Cameo-Parkway Records

CAMEO-PARKWAY RECORDS
 
 
Cameo-Parkway Records  was the parent company of Cameo Records and Parkway Records, which were major American Philadelphia-based record labels from 1956 (for Cameo) and 1958 (for Parkway) to 1967.  Among the types of music released were doo-wop, dance hits, popular/rock, rockabilly, big band, garage rock, soul, and novelty records.  Until 1962, Cameo was also the parent company name for both labels, and Parkway was a subsidiary.  In 1962, the parent company was renamed from Cameo to Cameo-Parkway, to give both labels equal status.  In some foreign markets Cameo-Parkway was also a label name, issuing records by artists from both labels.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

The first release by the Primitives was “Help Me” b/w “Let Them Tell”.  Both sides of this monster single are included on the English Freakbeat, Volume 1 CD.  Bruce Eder has this lavish description of the single in his Allmusic article: 

 

[The Primitives] could and should have been one of the top groups on the Pye label, based on their rough-and-ready debut ‘Help Me’, a cover of a Sonny Boy Williamson [II] number that was beautifully raw and authentic, and wonderfully intense across an astonishingly long three minutes and 39 seconds, [John E.] Soul’s harmonica and [Geoff] Eaton’s guitar keeping the verisimilitude right up there like a Chess Records session gone out of control, amid [Jay] Roberts ever more intense romantic lamentations.  The group-authored B-side, ‘Let Them Tell’, was almost as much a showcase for the harmonica and rhythm section as for Roberts’ singing.  Amazingly, that November 1964 release even made it out in America, as part of the very short-lived licensing agreement between Pye and Philadelphia-based Cameo-Parkway Records, which also issued the Kinks’ first U.S. single, before Pye headed for the greener pastures of Warner-Reprise.”

 

(May 2015)

 

Last edited: March 22, 2021