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The Hudson Brothers

The Hudson Brothers were an American musical group formed in Portland, Oregon, consisting of brothers Bill Hudson, Brett Hudson and Mark Hudson. They were discovered by a record producer while recording music at a local studio, and offered a recording contract. After releasing several garage rock singles in the late 1960s as The New Yorkers, the group began releasing material under the names Everyday Hudson, and Hudson.

The Hudson Brothers
Hudson Brothers in 1974, left to right: Bill, Brett, and Mark
Background information
Also known as
  • My Sirs
  • The New Yorkers
  • Everyday Hudson
  • Hudson
  • The Hudsons
OriginPortland, Oregon, U.S.
Genres
Years active1965–1981
LabelsScepter, Jerden, Warner Bros. Records, Decca, Lionel, Playboy, Rocket, Casablanca, Arista, Elektra, Columbia
Past members

They garnered fame as teen idols in the 1970s after their prime-time series debuted as a summer replacement for The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour in 1974. The resulting popularity led to their Saturday-morning half-hour sketch comedy series for CBS, The Hudson Brothers Razzle Dazzle Show, which ran from 1974 to 1975.[1] They also released numerous hit singles during this time for producer Bernie Taupin, including "So You Are a Star" (1974), "Rendezvous" (1975), "Lonely School Year" (1975), and "Help Wanted" (1976).

History edit

1965–1972: Formation and early singles edit

The Hudson Brothers had their beginnings as a trio composed of teenage brothers Bill, Mark and Brett Hudson in the early 1960s.[2] The three brothers had been raised in Portland, Oregon, by their Italian American mother who was also a singer and encouraged the boys to play music.[3] Early on, the three brothers had formed a band known as the My Sirs.[2]

After winning several local "battle of the bands"-type contest, the group recorded several songs at a local recording studio, where they received the attention of a local promoter, who offered them a contract promoting Chrysler automobiles.[3][4] They were subsequently renamed The New Yorkers, after the Chrysler model of the same name.[3] In early 1967, their song "Things Are Changin'" was issued on a promotional-only 45 for the Chrysler 1967 Go Show (b/w a song by another group, the Fury 4), after which they signed with Scepter. Their first Scepter 45 was issued in the spring of 1967, "When I'm Gone" b/w "You're Not My Girl" (SCE-12190) on Scepter Records, which became a radio hit in the Pacific Northwest.[3] This was followed in August 1967 with the single "Seeds of Spring" b/w "Mr. Kirby" (SCE-12199). The B-side was favored by DJs and became a top 10 hit in the Portland area and did well in other regional markets but did not chart nationally. Their final Scepter 45 was "Show Me the Way to Love" b/w "Again" (SCE-12207) in autumn, 1967. To support the singles, the group toured with several popular music acts, such as Buffalo Springfield, The Supremes, Johnny Nash, and The Buckinghams.[4] By October 1968, The New Yorkers had switched to Jerry Dennon's Pacific Northwest label Jerden Records and issued "Adrianne" (#906), following that up with "Land of Ur" (#908) in March 1969. Later in 1969 The New Yorkers also recorded the Harry Nilsson song "I Guess the Lord Must Be in New York City" (#32569) for Decca Records.[3] The Scepter and Jerden recordings, excluding "You're Not My Girl" but including the previously unissued "Lazy Meadow," were included on the 1978 "cash-in" album, "TV's The Hudson Brothers," issued on the First American label. (The "New Yorkers" which recorded "Lonely" for Warner Bros. is not the same group.)

On Decca Records they changed their name to Everyday Hudson in early 1970, releasing "Laugh, Funny Funny" (later revived for their 1974 CBS summer replacement series) b/w "Love Is the Word" (#32634). For the release in spring 1971 of "The World Would Be a Little Bit Better" bw "Love Nobody" on Lionel Records (L-3211), their name was shortened to Hudson. They had one further release on Lionel issued only in Canada, "Straight Up and Tall" (an early version of the song they later re-recorded for the Rocket label) b/w "Enough." This name was also used in 1972 after switching to the newly re-activated Playboy Records, with the release of "Leavin' It's Over" (P-50001), (Billboard Bubbling Under Chart #110). The single made the top ten in some local markets, including Omaha, where it reached #8. When the group's self-titled debut album was released in 1972, the song was re-titled on the lyrics inside the LP as "Leave and It's Over".[5] It was later reissued when Playboy was acquired by CBS. One further Playboy single was released only in Canada, with "Lovely Lady" as the A-side.

1972–1979: Teen idols edit

One of the group's earliest appearances on television as The Hudson Brothers, was in the summer of 1972, for the television game show What's My Line?[citation needed] In 1973, the group received the attention of producer Bernie Taupin, who signed them with Elton John's record label, The Rocket Record Company.[3] Under the name Hudson, the US Rocket label released "If You Really Need Me" (MCA-40141), which was recorded in France and produced by Taupin and mixed by Andy Scott. The B-side featured two songs, "America" and "Fight Back," and the record was issued in an attractive full-color picture sleeve. In the UK, the same sleeve was used for a different A-side, "Straight Up and Tall," b/w "America" and "Fight Back." After the group's 1974 success on the Casablanca label, their complete 1973 Rocket LP, "Totally Out of Control," was issued, and another single was issued, "Be a Man" b/w "Sunday Driver" (MCA-40317), which bubbled under in Billboard. The LP did not include "America" or "Fight Back."

 
The Hudson Brothers and Bob Keeshan (bottom) on Captain Kangaroo, 1976

After the group appeared as guests of The Sonny Comedy Revue on ABC in early 1974, noted producer Chris Bearde was impressed by the brothers' stage presence and offered them their own variety hour on the CBS network for the summer slot vacated by The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour. [6] The Hudson Brothers Show[7] aired Wednesday nights on CBS from July 31 to August 28, 1974.[8] The show was so successful that CBS devised The Hudson Brothers Razzle Dazzle Show, which aired on Saturday mornings, from September 7, 1974, to August 30, 1975, in a half-hour format.[8] The group's television exposure resulted in the brothers becoming teen idols.[8]

Their first release as The Hudson Brothers came in September 1974 with their single "So You Are a Star" on Casablanca Records (NES 0108),[3] which peaked on the Billboard charts at #21 in November 1974.[9] The group's second studio album, Totally Out of Control (1974), was released through The Rocket Record Company, and charted at #179 on the Billboard 200 in December 1974.[10] Their third studio album, Hollywood Situation simultaneously peaked at #174.[10]

They subsequently released the single "Coochie Coochie Coo" (NES 816) in 1975, which peaked on the Bubbling Under Chart at #108. The song was taken from the "Hollywood Situation" LP, but the single version featured added percussion and was backed with the non-LP track, "Me and My Guitar." They then re-signed wit Rocket and scored another hit with "Rendezvous" (#26 U.S. Billboard Hot 100)[9] from their fourth studio album, Ba-Fa.[3] John Rockwell of The New York Times, reviewing one of the group's summer shows in 1975, wrote:

They make a hard rock sound and, at least in a club context, they try to project a raunchier image than television might lead one to expect...  The result isn't entirely successful, however. The between songs routines still have a touch of slickness to them, and the comedy effort—although those in the audience who knew the television show seemed to find them uproarious —sounded lame indeed. Musically, this is a fully confident. competent group, capable of knocking out imitations of the nineteen‐fifties or original material with no embarrassment at all.[11]

Ba-Fa charted on the Billboard 200 at #176 in January 1976.[10] The follow-up single, "Lonely School Year," charted in Billboard at #60, but their next Rocket single, "Spinning the Wheel (With The Girl You Love)," failed to chart. They then signed with Arista Records in 1976. Their first Arista single, "Help Wanted,"[3] peaked at #70 on the Billboard charts.[9] It appears that a follow-up single, "She's a Rebel" (a remake of the Crystals' "He's a Rebel" with the genders switched), was planned for release, as they promoted it on several TV appearances, but the 45 was never released. A second Arista single, "I Don't Wanna Be Lonely," failed to chart and was backed with the non-LP track, "Pauline," which the Hudsons wrote and produced. Their final Arista 45, "The Runaway," also failed to chart. The three then starred alongside Bob Monkhouse in Bonkers!, a half-hour syndicated comedy show in 1978, produced in Britain by ATV (Jack Burns was its American producer) and distributed by ITC. The same year, they each appeared together in the comedy film Zero to Sixty (1978).[8]

1980–1981: Final album and dissolution edit

In 1980, the group reverted their name back to Hudson after they signed with Elektra Records. (The "Hudsons" which recorded for Columbia in 1983 is not the same group.) They engaged in a promotional tour for their debut Elektra single, "Annie," but it did not chart, nor did their final Elektra single, "Afraid to Love," despite featuring a Linda Ronstadt duet vocal which was not credited on the label. The brothers guest-starred on an episode of The Love Boat in 1980 ("Not So Fast, Gopher; Haven't We Met Before?/Foreign Exchange").[12] Their final studio album, Damn Those Kids (1980), was released by Elektra.[12] In 1983, the three brothers appeared in Hysterical, a horror-comedy film.

Legacy edit

Richard Unterberger of AllMusic wrote of the group: "Those that remember the Hudson Brothers usually think of them as a bubblegum act of sorts, due to the fact that they hosted some comedy-variety TV shows in the mid-'70s. But they were in fact a real group, extremely Anglophile in orientation, with heavy debts to the Beatles and Beach Boys, and occasional hints of the Kinks."[13]

The long (2:45) introduction to The Hudson Brothers Razzle Dazzle Show was featured in 2021 in the Family Guy episode "And Then There's Fraud".[14]

Discography edit

Members edit

Principal

Backing band (1978–1981)[3]

  • Barry Pullman — synthesizers
  • Phil Reed — guitar
  • Michael Parker — keyboards
  • Craig Krampfdrums, percussion

Timeline edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ Hyatt, Wesley (1997). The Encyclopedia of Daytime Television. Watson-Guptill Publications. pp. 224–225. ISBN 978-0823083152. Retrieved 22 March 2020.
  2. ^ a b Larkin 2006, p. 2623.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Nite & Newman 1978, p. 233.
  4. ^ a b Hudson, Brett (January 2, 2015). "The Hudson Bros. Story told by Brett Hudson - The Beginning". RockTalk TV. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12. Retrieved December 7, 2018 – via YouTube.
  5. ^ "The Hudson Brothers Discography". AllMusic. AllRovi. Archived from the original on December 7, 2018.
  6. ^ Woolery, George W. (1983). Children's Television: The First Thirty-Five Years, 1946-1981. Scarecrow Press. p. 237. ISBN 0-8108-1557-5. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  7. ^ Jacobs, A.J. (July 12, 1996). . Entertainment Weekly. Meredith Corporation. Archived from the original on October 14, 2016.
  8. ^ a b c d Leszczak 2015, p. 159.
  9. ^ a b c . Billboard. Prometheus Global Media, LLC. Archived from the original on December 7, 2018.
  10. ^ a b c . Billboard. Prometheus Global Media, LLC. Archived from the original on December 7, 2018.
  11. ^ Rockwell, John (July 9, 1975). "Hudson Brothers Blend Hard Rock At the Bottom Line". The New York Times. p. 24.
  12. ^ a b Pilchak 2005, p. 97.
  13. ^ Unterberger, Richard. . AllMovie. AllRovi. Archived from the original on December 9, 2015.
  14. ^ Marcus Gibson (March 1, 2021). "Review: Family Guy "And Then There's Fraud"". Bubbleblabber Cartoons Covered. Retrieved March 6, 2021.

Bibliography

  • Larkin, Colin, ed. (2006). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Vol. 4. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-195-31373-4.
  • Leszczak, Bob (2015). From Small Screen to Vinyl: A Guide to Television Stars Who Made Records, 1950-2000. New York: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-442-24274-6.
  • Nite, Norm N.; Newman, Ralph M. (1978). Rock On: The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock 'n Roll, The Modern Years. Vol. 2. New York: T. Y. Crowell Co. ISBN 978-0-690-01196-8.
  • Pilchak, Angela M. (2005). Contemporary Musicians: Profiles of the People in Music. Detroit, Michigan: Cengage Gale. ISBN 978-0-787-68069-5.

External links edit

  • The Hudson Brothers at AllMusic
  • The Hudson Brothers discography at Discogs
  • The Hudson Brothers at IMDb
  • Hudson Brothers at TV Party!

hudson, brothers, were, american, musical, group, formed, portland, oregon, consisting, brothers, bill, hudson, brett, hudson, mark, hudson, they, were, discovered, record, producer, while, recording, music, local, studio, offered, recording, contract, after, . The Hudson Brothers were an American musical group formed in Portland Oregon consisting of brothers Bill Hudson Brett Hudson and Mark Hudson They were discovered by a record producer while recording music at a local studio and offered a recording contract After releasing several garage rock singles in the late 1960s as The New Yorkers the group began releasing material under the names Everyday Hudson and Hudson The Hudson BrothersHudson Brothers in 1974 left to right Bill Brett and MarkBackground informationAlso known asMy SirsThe New YorkersEveryday HudsonHudsonThe HudsonsOriginPortland Oregon U S GenresPopgarage rockYears active1965 1981LabelsScepter Jerden Warner Bros Records Decca Lionel Playboy Rocket Casablanca Arista Elektra ColumbiaPast membersBill Hudson Brett Hudson Mark HudsonThey garnered fame as teen idols in the 1970s after their prime time series debuted as a summer replacement for The Sonny amp Cher Comedy Hour in 1974 The resulting popularity led to their Saturday morning half hour sketch comedy series for CBS The Hudson Brothers Razzle Dazzle Show which ran from 1974 to 1975 1 They also released numerous hit singles during this time for producer Bernie Taupin including So You Are a Star 1974 Rendezvous 1975 Lonely School Year 1975 and Help Wanted 1976 Contents 1 History 1 1 1965 1972 Formation and early singles 1 2 1972 1979 Teen idols 1 3 1980 1981 Final album and dissolution 2 Legacy 3 Discography 4 Members 4 1 Timeline 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit1965 1972 Formation and early singles edit The Hudson Brothers had their beginnings as a trio composed of teenage brothers Bill Mark and Brett Hudson in the early 1960s 2 The three brothers had been raised in Portland Oregon by their Italian American mother who was also a singer and encouraged the boys to play music 3 Early on the three brothers had formed a band known as the My Sirs 2 After winning several local battle of the bands type contest the group recorded several songs at a local recording studio where they received the attention of a local promoter who offered them a contract promoting Chrysler automobiles 3 4 They were subsequently renamed The New Yorkers after the Chrysler model of the same name 3 In early 1967 their song Things Are Changin was issued on a promotional only 45 for the Chrysler 1967 Go Show b w a song by another group the Fury 4 after which they signed with Scepter Their first Scepter 45 was issued in the spring of 1967 When I m Gone b w You re Not My Girl SCE 12190 on Scepter Records which became a radio hit in the Pacific Northwest 3 This was followed in August 1967 with the single Seeds of Spring b w Mr Kirby SCE 12199 The B side was favored by DJs and became a top 10 hit in the Portland area and did well in other regional markets but did not chart nationally Their final Scepter 45 was Show Me the Way to Love b w Again SCE 12207 in autumn 1967 To support the singles the group toured with several popular music acts such as Buffalo Springfield The Supremes Johnny Nash and The Buckinghams 4 By October 1968 The New Yorkers had switched to Jerry Dennon s Pacific Northwest label Jerden Records and issued Adrianne 906 following that up with Land of Ur 908 in March 1969 Later in 1969 The New Yorkers also recorded the Harry Nilsson song I Guess the Lord Must Be in New York City 32569 for Decca Records 3 The Scepter and Jerden recordings excluding You re Not My Girl but including the previously unissued Lazy Meadow were included on the 1978 cash in album TV s The Hudson Brothers issued on the First American label The New Yorkers which recorded Lonely for Warner Bros is not the same group On Decca Records they changed their name to Everyday Hudson in early 1970 releasing Laugh Funny Funny later revived for their 1974 CBS summer replacement series b w Love Is the Word 32634 For the release in spring 1971 of The World Would Be a Little Bit Better bw Love Nobody on Lionel Records L 3211 their name was shortened to Hudson They had one further release on Lionel issued only in Canada Straight Up and Tall an early version of the song they later re recorded for the Rocket label b w Enough This name was also used in 1972 after switching to the newly re activated Playboy Records with the release of Leavin It s Over P 50001 Billboard Bubbling Under Chart 110 The single made the top ten in some local markets including Omaha where it reached 8 When the group s self titled debut album was released in 1972 the song was re titled on the lyrics inside the LP as Leave and It s Over 5 It was later reissued when Playboy was acquired by CBS One further Playboy single was released only in Canada with Lovely Lady as the A side 1972 1979 Teen idols edit One of the group s earliest appearances on television as The Hudson Brothers was in the summer of 1972 for the television game show What s My Line citation needed In 1973 the group received the attention of producer Bernie Taupin who signed them with Elton John s record label The Rocket Record Company 3 Under the name Hudson the US Rocket label released If You Really Need Me MCA 40141 which was recorded in France and produced by Taupin and mixed by Andy Scott The B side featured two songs America and Fight Back and the record was issued in an attractive full color picture sleeve In the UK the same sleeve was used for a different A side Straight Up and Tall b w America and Fight Back After the group s 1974 success on the Casablanca label their complete 1973 Rocket LP Totally Out of Control was issued and another single was issued Be a Man b w Sunday Driver MCA 40317 which bubbled under in Billboard The LP did not include America or Fight Back nbsp The Hudson Brothers and Bob Keeshan bottom on Captain Kangaroo 1976After the group appeared as guests of The Sonny Comedy Revue on ABC in early 1974 noted producer Chris Bearde was impressed by the brothers stage presence and offered them their own variety hour on the CBS network for the summer slot vacated by The Sonny amp Cher Comedy Hour 6 The Hudson Brothers Show 7 aired Wednesday nights on CBS from July 31 to August 28 1974 8 The show was so successful that CBS devised The Hudson Brothers Razzle Dazzle Show which aired on Saturday mornings from September 7 1974 to August 30 1975 in a half hour format 8 The group s television exposure resulted in the brothers becoming teen idols 8 Their first release as The Hudson Brothers came in September 1974 with their single So You Are a Star on Casablanca Records NES 0108 3 which peaked on the Billboard charts at 21 in November 1974 9 The group s second studio album Totally Out of Control 1974 was released through The Rocket Record Company and charted at 179 on the Billboard 200 in December 1974 10 Their third studio album Hollywood Situation simultaneously peaked at 174 10 They subsequently released the single Coochie Coochie Coo NES 816 in 1975 which peaked on the Bubbling Under Chart at 108 The song was taken from the Hollywood Situation LP but the single version featured added percussion and was backed with the non LP track Me and My Guitar They then re signed wit Rocket and scored another hit with Rendezvous 26 U S Billboard Hot 100 9 from their fourth studio album Ba Fa 3 John Rockwell of The New York Times reviewing one of the group s summer shows in 1975 wrote They make a hard rock sound and at least in a club context they try to project a raunchier image than television might lead one to expect The result isn t entirely successful however The between songs routines still have a touch of slickness to them and the comedy effort although those in the audience who knew the television show seemed to find them uproarious sounded lame indeed Musically this is a fully confident competent group capable of knocking out imitations of the nineteen fifties or original material with no embarrassment at all 11 Ba Fa charted on the Billboard 200 at 176 in January 1976 10 The follow up single Lonely School Year charted in Billboard at 60 but their next Rocket single Spinning the Wheel With The Girl You Love failed to chart They then signed with Arista Records in 1976 Their first Arista single Help Wanted 3 peaked at 70 on the Billboard charts 9 It appears that a follow up single She s a Rebel a remake of the Crystals He s a Rebel with the genders switched was planned for release as they promoted it on several TV appearances but the 45 was never released A second Arista single I Don t Wanna Be Lonely failed to chart and was backed with the non LP track Pauline which the Hudsons wrote and produced Their final Arista 45 The Runaway also failed to chart The three then starred alongside Bob Monkhouse in Bonkers a half hour syndicated comedy show in 1978 produced in Britain by ATV Jack Burns was its American producer and distributed by ITC The same year they each appeared together in the comedy film Zero to Sixty 1978 8 1980 1981 Final album and dissolution edit In 1980 the group reverted their name back to Hudson after they signed with Elektra Records The Hudsons which recorded for Columbia in 1983 is not the same group They engaged in a promotional tour for their debut Elektra single Annie but it did not chart nor did their final Elektra single Afraid to Love despite featuring a Linda Ronstadt duet vocal which was not credited on the label The brothers guest starred on an episode of The Love Boat in 1980 Not So Fast Gopher Haven t We Met Before Foreign Exchange 12 Their final studio album Damn Those Kids 1980 was released by Elektra 12 In 1983 the three brothers appeared in Hysterical a horror comedy film Legacy editRichard Unterberger of AllMusic wrote of the group Those that remember the Hudson Brothers usually think of them as a bubblegum act of sorts due to the fact that they hosted some comedy variety TV shows in the mid 70s But they were in fact a real group extremely Anglophile in orientation with heavy debts to the Beatles and Beach Boys and occasional hints of the Kinks 13 The long 2 45 introduction to The Hudson Brothers Razzle Dazzle Show was featured in 2021 in the Family Guy episode And Then There s Fraud 14 Discography editMain article The Hudson Brothers discographyMembers editPrincipal Bill Hudson guitar vocals 1964 1981 Brett Hudson bass vocals 1964 1981 Mark Hudson drums keyboards vocals 1964 1981 Kent Fillmore guitar 1964 1967 Bob Haworth guitar 1968 1970 Backing band 1978 1981 3 Barry Pullman synthesizers Phil Reed guitar Michael Parker keyboards Craig Krampf drums percussionTimeline editReferences editNotes Hyatt Wesley 1997 The Encyclopedia of Daytime Television Watson Guptill Publications pp 224 225 ISBN 978 0823083152 Retrieved 22 March 2020 a b Larkin 2006 p 2623 a b c d e f g h i j Nite amp Newman 1978 p 233 a b Hudson Brett January 2 2015 The Hudson Bros Story told by Brett Hudson The Beginning RockTalk TV Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 Retrieved December 7 2018 via YouTube The Hudson Brothers Discography AllMusic AllRovi Archived from the original on December 7 2018 Woolery George W 1983 Children s Television The First Thirty Five Years 1946 1981 Scarecrow Press p 237 ISBN 0 8108 1557 5 Retrieved 14 March 2020 Jacobs A J July 12 1996 Catching up with the Hudson Brothers Entertainment Weekly Meredith Corporation Archived from the original on October 14 2016 a b c d Leszczak 2015 p 159 a b c The Hudson Brothers Chart History Hot 100 Billboard Prometheus Global Media LLC Archived from the original on December 7 2018 a b c The Hudson Brothers Chart History Billboard 200 Billboard Prometheus Global Media LLC Archived from the original on December 7 2018 Rockwell John July 9 1975 Hudson Brothers Blend Hard Rock At the Bottom Line The New York Times p 24 a b Pilchak 2005 p 97 Unterberger Richard The Hudson Brothers Biography AllMovie AllRovi Archived from the original on December 9 2015 Marcus Gibson March 1 2021 Review Family Guy And Then There s Fraud Bubbleblabber Cartoons Covered Retrieved March 6 2021 Bibliography Larkin Colin ed 2006 The Encyclopedia of Popular Music Vol 4 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 195 31373 4 Leszczak Bob 2015 From Small Screen to Vinyl A Guide to Television Stars Who Made Records 1950 2000 New York Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 442 24274 6 Nite Norm N Newman Ralph M 1978 Rock On The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Rock n Roll The Modern Years Vol 2 New York T Y Crowell Co ISBN 978 0 690 01196 8 Pilchak Angela M 2005 Contemporary Musicians Profiles of the People in Music Detroit Michigan Cengage Gale ISBN 978 0 787 68069 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hudson Brothers The Hudson Brothers at AllMusic The Hudson Brothers discography at Discogs The Hudson Brothers at IMDb Hudson Brothers at TV Party Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Hudson Brothers amp oldid 1208777314, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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