The Legendary Escorts
Biography
Of all
the sweet and satin-voiced groups to grace the R&B
charts in the early to mid-'70s, The
Escorts have one distinction (which some consider somewhat
dubious) of being the one and only team to have started
their recording career behind bars! Any discussion of the
seven-man group has inevitably focused on that fact but
beyond the circumstances of their recording situation, The
Escorts' work actually merits considerable acclaim and
praise. The Escorts - aided by renowned producer George
Kerr - made some fine music, from covers of tunes
popularized primarily by The Miracles such as "Ooh Baby
Baby," "We've Come Too Far To End It Now" and "I Can't
Stand To See You Cry" (the latter two post-Smokey charted
singles) to original songs such as "All We Need Is Another
Chance" and "Disrespect Can Wreck" written specifically for
the group.
The Escorts' history dates back to 1969. In a rare 1974
interview for Britain's "Blues & Soul" magazine
completed just one day after a week-long stint at the famed
Apollo Theater in New York, original member Reggie Haynes
recalled, "It started when I was transferred to Rahway
Prison in New Jersey. While all the other guys were playing
basketball or baseball... a group of us used to get
together and sing all the time..." The change in The
Escorts' fortunes began two years later when producer Kerr
came to the prison. Kerr had been invited to check out an
annual Inmates Variety show in the facility by singer Linda
Jones, whose brother was incarcerated at the time. A former
Motown songwriter and producer who had also been a member
of the group The Serenaders and spent a period of time
replacing Little Anthony with The Imperials, Kerr had been
working with Linda for a couple of years, enjoying success
with such hits as "Hypnotized" and "That's When I'll Stop
Loving You."
Recalls Kerr, who masterminded all of The Escorts' work,
"Originally, I didn't feel like going but once I was in the
prison and I heard all these musicians, I liked what I saw.
I remember turning to my wife and telling her I thought it
would be great to record the group. She thought I was out
of my mind and that I was never going to get it done. I
started talking to the prison warden and explained that I
was a professional record producer and he had the same
reaction. The moment he said, "you can't!" I remembered a
time when I'd said that same thing to (producer) Richard
Barrett when he was doing a session with me and The
Imperials. He told me, "don't ever use that word around
me!" and when the warden said the same thing to me, that
gave me the incentive to show I could do it, I could record
these guys, even in prison." Kerr persisted in his mission
and five hundred letters and two years later, a mobile
recording truck pulled up outside Rahway Prison. "I did
some research and found out that it cost about $964 to
house an inmate and that if the authorities let me record
them, they could pay for themselves," says Kerr. "I went
before the Superintendent of Prisons in Washington DC and
explained that to them. It took a lot of work but they
eventually gave me permission to record The Escorts."
As Reggie Haynes explained in his 1974 interview, "During
those two years, guys came and guys went and the group that
actually recorded the first LP, 'All We
Need Is Another Chance' was
almost completely different from the group that George saw
at the Variety show. Happily, we always had the good
fortune to find good singers and as the project grew, the
guys involved took it more and more seriously." The actual
line-up for the first album consisted of Haynes, Lawrence
Franklin, Robert Arrington, William Dugger, Stephen Carter,
Frank Heard and Marion Murphy, with Carter - obviously
influenced by Smokey Robinson - as lead singer on a number
of songs. Kerr worked with arranger Bert Keyes on preparing
the tracks at Venture Sound studios in nearby Somerville,
New Jersey after rehearsing the group on regular visits to
Rahway over a period of five months at a piano in the
prison auditorium. "We actually did the vocals in the
psychiatric ward because it was sound-proofed!" says Kerr.
"Before we did the sessions, I was on the phone to all of
the New York newspapers and television stations to tell
them what we were doing and when I got to the prison, there
were all these newsmen with cameras..." After seeing Kerr
on the news, a construction company that was planning to
start a record label contacted him and The Escorts became
the first act signed
to Alithia Records.
In all, Kerr cut eleven tunes on the group over a
fourteen-hour period. Included on that first album were
remakes of two songs the produced had cut with The O'Jays,
"Look Over Your Shoulder" and "I'll Be Sweeter Tomorrow"
and those two cuts ended as the first two charted singles
for The Escorts, both reaching the R&B Top 100. Haynes
was the first of the inmates to be released and in June
1973, he began promoting the group's work. As he stated in
'74, "People were aware of The Escorts and of course, we
were somewhat unique so press people and radio stations
listened. They were naturally inquisitive and some were for
us and some hostile towards us. You have to understand that
we were in a maximum security prison and some folk don't
understand that we have paid for our mistakes." Other tunes
from the group's first album included covers of "By The
Time I Get To Phoenix," "Little Green Apples" and the doo
wop classic "I Only Have Eyes For You" along with "All We
Need Is Another Chance," a song that referenced the group's
personal situation as inmates hoping to return to society
to lead productive lives, which became the obvious title
track for The Escorts' debut. The album did manage to gain
airplay most up and down the East Coast and not content
with recording the group, Kerr felt that a live concert
would also be a milestone: "After the album came out, we
got all these letters from people who wanted to see them. I
went back to the Superintendent of Prisons and asked if we
could do a show..." With much negotiation and with thirty
policemen on duty to ensure security, The Escorts performed
at Newark Symphony Hall, shackled on the way to and from
the venue but clad in tuxedos and dress shoes for the show,
which was a sell-out and
major success.
On the heels of the concert, Kerr decided to make a second
album: three of the members of the group - Haynes, Franklin
and Willie Quick, a longtime friend of Haynes who had
replaced Stephen Carter (then serving a life sentence) -
were out of prison while the other four remained inside
hence the title of the group's sophomore project, "3 Down,
4 To Go." In a twist of irony, the three freed former
inmates had to go back into Rahway for the recording of the
album which included the R&B-charted singles
"Disrespect Can Wreck" and the ballad "Let's Make Love (At
Home)." Recalled Haynes in '74, "...Who do you know that
walked into a prison of their own free will! We recorded
[the second album] in exactly the same way as before except
that I was able to be there when the tracks were recorded
this time." The album featured a cover of The Delfonics'
"La La Means I Love You" along with several original tunes
such as "Brother" and "Corruption" and after its release in
1974, Haynes, Franklin and Quick did some dates including
the afore-mentioned stint at The Apollo. Reginald Haynes
resurrected "The Legendary Escorts" in 1985 and while the
group's recording legacy is limited. to Four albums, The
newest CD's, that they have are "Back To Love" and "The
R&B Menagerie" which was recorded Featuring Reginald
Haynes, William "Billy" Martin, And La'Grant Harris, these
CD'S and DVD's of their shows can Be Purchased through
their Myspace page or you can E-mail them at
lharris2@net2phone.com and purchase them that way.
The Most Recent members Harris and Martin Have spent the
last 20 years singing with Reginald Haynes, the Group's
vocal harmonic skills still make listening to The Escorts'
music nearly thirty years later after it was first cut
inside the walls of Rahway Prison a veritable treat. For
Bookings and Interviews please call directly
1-973-414-0473, or E-mail them at the e-mail address above,
or call Mandana Entertainment at www.MandanaEnt.com,
1-917-463-3364, United Kingdom. 0798-468-4000.