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Top Picture Domino

 
Domino records  was formed by a group of 11 professionals in the state capitol of Texas, Austin,in 1957.  They also formed  their own publishing  company called Balcones Music, named after  the Balcones fault  that runs through  the  state. The Slades were the first act signed,and several others were added before the label folded around   1961. Domino records was small in size and resources,but was still able to get radio play for many of their singles.They lacked good distribution, so many titles stayed local. Below are many of the Domino records releases,and several of the promotional picture inserts that were originally sent out to radio stations and other people of influence in the late 1950's. For additional information on the Slades, see my Slades page   with more label shots and history of the group.

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Baby Spades Domino
You Mean Everything To Me Spades Domino
The first release on the Domino label and the first for the newly formed group called the Spades. "Baby" backed with "You Mean Everything To Me", was a great initial effort by the group and Domino records. This record did well enough that Liberty records was the label chosen to distribute it on a more national level. The initial copies still showed the Spades, and it was then changed quickly to the Slades for obvious political reasons. The record sold fairly well for the group. Check out my interview with John Goeke of the Slades, HERE!
   
 
 
 
Joyce Web Right Here
Joyce Webb  After You're Gone
 
 
On the second release for the label, Joyce Webb sings "Right Here!",  and is backed  by the  Slades in 1958. The flip side, "After You've Gone" was also backed by the Slades. Notice that their names are listed on the label. To hear my interview with Joyce and see what she is doing now, go HERE!
 
 
Slades You Cheated
Slades The Waddle
 
The biggest selling record for Domino, "You  Cheated" by the Slades,from 1958.This is the original version, before the Los Angeles based Shields covered it. An up tempo dance number,"The Waddle",combines a ballad and a fast song  pairing on  A/B sides, which   occurred on most Slades releases.
 
 
Joyce Webb Ain't That Just Like A Man
Joyce Webb  I Don't Care
 
"Ain' t That Just Like A Man", was the third domino  records release,  and the second for Joyce Webb.   The   release date was 1958. The flip side"I Don't Care", is my preference on the best side of the two.
   
Joyce Webb sleeve 1
Joyce Webb sleeve 2
This is the picture sleeve issued for Joyce Webb's previous record, "Ain' t That Just Like   A Man" and "I Don't Care". Joyce is at the piano, and on the back of the sleeve, are   record  reviews from Cashbox and The Music Reporter. Click on the right picture for a  bigger photo. Listen to an interview with Joyce Webb Here. Recorded in September 2003.
   
 
Ray Campi Screamin Screamin Mimi
Ray Campi With You
 
 
Wild Rockabilly by Ray Campi was next in line for Domino records. "My Screamin' Screamin'   Mimi" was a good one. The flip, "With  You" ,assured people would play the "A" side.This was his only release on the label. 1958
 
 
Ray Campi Sleeve 1
Ray Campi Sleeve 2
 
A nice picture insert showing the  artist's photo,originally shipped for promotion. The artist bio appears on the back of the insert.  Click to Enlarge.
 
 
Slades You Gambled
Slades No Time
 
The Slades follow up  release  "You  Gambled", was done much in the same style as their  big hit."No Time" was the up tempo flip. Another decent two sided pairing for the group, from  1958.
 
 
Slades You Gambled sleeve1
Slades You Gambled sleeve2
 
This is  actually  a  sleeve,  not  an insert. This  was  issued  in  limited quantities on it's   release.  Click to enlarge. The backside  of the sleeve gives some limited group information.   Click to enlarge.
 
 
Slades It's Better To Love
Slades Just You
 
The next Domino, and Slades release,was "It's Better To Love", and this is the promo.   "Just You" , is  on the flip side, an up tempo recording in the typical Slades style. 1959.
 
 
Slades Better To Love Sleeve 1
Slades Better To Love Sleeve 2
 
Promotional only sleeve for "It's Better To Love". Click to enlarge. Flip side of the sleeve   for "Just You"can also be enlarged.
 
 
Slades Better To Love
Slades Just You
 
Stock copy of "It's Better To Love". Notice the stock record 901 versus the promo   #900.   The flip side remains the  same on the  stock copy of "Just You", This was  released  in 1959.
 
 
Slades Summertime
Slades You Must Try
 
The Slades  version of the  old standard  "Summertime",  was waxed in 1961 and  is   quite good.The flip shown here "You Must Try", on a Domino records promotional  issue.
 
 
Rob McCullough  Sweet Moments With You
Rob McCullough  My Lonely Night
 
The  only  domino  release  by  Rod  McCullough,  "My Lonely Night" from 1960. The   flip "Sweet Moments With You", just didn't catch on with the record buying public.
 
 
Rob McCullough sleeve 1
Rob McCullough sleeve 2
 
The Domino records insert for Rod McCullough is shown. I don't think they knew which side  to push, as both   are  highlighted, and both are very different. Click to enlarge. Rod's bio is on the back. In   writing it mentions "Future Releases, already on the Domino Schedule." They must have dropped off the schedule,as this is Rod's only release. Click  to enlarge.
 
 
Joyce Harris  I Cheated
Joyce Harris  Do You Know What It's Like To Be Lonesome
 
The Slades backed  Joyce Harris on her first Domino effort  "I Cheated", answering   their   own song!  Released in 1960.   The flip "Do You Know What It's Like To Be   Lonesome", does not feature the Slades.
 
 
Slades/Harris Sleeve1
Slades/Harris Sleeve2
 
The Slades with a promotional picture insert, trying to get back on track with record   sales.   Click for an  enlarged picture of the Slades .  DJ's may not only have flipped over the record,but   also  turned over the picture insert. Still, there was no wide regional play. Click for view of the sleeve enlarged picture of Joyce Harris.
 
 
Daylighters I'll Never Let You Go
Daylighters Something Is Wrong
 
The Daylighters were next on the Domino release schedule.They had a blues sound to them, and this  is a great up tempo side, "I'll Never Let You Go".This was issued in 1961.The Daylighters flip,"Something Is Wrong" is a real slow blues  number. Not to overuse the phrase "Great Two Sider",but it is. The Daylighters should have had more airplay.
 
 
Joyce Harris  No Way Out
Joyce Harris Dreamer
 
"No Way Out" was another big hit for Domino, sort of. It didn't hit the national charts on  Domino, but the record made just enough noise that Domino worked out a distribution deal with Infinity records. The Joyce Harris Flip side was "Dreamer". A nice pairing by the label.  Notice that both sides have writing credits by Harris, as does her previous single.   This is the original issue from 1961.
 
 
Slades  It's Your Turn
Slades Take My Heart
 
The last Slades  release for the label," It's Your Turn". It's a  great up tempo  song, but it failed to make a dent in the charts. "Take My  Heart"  was the flip, released in 1961.  The   Domino records success story was slowly coming to a close.
 
   
Barny Tall picture 1
Barny Tall picture 2
Barny Tall picture 3
Barney Tall is on the right and Roger beck, another Texas musician,left, on all 3 photos. Center photo by Donald McDonald.


Barney Tall's real name was Bernard Samuelson, and he lived in Austin. He stood about 6'8", and was legally blind. He suffered from Marfan Syndrome, which is a connective tissue disorder that affects tissues connecting tendons, ligaments, blood vessels, heart valves, and the like. People who suffer from this disease are often extremely tall and thin, have long extremities, and eye problems. Barney was no exception. He could see objects
at extremely close range, though Roger recalls that Barney's pupils were always in a state of flux.

As heard by the Domino recordings, Barney's music was in the Texas dance hall vein, which was primarily country swing and popular numbers. He played a Gretch White Falcon guitar. Roger recalls that Barney did an outstanding job performing "Young Love," made popular by Sonny James.

Barney and Roger played numerous nightspots in and around the Austin area, including the Flamingo, Shorthorn, Longhorn, and 5 nights a week at the Split Rail. Their group would also back more established stars who passed through the area; Arleigh Duff of "Y'all Come" fame was one that comes to Roger's mind.

"I'm Only Human" on Domino was a regional hit for Barney; the song is still performed around Austin today by country dance musicians. Steel guitarist Bert Rivera, who today is best known for his years with western swing great Hank Thompson, played on the record. Joe Castle performed the violin duties, multi-tracking several parts.

Roger Beck, who is also a barber, joined with Barney shortly after "I'm Only Human" came out. The two chanced to meet when Barney visited Beck's barber shop. They began playing together, and Barney secured backing from both the Lone Star and Jax beer distributors. According to Roger, one Lone Star representative took offense when he found out that Barney was playing for a competitor, and subsequently smashed a beer bottle across Barney's face, damaging the retina in one of his eyes. Roger had to drive Barney to Houston in order to be treated by an eye doctor, as nobody in Austin could perform such work at the time. It is said that the Lone Star rep remained in hiding for a very long time, as Barney was a very large man and could pack quite a wallop.

Barney's career peaked when they secured a steady gig at HemisFair '68 in San Antonio, which ran from April to October. Barney died shortly thereafter in early 1969 from complications stemming from Marfan Syndrome. He was in his early 30's. According to Roger, Barney started experiencing heart difficulties during a gig; on the outset, it looked like a heart attack. Roger drove Barney to the emergency room at Brackenridge, Austin's city hospital. The emergency room attendants were more concerned with a drunk who had cut himself up and was bleeding, and did not attend to Barney, who finally walked out of the hospital proclaiming, "If I'm going to die, I'm going to die at home!" Roger took him to Seton, another hospital in Austin. Barney's aorta had partially separated from his heart, and was bleeding internally. At that time, nobody in Austin could perform what was then complicated heart surgery. So, within about 2-3 days, Barney bled to death.

Roger relates that Barney was always a jokester. Even during his final days in the hospital, Barney would jiggle the heart monitors just to see the nurses come running into his room.

Barney was married and had about 5 kids; two of which reportedly inherited Marfan Syndrome. From all accounts, Barney's widow is still alive, and Roger recounts that at least one son for a time followed in his father's musical footsteps.
Story by Paul Schlesinger from an interview conducted in October 2007 with Roger Beck, an Austin, Texas musician who performed with Barney throughout the 1960's.

   
Barny Tall I'd Rather Be Wrong
Barny Tall Little Love Letter
Country and western anybody? Barny Tall had two releases for Domino, and this is the first. "I'd Rather Be Wrong" is early 1960's, tear in your beer, the dog died, country music. A huge deviation for Domino. But wait! Flip it and yes, "Little Love Letter" is still on the country side, but it's upbeat and has the Slades in the background. Not a bad song at all.
   
Dub Walker Freedom march
Dub Walker Battle Hymm Of The Republic
Not exactly Doo Wop or rock and roll. This was likely an early 60's release, and was a completely different type of record for Domino. They were inspirational, and aimed at the civil rights movements of the time period. A forward thinking release for Domino, but I don't think a huge volume of records were sold.
   
Barny Tall I'm Only Human
Barny Tall Fleeting Love

This is Barny Tall's only other Domino label recording that was pressed and released. "I'm Only Human" was a local hit in Texas, and is still played by bands to this day. One way radio was different in the 50's and the 60's was that the rock and roll stations played quite a variety. That included rock and roll, r+B, doo wop, pop, and some songs that were country influenced. "Fleeting Love" is on the flip side, and it seems this side could have done well on most any station at the time. A collaboration of thoughts and memories written by Chester Johnson, the son of Maydell Johnson who is shown with writing credits on "I'm Only Human", follows here:

In the mid 1950‘s, my mother, Maydell, and dad heard about Bernard Samuelson (Barny Tall) and that he sang and played the guitar very well. They had previously known of Bernard’s parents because they had attended the same church with them at one time. Shortly after hearing of Bernard
Samuelson, my parents had contacted the Samuelsons and we had an invitation to the Samuelson home one evening, which was in about the 4600 block of Speedway, in central Austin. At that point in time, Bernard was a young adult and still lived with his parents. The evening of the first meeting with him, my parents took my younger brother, Kenneth and I, with them to the Samuelson home.

I was only about 8 or 9 years old at the time, but I vividly remember that first visit to the Samuelson home and our first meeting with Bernard, who was a very tall, thin, sharp featured young man with dark curly hair. Although Bernard had a severe sight impairment and was considered legally blind, he was very musically gifted. In order to see anything with any degree of clarity, he had to hold it up very near his face and everything beyond a few inches from his face was a blur. That did not prevent him from singing and playing his guitar like a professional musician. Bernard had a Martin acoustic guitar at that time when we first met him. It was covered with a tooled leather cover with hand stitched leather lacing where the top and bottom of the leather cover met the sides. Hand tooled leather covered most of the guitar body except for the round sound hole and the area beneath the strings.
Bernard sang some Hank Snow songs for us and he sounded exactly like Hank Snow. He also expertly played his guitar exactly like Hank Snow. I remember that he had a big stack of Hank Snow 78 rpm records and he and his parents told us he learned all of the Hank Snow songs from listening to those records and that he taught himself to play the guitar. Bernard’s mother had an old pump organ and I remember her playing it for us at some point back then. I remember that she played it with much vigor and enthusiasm. At that first meeting with Bernard Samuelson, he indicated that he would like to try some of my mother, Maydell’s, songs.

My mother, Maydell, had purchased a ukulele to use to accompany her singing while she worked out the melody for her songs. After we met Bernard Samuelson, my parents bought a Webcor tape recorder, which was a big, heavy tube type suitcase sized one; the latest technology of the day. My mother would sing her songs and accompany herself with the ukulele, and record them on the tape recorder. They would then let Bernard Samuelson use the tape recorder. He listened to the tape until he had learned the lyrics and melody of some of the songs, such that he could sing her songs and accompany himself on his guitar. At the point we first met Bernard Samuelson, he and a few other boys were regularly getting together to play at each other’s houses or garages but I don’t believe they were playing professionally at that point in time. Bernard Samuelson also came to our house in Austin sometimes back then. My parents went to get him because he did not drive because of his sight problem. I remember that one time he came over, I had gotten a little youth sized green Harmony flat top acoustic guitar for Christmas and my parents asked him if he would play it for me and he did. I’ll never forget how wonderful Bernard made that little green Harmony guitar sound. He had such long fingers and it seemed like he had a natural ability to easily get the sounds out of a guitar that others had to really work for.At some point after we met Bernard Samuelson in the mid 50‘s, he married and moved from his parents house on Speedway. He and his new wife moved into a small house just off North Loop in north Austin. They began raising a family there. During the weekdays, Bernard worked at a grocery store and on the weekends and evenings he pursued his musical ambitions. We went to their home a few times there and sometimes the other members of his band would be there. I remember one time when we were there and the bass player arrived (Don Keeling). He was in a green Chevrolet, about a 1952 model, and he had his bass, a big standup acoustic bass, strapped to the roof of that old Chevrolet. In the days before guitar sized electric basses, before vans and before Suburbans, the only way a bass player had to transport his instrument was usually by strapping it to the roof of a car. My mother, Maydell, said she believes the bass player was named Don Keeling.


Bernard and his band would record some of my mother’s songs, including "I’m Only Human" on the old Webcor tape recorder. My parents then took copies of the tape around to disc jockeys and played it to whoever they could get to listen to it. Bernard Samuelson and the other members of his band also played tapes of the songs to people they encountered who might have connections in the music business and I believe that is how the connection was made with the Domino record people. My parents encountered a country disc jockey and musician named Earl Aycock who worked at a country music radio station in Pasadena, Texas. He liked my mothers songs and Bernard Samuelson’s vocals. He was associated or connected in some way with Starday Records, where George Jones, who lived in nearby Beaumont, at the time, was an up and coming new country music star. Earl Aycock reportedly played the tape of Bernard Samuelson and his band performing my mother, Maydell’s, songs for the record company people. They reportedly acknowledged Bernard Samuelson’s talent and abilities, but declined to offer him a recording contract because they said he sounded too much like Hank Snow. After that, Bernard Samuelson shifted his musical style from sounding too much like Hank
Snow, to a style that was more uniquely his own.


Earl Aycock, the Pasadena, Texas disc jockey and his band also performed some more of my mother’s songs on some demo tapes or records and he continued to push them to other record company people he came into contact with. Later on, he was instrumental in bringing about the release of two other songs of my mother’s on the "D" record label. Those
two songs were titled “Dear World" and "Cold Cold Ashes", and they were recorded by Bill Wilbourne. In the late 1950’s, Earl Aycock moved to Meridian, Mississippi, where he was originally from I believe. We took a family vacation in the summer of I believe 1960, and we drove through Meridian, Mississippi and stopped and visited with him at the Meridian radio station where he was working at the time.


When my family first met Bernard Samuelson in the mid 1950‘s, he was working at an Austin grocery store during the day and pursuing his music; first as a hobby and then semi-professionally, at night. When he began performing professionally, Bernard Samuelson purchased a beautiful white Gretsch electric guitar with gold colored hardware which he played from that point on. We no longer saw him with the Martin acoustic guitar with the leather cover that he had when we first met him and I don’t believe he had the Martin after he started using the white Gretsch electric guitar. After we had known Bernard Samuelson for awhile, we went to a place one night where he and his band were playing. I believe it may have been one of their first few professional gigs. It was at a small honky tonk called the "Hilltop Inn", which was located on Jollyville road just northwest of the Austin city limits. Bernard Samuelson was still working his grocery store day job into the 60‘s that we knew of, but we didn‘t know if or at what point he might have given up the grocery store job after he and his band began performing regularly. After their family began to grow, Bernard Samuelson and his wife and children moved from the small house off of North Loop in north Austin, to a larger home in northeast Austin. We visited with them there at least once, and I remember they had several small children by then.


I remember that their oldest son, who was probably no more than 5 or 6 years old at that time, looked just like his daddy, Bernard, but had very light colored hair like his mother. Although my mother, Maydell Johnson, wrote well over 100 good country songs between the early 1950’s and the early 1960’s, only a few of them were recorded. The Domino release of "I’m Only Human" by Barny Tall (Bernard Samuelson) and the "D" record label release of "Dear World"and
"Cold Cold Ashes" by Bill Wilbourne were the only 45 rpm releases of her songs. The only other works of her’s to be recorded were some recitations, which were included and released on a 33rpm album by Clyde “Barefoot" Chesser in the early 1960’s. Clyde Chesser was a country radio disc jockey at the time at Austin country radio station KOKE. Prior to that, he had worked for several years as a country disc jockey in the Temple, Texas area and he and his band performed frequently around central Texas in the 1950’s and 60’s. He was predominately known for his country music recitations.


After the early 1960’s, my mother, Maydell Johnson, did not write any more songs. In 1964, my parents bought a large, old, brick house in central Austin and our family project became home renovation. Although we had lost contact with Bernard Samuelson before the mid 1960’s, we often heard of his frequent local performances during the 60‘s. We were deeply saddened when we heard of his death in 1969.


This year (2008) my mother, Maydell Johnson, who wrote "I’m Only Human", will be 85.

   
 

Summary: This is  all of the Domino records released that I know of. It gives a good showing of the artists and groups that had the most popularity  on the label. Domino   was also very promotion minded, sending out artist information and pictures on many of   their releases. Domino was a typical small record label that had better than average   talent,  but had only one truly National hit. But that was one more hit than 1000's of other   record labels had at the time.

Gone Missing: I'm looking  for  78's  and  Canadian  pressings,  probably  on  Reo. A  few   promotional inserts and sleeves are also needed.

 
 
 
Where Are They Now?????  Joyce Webb Is still singing and now resides in Wimberley,   Texas. Joyce owns the nationally recognized Wimberley Stained Glass, and is quite an   artist.  I  had  the  chance  to  interview  her in  August  of 2003, and she is simply   amazing. I didn't realize how talented she is and how many opportunities she has had   performing throughout her career. She loves to laugh, and made me feel like we had   known   each for years when the interview took place. I don't think you could meet a nicer person. Listen to the interview Here. Recorded in September of 2003.
 
 

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