The “Golden Hits Of The 60s”
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JARMELS
“A LITTLE BIT OF SOAP”
(Bert Burns)
Laurie 3098
No. 12 September 18, 1961
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Bert Burns (a.k.a. Bert Russell, Russell Byrd) died of a heart attack years before he hit 40 and light years
before he would run out of creative energy. He wrote “Twist and Shout,” the Rolling Stones’ “Everybody
Needs Somebody to Love;’ and JANIS JOPLIN’s “Piece of My Heart;” produced the Drifters, Lulu, the
McCoys, Van Morrison, Neil Diamond; and headed Bang and Shout Records. Writing “A Little Bit of Soap,”
Bert created two One-Hit Wonders–the Jarmels and NIGEL OLSSON and revived the career of a third, the
EXCITERS.
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The Jarmels–lead vocalist Paul Burnett (b. 1942), tenor Earl Christiansen (b. 1940), bass Tommy Eldridge
(b. 1941), baritone Ray Smith (b. 1941; no relation to the rockabilly wonder RAY SMITH), and tenor
Nathaniel Ruff (b. 1939) were all from Richmond, Virginia, and had been crossing paths for years. They
attended the same church; they sang in the same glee club in school. They eventually became good friends,
and in the late ’50s decided to pull themselves together into a legitimate singing group. By 1960, they had
traveled to New York City where they lifted the group name from a street sign in Harlem.
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Jim Gribble, manager of the Passions and THE MYSTICS, happened on to the group, liked their material,
and pointed them toward Bob and Gene Schwartz at Laurie Records. Although Laurie was well known as a
doo-wop label, their artists were usually Italian (e.g. the Belmonts, the Del Satins), not black. Still, six
singles in all were issued, all of them with a smooth racially inte grated feel to them.
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The Jarmels’ debut disk, “Little Lonely One,” was also a first 45 for Bobby Vinton; neither charting. The guys
hit pay dirt with the Bert Russell (a.k.a. Bert Burns) tune, “A Little Bit of Soap.” It cracked the Top 10, but
nothing else the fellows ever waxed even brushed the Hot 100. “Soap” was loaded with magic, and over the
years, The Exciters, Garnet Mimms, Paul Davis, Nigel Olsson, and Showaddywaddy all charted with their
renditions of the Jarmels’ original; the latter went Top Five in Great Britain in 1978.
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