Josie and the Pussycats (album)
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Josie and the Pussycats: From the Hanna-Barbera TV Show | ||
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Studio album by Josie and the Pussycats | ||
Released | December 5, 1970 | |
Recorded | Spring 1970 - fall 1970 | |
Genre | Bubblegum pop | |
Length | 23:43 | |
Label | Capitol Records | |
Producer | Danny Janssen | |
Professional reviews | ||
Group Members | ||
(left to right) Cathy Dougher, Cherie Moor, and Patrice Holloway.
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Josie and the Pussycats, besides being both an Archie comic book and a Saturday morning cartoon series, is also the name of a bubblegum pop singing group from the early 1970s, which was designed to be the real-life incarnation of the musical girl group featured in both the comic and the cartoon. The group was made up of Cathy Dougher (real name Kathleen Dougherty), Patrice Holloway, and Cherie Moor (formerly known as Cheryl Jean Stoppelmoor and later better known as Cheryl Ladd), who cut an album and six singles for Capitol Records in 1970 with Danny Janssen's La La Productions.
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[edit] Background
In preparation for their upcoming cartoon series, Hanna-Barbera Productions began working on putting together a real-life "Josie and the Pussycats" girl group, who would provide the singing voices of the girls in the cartoons and also cut an album as well.
The "Josie and the Pussycats" recordings were produced by La La Productions which included producer/songwriter Danny Janssen (who had written for Bobby Sherman and The Partridge Family), his business partner Bobby Young, and songwriters Austin Roberts, Sue Steward (now known as Sue Sheridan) and Bobby Hart (formerly one of the producers/songwriters for The Monkees). They held a talent search to find three girls who would match the three girls in the comic book in both looks and singing ability, and, after interviewing over 500 finalists, settled upon casting Kathleen Dougherty (Cathy Dougher) as Josie, Cherie Moor as Melody, and Patrice Holloway as Valerie.
African-American with part-Hispanic background, Patrice Holloway is the younger sister of Motown legend Brenda Holloway. She was the only one of the three finalists with prior ties to Capitol Records (the label that released the Pussycats' album and singles), having signed to the label as a solo artist in 1965. Her early Capitol singles, all highly collectible, include "Ecstasy," "Stay With Your Own Kind" and "Stolen Hours" (released between 1965 and 1967). Most were produced by Hollywood-based writer/producers Billy and Gene Page.
Cheryl Jean Stoppelmoor had come to Hollywood from her native South Dakota with a Country & western band that broke up and went back home almost immediately upon arrival. Shortening her unwieldy last name and now going as Cherie Moor, she decided to stay and try her luck as a singer, dancer and actress on television. After marrying David Ladd, Cheryl Ladd would go on to replace Farrah Fawcett in Charlie's Angels in 1977 and release a Gold album on Capitol the following year.
Janssen presented the newly formed band to William Hanna and Joseph Barbera to finalize the production deal, but was in for a major surprise. Hanna-Barbera wanted Janssen to recast Patrice Holloway, because they had decided to portray "Josie and the Pussycats" as an all-White trio and had altered African-American Valerie's character to make her Caucasian. Janssen refused to recast Holloway, whose voice he felt he needed for the soul-inspired bubblegum pop songs he had written, and threatened to walk away from the project. After a three-week-long stand-off between Janssen and Hanna-Barbera, Hanna-Barbera finally relented, allowed Janssen to keep Holloway, and changed Valerie back to being an African-American. It should be noted that Valerie had been introduced in the "Josie" comic book in late 1969, and the character had been African-American from the start.
Word quickly spread around Los Angeles about the stand Janssen had taken. To show their gratitude, a number of the most notable soul session players in the city offered their services to La La Productions and the Josie album at a fraction of their regular fees. Among them were Elvis Presley's drummer Ronnie Tutt, Elvis' bassist Jerry Scheff, keyboardist Clarence MacDonald, flutist Wilton Felder and guitarist Mike Stewart.
[edit] Overview
The Josie and the Pussycats sound is very much based upon that of late '60s Detroit acts such as Motown's Jackson 5 and Hot Wax's Honey Cone. A cover of The Jackson 5's classic "I'll Be There" is present on the album, and a number of Patrice Holloway's leads find her imitating young Michael Jackson's lead vocals [1]. Ironically, Holloway, who almost didn't even end up in the group, sings most of the album's lead vocals. Holloway also sings lead on the famous "Josie and the Pussycats" theme song, which was wrtten by Hanna-Barbera musical director Hoyt Curtin (and based on a recurring score cue from The Jetsons), William Hanna, and Joseph Barbera. The majority of the rest of the lead parts are done by Cherie Moor. Although she was cast as the singing voice of Josie, Kathleen Dougherty only sings partial lead vocals on two of the Pussycats' songs, "If That Isn't Love," and the cover of "I'll Be There." Also present on the album are covers of Bobby Sherman's "La, La, La (If I Had You)", The Carpenters' "(They Long To Be) Close To You", and Bread's "It Don't Matter to Me".
Although Janssen used strings, horns, keyboards, and oscillators (electronic synthesizers) to create the band's sound, the on-screen cartoon band featured Josie on guitar, Valerie with tambourines, and Melody on drums. No other musicians appeared on-screen with them, creating a disconcerting contrast between audio and visual for the viewers. At least one, but usually two, of the band's songs were heard during the course of an episode of the TV show, especially during a high-action chase sequence.
Josie And The Pussycats: From The Hanna-Barbera TV Show was released on December 15, 1970 by Capitol Records, Six 45 RPM singles were released, 4 of which contained non-album songs and were only available as part of a Kellogg's mail-order promotion. None of the singles charted, and many people didn't even know the album was available. As a result, sales were far below expectations, and plans for a national tour were shelved. Hanna-Barbera contracted producer Jimmie Haskell and a group of anonymous session singers to do the music for Josie and the Pussycats in Outer Space, and La La Productions' Josie and the Pussycats group was officially disbanded. Danny Janssen and Patrice Holloway worked together on a few songs after the demise of the band ("Black Mother Goose" and "Evidence," both issued in 1971), and Sue Sheridan (as Sue Steward) cut two solo singles for Capitol under Janssen and Young's supervision. Several years later, Sheridan wrote a few songs for Cheryl Ladd's self-titled 1978 debut album, also released on Capitol Records.
The album, the singles, some alternate takes, and a few songs that only appeared in the animated series were all collected in a limited edition digitally remastered set entitled Josie and the Pussycats: Stop Look and Listen: The Capitol Recordings, released by Rhino Handmade on October 5, 2001. Rhino only pressed 5000 copies of the album. Earlier that same year, Babyface produced a new Josie and the Pussycats album as the soundtrack for the motion picture released by Universal Pictures that same year. This new reincarnation of the Pussycats had a harder, punk-rock sound, as opposed to their Motown-ish 1970 counterparts. Letters to Cleo vocalist Kay Hanley sang lead on all of the Pussycats' new songs.
[edit] The group's songs
[edit] Tracklist for Josie and the Pussycats: From the Hanna-Barbera TV Show
- "Every Beat Of My Heart" (Bobby Hart, Danny Janssen)
- "La, La, La (If I Had You)" (Janssen, Sue Steward)
- "Stop, Look and Listen" (Janssen, Steward)
- "Hand Clapping Song" (Jesse Kirland, Janssen)
- "I'll Be There" (Berry Gordy, Jr., Hal Davis, Willie Hutch, Bob West)
- "You've Come a Long Way Baby" (Hart, Janssen)
- "(They Long To Be) Close To You" (Burt Bacharach, Hal David)
- "Roadrunner" (Janssen, Steward)
- "Lie, Lie, Lie" (Janssen, Austin Roberts)
- "It Don't Matter to Me" (David Gates)
[edit] Commercial singles
- "Every Beat of My Heart" b/w "It's All Right With Me" (Janssen, Steward; non-album)
- "Stop, Look And Listen" b/w "You've Come a Long Way Baby"
[edit] Kellogg's mail order singles
- "Voodoo" (Janssen, Steward) b/w "If That Isn't Love" (Hoyt Curtin, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera)
- "Josie" (Curtin, Hanna, Barbera) b/w "With Every Beat of My Heart" (Janssen, Steward) [2]
- "Inside, Outside, Upside-Down" (Janssen, Steward) b/w "A Letter to Mama" (Curtin, Hanna, Barbera)
- "It's Gotta Be Him" (Curtin, Hanna, Barbera) b/w "I Wanna Make You Happy" (Janssen, Steward)
[edit] Other recordings
These songs only appeared in the cartoon show; they were never released for consumer purchase. "Clock on the Wall" and "I Love You Too Much" were the only songs not included on the Rhino reissue.
- "Dreammaker"
- "Clock on the Wall"
- "Together"
- "The Time to Love"
- "I Love You Too Much"
[edit] See also
- Josie and the Pussycats (the Archie comic)
- Josie and the Pussycats (the Hanna-Barbera cartoon show)
- Josie and the Pussycats (film)
[edit] Notes
- ^ Unterberger, Ritchie (2003). "Stop, Look, and Listen: The Capitol Recordings" Allmusic.com
- ^ "Josie" is an extended version of the Josie and the Pussycats cartoon theme song, while "With Every Beat of My Heart" is an alternate mix of "Every Beat of My Heart" (missing the album version's strings and horns)
[edit] References
- Charles, Don (March 2003). Long Tails and Ears for Hats: The Story of Josie and The Pussy Cats. Cool & Strange Music #28. Text available at http://lpintop.tripod.com/oldiesconnection/id17.html.
- Josie and the Pussycats: Stop Look and Listen: The Captiol Recordings [CD Set]. Burbank: Rhino Handmade. Text available at http://www.geocities.com/antlion7/josie.htm.
[edit] External links
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