The “Golden Hits Of The 50s” 

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JOHNNIE & JOE

“OVER THE MOUNTAIN ACROSS THE SEA”

(Rex Garvin)

Chess 1654

No. 8    July 22, 1957

No. 89     September 26, 1960

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Zelma “Zell” Sanders was always itchin’ to be an enter­tainer.  It never happened, but Sanders did

become something of a momentary cult legend as the owner of the tiny J & S label and as a mentor to

numerous aspiring talents.

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“She’d written a couple of songs when she was a child, and she answered a couple of those ads in the

papers saying  “send us your song and we’ll get it published,” Johnnie Louise Richardson,  Zell’s

daughter and half of Johnnie & Joe, told Goldmine’s Aaron Fuchs.  “That was it.  She was dedicated.

And she liked kids, too . [Later, when] she was working for the Police Athletic League in Harlem in

the 23rd Precinct, she saw the talent, and it was just there on the street.  ‘Do you sing?’ she’d ask them.

‘Come on up to my house.’  They all got to know her around as the lady that goes around grabbing groups”.

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One of those groups was the Hearts, which consist­ed of Hazel Cruchfield, Louise Harris, Joyce Weiss,

and, at various times, BETTY HARRIS and BABY WASHINGTON.  In 1953, Sanders placed the girls

with Baton Records.  Disappointed with both the productions and the royal­ty statements issued by

the label, Zell  formed her own label, J & S, the following year.  She then issued singles by Niecy Dizelle

and the Machines [WHO?  Gotta hear that.], the Gospel Won­ders, the Harptones, THE JAYNElTES, the

Plants, and the Pre-Teens.

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“Rex [Garvin, a pianist/songwriter who lived next door] brought Joe Rivers (b. Charleston, S.C.) up

one night, and said ‘Hey, Miss Sanders, this is Joe Rivers and we’ve been rehearsing some things,'”

Richardson told Fuchs.  “‘We want you to listen because we want to do a thing together called ‘Over

the Mountain.’   So, she lis­tened and listened, and said ‘I think it needs a little something … I tell you

what, Johnnie, you get over there, and you sing with them.’  I said, ‘Oh no, do I have to?’  So she gave me

that look that distinguishes between mother and record manufacturer.  So I knew I better get over

there and join them.

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“At first they didn’t want to do it with me.  But when we got into the studio, and we all listened, I guess

it all dawned on us, ‘Hey maybe we got something here.”‘  Issued on J & S, the disk almost immediately

start­ed to take off.  Chess Records had picked up national distribution on Johnnie & Joe’s debut disk,

“I’ll Be Spinning” (R&B:#10, 1957), and did the same for the duos only mammoth mover.  In addition to

some fine follow-ups shipped by J & S and Chess, and a rechart­ing of “Over The Mountain’ (#89, 1960),

numerous other Johnnie & Joe 45s appeared on ABC-Paramount, Blue Rock, Gone, Masterpiece,

Omega, and Tuff; most notably, the immediate follow-up to “Over The Moun­tain;”‘My Baby’s Gone On,

On” (R&B:#15, 1957).  Personal appearances were rare, and tensions devel­oped between the duo.

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Johnnie formed Dice, her own short-lived label, and recorded the Avalons, the Click­ettes, and the

Premiers [not to be confused with the L.A. group THE PREMIERS].  In the ’60s, she turned away from

the biz to marry and to raise a family.  Ambient Sound resurrected the act in 1983.  King­dom o f Love,

their first and only LP, was issued, as was a single, the album’s title track.  Neither generated more

than a cultish stir.

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Johnnie Louise Richardson died from a stroke on October 25, 1988.