Monday, September 14, 2009

The Spacemen - The Clouds


"The Clouds" is a 1959 instrumental by The Spacemen, an instrumental studio group. The single released on the Alton label, was the only chart hit by The Spacemen. "The Clouds hit number one on the R&B chart for three non consecutive weeks, and also peaked at number forty-one on the Hot 100.

The Spacemen Consisted of one Samuel "Sammy" Benskin (September 27, 1922 – August 26, 1992) who an African American pianist and bandleader.
He was born in The Bronx, New York City, and made his professional debut around 1940 as piano accompanist to singer and guitarist Bardu Ali. He worked throughout the 1940s with jazz musicians including Stuff Smith, Benny Morton and Don Redman. By the early 1950s he had begun leading his own piano trio, as well as appearing as a soloist and as accompanist to singers including Roy Hamilton and Al Hibbler. In 1954 he also joined a group, The Three Flames. Later in the 1950s he worked as accompanist to Dinah Washington.
In 1959, with the band credited as The Spacemen, he recorded an instrumental, "The Clouds", written and produced by Julius Dixson and issued on Dixson's Alton record label. Other session musicians playing on the record were Panama Francis, Haywood Henry, and Babe Clark. The song originally had vocals, which Dixson removed, releasing the instrumental version. This rose to # 1 on the Billboard R&B chart, and # 41 on the pop chart. "The Clouds" was the first number one on any chart released by an African-American owned independent record label, predating Motown's first # 1 by a year.

Sammy died in Teaneck, New Jersey, aged 69.


The Spacemen - The Clouds

3 comments:

KL from NYC said...

Thanks.

Anonymous said...

""The Clouds" was the first number one on any chart released by an African-American owned independent record label, predating Motown's first # 1 by a year."

Not quite true. I don't know what WAS the first, but it definitely wasn't "The Clouds." Johnny Ace had three number-ones on the black-owned Duke by the time the Spacemen showed up.

But, that's a minor problem - thanks for the sounds!! Considering this was a #1 hit (on the R&B charts, at least), I'm surprised we don't hear more of it...

JP

Devil Dick said...

Hey JP, thanks for that. You know i get my info from the internet and we all know how true that is at all times!