The “Golden Hits Of The 60s”
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CORSAIRS
“SMOKY PLACES”
(Abner Spector)
Tuff 1808
No. 12 March 17, 1962
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The Corsairs were three brothers and a cousin from La Grange, North Carolina, that grew up and attended
the same schools together. They were Jay “Bird” (b. July 14, 1942), James “Little Skeet” (b. Dec. 1, 1940),
and Mose “King Moe” Uzzell (b. Sept. 13, 1939), plus cousin George Wooten (b. Jan. 16, 1940). They started
singing together as members of the school glee club, performing at local gatherings and talent shows. Calling
them selves the Gleems, they eventually made tracks to Newark, New Jersey, to audition for the record
companies in and around the New York area.
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One night early in 1961, the Gleems were playing in a smoky Newark nightclub. Abner Spector, a producer
and big wheel at the tiny Tuff record label, was in the audience. Abner liked what he heard, and told the
group that he wanted to record them as the Corsairs. The rest, as they say, is history–but a very sketchy
history; and too brief.
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“Smoky Places,” the Corsairs’ second release, was a top-of-the-line neo-doo-wop goodie. Quality vocal group
numbers like this one were becoming increasingly scarce on the airwaves. (True, there were groups like the
CLASSICS and the EARLS, but their days on the radio–and the charts–were numbered.) The Corsairs’
follow-up,”Til Take You Home,” hit number 68 in 1962, and the singles kept rolling out: “Stormy,” “Dancing
Shadows,” “On the Spanish Side,” and “At the Stroke of Midnight.” But regardless of who was credited on
the disk as lead singer–“King Moe,” Jay “Bird,” or “Little Skeet”–not one of these well-arranged platters
charted.
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With time, the group’s members did some weeding and seeding. Larry McNeil was added in 1965, the last
year the group was known to exist. Just what happened to the Corsairs after this point is not known.