Song of the Day 12/9: Rich Allen and the Ebonistics, “Echo’s of November”
Phillies great Dick Allen, one of the most controversial players in the history of baseball, died Monday, prompting a wave of nostalgia for a man Philadelphia fans demonized and drove out of town during the racially charged 1960s. During his playing days, Allen’s many interests outside the game drew accusations that he lacked “focus.” So when Allen formed a doo-wop singing group in 1968, toward the end of his first stint in Philadelphia, it was treated with eye rolls by the sporting press.
The group, the Ebonistics, performed in nightclubs around the city and cut a 45 with Groovey Grooves records. The song was a throwback to the ’50s, but the surprise is Allen’s gentle tenor singing voice, not exactly what you’d expect from a fearsome slugger. Allen and his group also performed at halftime of a 76ers game, a performance briefly reviewed in the Inquirer, in a passage that gives an idea of the city’s love-hate relationship with the team’s best player:
Here came Rich Allen. Flowered shirt. Tie six-inches wide. Hiphugger bell-bottomed pants. A microphone in his hands. Rich Allen, the most booed man in Philadelphia from April to October, when Eagles coach Joe Kuharich takes over, walked out in front of 9,557 people at the Spectrum last night to sing with his group, The Ebonistics, and a most predictable thing happened. He was booed. Two songs later though, a most unpredictable thing happened. They cheered Rich Allen. They cheered him as warmly as they have ever cheered him for a game winning home run.
Philadelphia was no stranger to its sports heroes cutting records. In January 1960, basketball legend Wilt Chamberlain went into the studio and cut a single. This was the B-side.
Joe Frazier & The Knockouts – 9 song compilation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D6kEIZUBF_U
Jerry, is this just a Philly thing, or did sports stars in other towns also take up music? In the pre-rap era, I mean.
I’m not aware of any. Of course, some stars might have had local hits.
Lee Maye, a decent-hitting outfielder for the Milwaukee Braves and others during the 1960s, had a few doo-wop hits for mainly West Coast labels in the late ’50s. He supposedly sang the “duh-duh-duh” background vocals on Richard Berry’s original recording of “Louie Louie” too.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Maye
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rxedxkx88t0 Louie Louie
The flip side of Wilt’s 45 used to get a lot of airplay on WFIL-AM back in the day. Looking back on the Stilt’s proclivities, it must have been sung tongue-in-cheek.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXxwrkuiBSg
I just liked the B-side better. I never heard it on the radio; 1960 was a bit before my time.