The
advert for the Webb Wood Inn is from May 1964 and the group are photographed
there - left to right: Cleo “Sonny” Barksdale, Robert Barksdale, Johnny Mitchell
and James Holland. The left-handed guitarist in the center is John Glover. The
group’s Master 45 was recorded at United Sound Studio in Detroit and released in
February 1964.
Master
With Markie not scoring with
“I’ll Walk Right Out The Door”, the group headed back to Detroit and got Joe
Hunter to organize a session at United Sound. The result was two top-notch sides
that the group hawked unsuccessfully around Chicago. Once back in Detroit they
propositioned business Ronald Holmes, who had a store on Joy Road.
Ron liked what he heard and formed The Master Recording Company. The 4 Hollidays’
had the maiden 45 on his label in February ’64: two photos of the group appeared
in The Michigan Chronicle. One showed the four in their uniforms and another was
on stage with WJLB disc jockey “Frantic Ernie” Durham, who enthused about their
prospects. And rightly so: the songs are great.
“Deep Down In My Heart” has Jimmy leading with music by Joe Hunter’s band, which
included famed musicians that were by then ensconced at Motown. As you would
expect, the result is a high-quality recording that should have shot up the
charts. But the fledgling company wasn’t really set up to properly promote and
distribute the disc and consequently sales never materialized. It’s now a
valuable collector’s item.
In May the group gigged at the
Webbwood Inn, a large club on the corner of Woodward Avenue and Webb where Tony
Lee’s Band backed a revolving set of artists. As a novel way of getting some
attention, The 4 Hollidays started to don colored wigs and were therefore billed
as “the group with purple hair”. The advert for the gig also shows “guest star”
Lillian Dupree, who had a Don Davis penned song on Mike Hanks’ D-Town label in
‘65. By then Mike had taken over the management of the club.
The Webbwood was one of
numerous places that
Detroit
could boast about during the 60s. The array of nightclubs dotted around 12th
Street and over on the East Side enabled entertainers to hone their craft,
promote their recordings and earn a living: The 20 Grand on 14th, The Chit Chat
on 12th, Mr. Kelly’s on Chene and Phelp’s Lounge on Oakland were just a few of
the most popular.
The Four Hollidays appeared at them all and in July ’64 sang at Lee’s Club
Sensation - a place on Owen that had been packing them in since 1941. The
Michigan Chronicle printed a publicity piece in July ‘64 that plugged The
Hollidays’ first appearance there; they were billed with Cleveland-based singer
Kim Tolliver.
When I quizzed Jimmy Holland about gigging at Detroit’s nightclubs, he had the
fondest memories of The Moonglow Lounge at 8434 Grand River Avenue - a place
that rarely advertised in the local papers. Maybe it didn’t have to:
“You cannot talk about clubs in Detroit without talking about The Moonglow. The
Moonglow was the practice house, it was the assembly house, it was the love
house, it was the entertainers’ house. Then they had the 20 Grand Ballroom - and
this is where you worked when you got your hit record. But… you’re in the
business to create music and the only way you could do that craft is find a club
that would allow you to do it; and would give you special treatment; and the
Moonglow was always nice to artists. It was only a $2 cover, but you didn’t have
to pay. You gotta remember The Moonglow. The 20 Grand was a step up - that was
where you got dressed up - you did pretty much the same thing, but it was a
little bit more sophisticated.”

Kim Tolliver was based in
Cleveland and
The Hollidays appeared with her at Lee’s Club Sensation in July 1964, still
plugging their Markie 45s. Ronald Holmes owned the Master label.
Continued