill Deal
& the Rhondells, a white dance-rock and r&b-based band
from the Virginia-Carolinas area who'd been doing it on stage
for years. The group subsequently released records on Atlantic,
Sea-Horn, and Scepter, including a fine single, "Return,"
with Gladys Knight & the Pips singing behind them. Williams
saw minimal chart action from any of this, but remained active-Maurice
Williams & the Zodiacs were still a major draw in the south,
especially in their native state, and in 1965 cut a live album
at Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Throughout
the 1970's and 1980's, Williams led various incarnations of the
Zodiacs on oldies tours, primarily on the Beach Music circuit
on the U.S. East Coast. In the wake of Dirty Dancing, which yielded
sales of another fifteen million copies of "Stay," he
re-emerged as a recording artist on the Ripete label, based in
Columbia, S.C., which specializes in beach music (they've also
got a best-of the Swinging Medallions out on CD). Ripete has since
released the impossible-to-find 1965 live album on CD, as part
of an excellent career anthology of Maurice Williams & the
Zodiacs.
Today, Maurice
Williams resides in Charlotte, NC. He is an active performer on
the beach music circuit and is extremely popular wherever he performs.
His latest album, Back To The Basics on EMN Records (also based
in Charlotte) features new performances of his hits Stay, Little
Darlin' and May I that are very much worth the price of the album
alone. Maurice is an inductee of the South Carolina Music and
Entertainment Hall of Fame, and the Beach Music Hall of Fame in
Myrtle Beach.
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