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Shields  

” YOU CHEATED

(Don Brunch)

Dot 15805

No. 12    October 6, 1958

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The circumstances behind the Shield’s “You Cheated” is, according to Yesterdays Memories’ Dave

Hinckley, “one of  the most tangled stories ever to surround a hit record.”

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Most simply put, the Shields never existed.  George Matola, the big cheese at Tender Records,

heard  this great little number by an Austin, Texas  group, the Slades  called “You Cheated.”

 Matola reportedly had his good buddy JESSIE BELVIN toss together a one-shot group to do a

quickie cover on the Slade’s original.  Everyone who has looked into the matter at hand agrees

that the lead vocalist on the track is Frankie Ervin.  Frankie has identified the other Shields  as

Belvin (falsetto), Buzzy Smith (baritone), Johnny “Guitar” Watson (bass), and Mel Williams

(second tenor).  To complicate matters, Watson denies being involved.   And to untidy the affair

further,  performers like Tony Allan, Buster  Wilson, and Charles Wright  (later leader of the

Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band) claim to have been among the voices taped that night.

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The Shields’ cover version of “You Cheated” cheated the Slades out of most of the chart action;

the Slades’ original rendition (#42,”1958) never even broke into the national top 40. To promote

the Shields’ hit disk,  something  calling itself the Shields had to tour. The label hastily rounded

up three guys to hit the road with Frankie Ervin.

For a follow-up, Nat “King” Cole’s  “Nature Boy” was dressed up and dished out.  Ervin was

reportedly present on this sess1on,  but beyond that, things get quite fuzzy.   Hinckley has

suggested that Belvin, Wright, “Pookie” Wooten, and James Monroe Warren might also have

performed on “Nature Boy.”  The  voices on the Shields’ third and last Dot release, “Fare Thee

Well, My Love,” could have been supplied by Belvin, Wright, Warren, Johnny White, and maybe

even Chuck Jackson.  As for “You’ll Be Coming Home Soon”–released on Transcontinental and

later Falcon Records–Tony Allan,a member of the various touring editions of the Shields, claims

that he was on this recording with Tommy  Youngblood, Charles Patterson, and David Cobb.

Got that?

 Regardless of who appeared on which record, none of these follow-ups to “You Cheated” sold

more than a dribble.  Collectors  and pop historians  may someday straighten out this cluttered

pile of educated conjecture.

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Ah, fat chance…