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The Mad Lads

In Action

The Mad Lads

12 SONGS • 32 MINUTES • FEB 08 2005

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
I Want Someone
02:41
2
Come Closer to Me
02:39
3
I'm Learning (In the Ways of My Love)
02:47
4
You're My Inspiration
03:15
5
Michael the Lover
02:29
6
You Mean so Much to Me
02:31
7
Don't Have to Shop Around
02:50
8
Land of 1000 Dances
03:33
9
Nothing Can Break Through
02:14
10
She's the One
02:04
11
Get Out of My Life
03:06
12
Sugar Sugar
02:29
℗© 2004 Atlantic Recording Corp. Manufactured & Marketed by Warner Strategic Marketing

Artist bios

One of the few vocal groups on the Stax roster during the '60s, the Mad Lads' doo wop-influenced harmonies -- featuring the high, innocent tenor of John Gary Williams -- were more akin to what you might find in Philadelphia soul acts than those of their native Memphis. The group members were still in high school when the Mad Lads were signed to Stax in late 1964. In the mid-'60s, they enjoyed solid R&B hits with "Don't Have to Shop Around," "I Want Someone," and "I Want a Girl," although they never would cross over to the pop audience. Williams and fellow Mad Lad William Brown were drafted in 1966, and their recording career was suspended while they were in the service (although they carried on live with replacements). After their discharge, Williams and Brown were told by fellow original members Julius Green and Robert Philips that they didn't want Brown in the group; Brown and Stax co-owner Jim Stewart forced them to reinstate Williams, but their subsequent efforts were more in the Stax soul/funk formula, and not as memorable as their more atypical mid-'60s singles. They did return to the R&B Top 30 in 1968 with "Whatever Hurts You." ~ Richie Unterberger

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Language of performance
English
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