Tuesday, August 9, 2022

The 1981 Listening Post - Totty - Too

 Totty - Too


#739

1981 Housekeeping

Totty

Too

Genre: Hard Rock n Metal

3.75 out of 5


Highlights:

Scratched Records


Maybe if you didn’t get a record deal in 1981 you just weren’t trying.


Oklahoma boys Dennis and Byron Totty didn’t get one. So, they put their record out themselves. And this was their second record. It was put out by “Our First Record Company”.


We shouldn’t be reviewing those cuz, honestly. There’s no way I would have had a chance to hear this in 1981.

These kids really love their bassist. Why not? That Byron Totty.  And lead guitar licks. Which is how it should be, since Dennis plays that. 


It’s not the worst boogie rock. It’s actually better than it deserves to be. They would have been great on a tour with Raging Slab. 


The story of their first record is pretty cool and I’ll add it here since Byron went to the trouble to write about it on a website devoted to the band.He’s a photographer in Oklahoma, by the way.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsdRkoIpGsU



THE STORY OF THE FIRST ALBUM



How an independent, locally produced 70's grass roots project came to be heard around the world

.....and worth hundreds of dollars on the record collector market




In 1976 the Totty Brothers were in a three piece band with drummer George Cooper called Starstream Bodine. They went into Charity Recording Studios in Tulsa, Oklahoma to record six original songs to be used in a band ‘promo package’, which would be sent out to talent booking agents and other music industry people. This was done in order to hopefully book more live appearances, and possibly generate interest from a record label for their original songs.


STARSTREAM BODINE 1975, BYRON TOTTY, DENNIS TOTTY, GEORGE COOPER

Shortly after the six songs were completed, George moved out of state. After a short while, instead of scraping the project, The Totty Brothers decided to add a few more songs to the six songs and make a full album of all original tunes.  Needing studio drumming help to record three more songs, they asked drummers Roger Roden, drummer from their old band Cedric, and David Blue, the drummer for the band Bliss, their  favorite Oklahoma band, to play on the new sessions . They would not worry about putting together a live act at this time.  Basically just finish out recording the full album, and then concentrate on doing promo work by sending out the 9 songs  to record companies. 


THE BAND CEDRIC, 1973. BYRON AND DENNIS TOTTY WITH DRUMMER ROGER RODEN, RIGHT.


DRUMMER FOR THE BAND BLISS, DAVID BLUE

Once the full album was mixed and completed, the album was pressed on vinyl and 50 copies were

made, with plain white album covers and no artwork. (This wasn’t to copy the Beatles white album. This was strictly a financial decision. This was the least expensive way to get the albums pressed)

This white album, along with lyric sheets, mimeographed photos, and album and contact info, were all enclosed in a clear plastic bag and sealed with a white, circular adhesive tab. This package was created in 1976.


THE TOTTY PROMO PACKAGE. 50 COPIES MADE

After a short while, word-of-mouth about this promo package started to pick up steam in the Oklahoma area. After a couple of radio stations played a song from the package, several local artists stepped up and donated their services in order to turn their ‘promo’ album into a ‘real’ album, with artwork and photography for both covers, plus a lyric sheet insert. Thus, the final version of the Totty album was created.  They decided to follow in the footsteps of other independent artists at that time and start their own record and publishing company, and release their album on their own label. In 1977, the first completed Totty album was officially released by Our First Record Company (OFRC-01).


THE FINAL VERSION OF THE FIRST TOTTY ALBUM

They made an appointment one afternoon with Oklahoma City’s largest rock station , KATT, to see if the station would play a song from the album. During the meeting, after listening to 2 songs, the program director said ‘yes, we’ll play this’.  That night, on KATT’s album spotlight hour, they played the entire Totty album.


The brothers were soon driving their car around to record stores and radio stations in Oklahoma, trying to get the album into any kind of record store that would sell it. Later, after they had put together an act, they also sold the album at live performances. (They later performed two concerts for KATT radio which were recorded and re-broadcast on air.)



The album was also gaining a word-of-mouth buzz due to the somewhat controversial lyrics that were contained in the album. There were actually some rock radio stations who would not play the album because they felt the album was 'too religious'.  At the same time, there were christian radio stations who would not play the album because they felt it was 'too satanic'.


You listen and you be the judge.


FLASH FORWARD 25 YEARS


Byron received a call from someone in Ohio wanting to know if he had any old Totty albums for sale. He told him yes, he still had a few left. The man from Ohio offered to pay $25 each for ten of them. ‘Wow, $250 bucks for our old albums, pretty cool’.  Sold.  A couple of weeks later, someone from New York calls asking the same thing. Hmm, weird,….but sure, ok. Sold.


Now, a third person calls, from Houston, asking the same thing.  Ok, something strange is going on here. The guy from Houston asks, don’t you know what going on? Haven’t you heard? Your first album has become a very hot item on the vinyl album collectors market. The guy that bought them off you for $25 each is selling them for $150 each. That’s a piece. $150 per album.


Over the next few years, the value of their first album kept rising, and eventually, asking prices reached the $350-$400 range. This price was only for ‘original, sealed’ copies. Opened copies, in excellent condition, had their value drop to around $150 a copy. Unfortunately, being 25 years later, the Totty Brothers had very few copies of the album remaining.


Collectors tried to call every name listed on the back of the album trying to find copies of

the album.


The album was later ’bootlegged’ and sold illegally by 4 different record companies in Europe.  

The Totty Brothers made no money from any of these bootlegged sales.


TOTTY ALBUM FOR $400





Recorded in 1976 at Charity Recording Studios, Tulsa, Oklahoma

DENNIS TOTTY:  Guitars, vocals, piano and synth keyboard on Thus Saith The Lord

BYRON TOTTY:  Bass guitar, backing vocals, synth keyboard on T-Town Teasers and Somebody Help Me

 

GEORGE COOPER:  Drums; Thus Saith the Lord, T-Town Teasers, Crack In the Cosmic Egg, Done Made Up My Mind, Tryin To Forget You

DAVID BLUE: Drums; Wicked Truth, Somebody Help Me

ROGER RODEN:  Drums; Love Down By One Share


DAVID SMALLWOOD:  Recording and Mixing Engineer

MIKE BOLLINGER:  Assistant Engineer

DAVID WINFREY:   Assistant Engineer

JOHNNY FRENCH:  Wolf Whistle on T-Town Teasers

THE CHARITY CHOIR:  Somebody Help Me

MARTY AND JON NICHOLAS:  Instrument Support



DAVID SMALLWOOD

BARBARA WORRELL - Album Insert Design and Layout

Moye’A:  Cover Oil Painting  (Nick Moyers)

ZACHARIAH:  Black and White Photography On Back Cover and Lyric Insert 

DALE ROWE:  Copy Work Photography of Oil Painting

D L EDGINGTON:  Album Cover Layout Design


SIDE ONE

1  THUS SAITH THE LORD  1:30

2  T-TOWN TEASERS  2:41

3  CRACK IN THE COSMIC EGG  5:04

4  LOVE DOWN BY ONE SHARE / LOVE SONG TO A WHORE  4:57

5  I’VE DONE MADE UP MY MIND  5:40


SIDE TWO

1  WICKED TRUTH  4:09

2  TRYIN TO FORGET YOU  3:47

3  TAKE ME AWAY JESUS  4:48

4  SOMEBODY HELP ME  8:27












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