'Cameo' and its sister label 'Parkway' were major
Philadelphia-based
record labels.
Formation
Cameo Records was founded in December
1956 in Philadelphia by
Bernie Lowe and
Kal Mann. The name was revived from a
1920s record label,
Cameo Records.
Dave Appell joined the label early as A&R director. Parkway, a subsidiary label, was formed in 1958.
The glory years
The first hit for Cameo was "Butterfly" by
Charlie Gracie, which rocketed to #1 nationally in early 1957 and established Cameo as a hit label. Cameo continued to have hits by groups like the R&B group the Rays, who had a #3 hit with "Silhouettes" later that year. In 1958, the big hits were by
John Zacherle with his top 10 novelty hit "Dinner with Drac", and the Applejacks' rocking instrumental "Mexican Hat Rock", which cracked the top 20.
In 1959, teen idol
Bobby Rydell scored his first hit with "We Got Love" on Cameo. From 1960-1963, Bobby Rydell was the label's second largest hit maker after
Chubby Checker. He had hits like "Wild One" (his biggest), "Volare" and "Swinging School", "Forget Him" and others.
Chubby Checker had a minor novelty hit in the summer of 1959 called "The Class", which featured Checker doing funny imitations of singers
Fats Domino,
The Coasters,
Elvis Presley, Cozy Cole and the Chipmunks. In the summer of 1960, Checker's cover of an obscure
Hank Ballard tune called "
The Twist" rode to immortality. It first went to #1 in 1960, and, when it caught on with parents, went to #1 again in early 1962. Checker had lots of hits, including "Pony Time" (his second #1), "Let's Twist Again", "The Fly", "Slow Twistin'", "Limbo Rock", "Popeye", "Birdland" and others.
Around 1961, Cameo-Parkway began developing some new stars. First, the vocal group the Dovells, which featured Len Barry as the lead singer, scored hits in late 1961 with the #2 smash "Bristol Stomp" and "You Can't Sit Down" in early 1962. The R&B quartet the Orlons had a big hit with "The Wah-Watusi", which hit #2 in the summer of 1962. They had a few more top 20 hits.
Dee Dee Sharp had been a studio backing singer at Cameo-Parkway for some time before she got her chance to make a solo record. The 15-year-old had done a duet with Chubby Checker on "Slow Twistin'", but her powerhouse vocals were so impressive that she recorded her first solo single, "Mashed Potato Time", on the same day. It jumped to #2 in the spring of 1962. More dance songs followed, including the follow up "Gravy", and another dance song, "Ride!"
The last hits from Cameo-Parkway's peak came from the smooth
R&B group the Tymes, who scored the #1 hit "So Much in Love" in the summer of 1963.
Decline and shutdown
For the next few years, with the onslaught of the
British Invasion, Cameo-Parkway wasn't doing very well. Artists like Jo Ann Campbell, Maynard Ferguson, Clark Terry and stars like
Clint Eastwood and
Merv Griffin had little success on the label. Artists who later became big, including
The Kinks and
Bob Seger, also had unsuccessful records at Cameo-Parkway.
In 1965,Cameo-Parkway became distributor of Flint, Michigan based
Lucky Eleven Records and a hit single "
I (Who Have Nothing)" recorded by
Terry Knight and the Pack along with a follow-up LP and a few more singles including "Mister You're A Better Man Than I," "A Change On The Way" and "Love Love Love Love Love." Other Cameo-Parkway subsidiary labels included: Windy C (owned by Curtis Mayfield), Sentar, Fairmount, Winchester, Key-Loc, Vando, Chariot, and Cheltenham.
The last major hits for the label were
? and the Mysterians' "96 Tears", which went to #1 in the fall of 1966; and, in 1967, the Ohio Express' "Beg, Borrow and Steal" and Senator Bobby's novelty remake of "Wild Thing".
'Cameo-Parkway' released '727' 45rpm singles and '158' 33 1/3rpm albums between 1957 and 1966. Among the types of music released were
doo-wop,
dance hits,
popular/rock,
rockabilly,
big band,
garage rock, and
soul.
'Wyncote Records' was started in
1964 as a budget reissue daughter of Cameo-Parkway Records, but the label failed in 1967 when Cameo-Parkway got into financial trouble. In mid-1967, Cameo-Parkway briefly merged with MGM Records and released four more albums (Two on Cameo, one on Parkway, and one on Vando). By late 1967, after their financial problems worsened, the Cameo-Parkway label was purchased by
Allen Klein, who renamed the label
ABKCO Records.
Reissues
For various legal and financial reasons , ABKCO allowed the Cameo-Parkway recordings to fall out of print after the 1970s, and they remained officially unavailable on
compact disc (or any other format) for many years. In May of 2005, however, the company released a multi-CD
box set of the labels' most notable output (''Cameo-Parkway: 1957-1967''), and began to issue various single-artist "best of" compilations in
October 2005 including CDs by
Bobby Rydell,
Chubby Checker,
Dee Dee Sharp,
The Dovells,
The Orlons,
The Tymes and
? & the Mysterians. A various artists CD titled ''Cameo-Parkway: The Greatest Hits'' was also issued. Many tracks from more obscure artists on the label (inluding several "
Northern Soul" favourites from artists like Bobby Paris and Yvonne Baker) still remain officially unavailable.
See also
★
List of record labels
★
List of Cameo Parkway Album Releases
★
List of Cameo Parkway 45rpm Releases
External links
★
Official website from ABKCO Records
★
The Cameo-Parkway Story