Uploaded by John1948NineC on Jan 7, 2011
PLEASE NOTE: I divided my uploads between multiple channels, Bookmark this link in your browser for instant access to an index with links to all of John1948's oldies classics. LINK: http://tinyurl.com/Channel-Index
High octane, turbo, high performance, super-charged - MITCH RYDER & The Detroit Wheels didn't need to hail from the Motor City for those adjectives to be tossed their way, but it was certainly appropriate that they called Motown home. It was Mitch and The Wheels who served as the musical bridge between the Motown soul factory and the high energy, take no prisoners rock 'n' roll that would roar out of Detroit via Iggy & The Stooges, MC5, Ted Nugent and Bob Seger.
The explosive quality was there from the very start. Listen to the way the chords introducing Jenny Take A Ride are chomping at the bit to swoop down into the double-time mid-section, or how John Badanjek's thundering bass drum trigger's the ecstatic roll that kicks off Devil With A Blue Dress On. The Wheels must have known what they had. Witness the confidence -even cockiness- of telegraphing their punch forever on Little Latin Lupe Lu, building expectations to fever pitch before hammering down the riff with Jim McCarty's lead lick trailing behind. And nailing it big time. One punch, KO, Mike Tyson-style.
The records worked because they perfectly captured the kinetic frenzy of the live performances that had been the group's stock in trade since they first joined forces in Detroit early in 1964.
What followed was a wild two-year ride through the starmaking machinery of the record industry that brought them fame but no fortune and tore the group apart in the process. Late in 1965, Jenny Take A Ride climbed to #10 as The Wheels welded Chuck Willis' "C.C. Rider" to Little Richard's "Jenny, Jenny", and cannily tossed in an advertisement for their live show along the way (check how the backing vocals change to "See Mitch Ryder" during the second verse). Little Latin Lupe Lu cemented their commercial appeal when it reached #17 and set the general outline of the band's most popular sound- an R&B standard or two revved up, Wheels-style, with Mitch's peerless soul shouting ripping away over the top.
Late in 1966, the Devil With A Blue Dress On and Good Golly Miss Molly medleys exploded over the airwaves and indelibly stamped the high energy Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels sound on anyone within an earshot as they hit #4 on the charts.
Early in 1967, prototypical, riff-rockin Sock It To Me Baby! became Ryder's final Top 10 single, despite being banned on several stations for being too sexually suggestive. The brassy Too Many Fishes In The Sea and Three Little Fishes medley was the final chart entry (at #24) for Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels.
Ryder's career then took several detours, when Bob Crew encouraged him to pursue a solo career. Unhappy with the results, Mitch went to Memphis to record The Detroit-Memphis Experiment album with Stax luminaries Booker T. & The MGs and The Memphis Horns for Dot. He then returned home to a reunion with The Wheels drummer John Badanjek in the short-lived supergroup Detroit, which lasted just long enough to record one monster of a heavy-duty rock 'n' roll album in 1971. "Long Neck Goose" updated the classic Wheels sound as Ryder digs into the tune with a ferocious glee, but the climatic moment was "Rock N' Roll", kicked off by a mountainous guitar riff while Badanjek bounced a cow-bell off your skull at regular intervals. It was so powerful a performance that Lou Reed was quoted as saying that was how the song was supposed to sound.
Mitch left the active performing scene for the next 5 years, but came back to a major American label for the John Cougar Mellencamp - produced Never Kick A Sleeping Dog in 1983, highlighted by a world weary, gritty version of Prince's When You Were Mine that cut the original and all others to shreds. Currently enjoying another surge in European popularity, Mitch has released two more LPs for Line, Red Blood, White Mink and In The China Shop.
No one, but no one, ever kicked out the rockin' R&B jams better than Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels.
SOURCE: http://www.utopiaartists.com/bio_mitch_ryder.htm
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Artist: Mitch Ryder And The Detroit Wheels
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As Seen On:
ROCKLAND
18 videos

YouTube Mix for Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels
5:07
Mitch Ryder - Devil With The Blue Dress/Good Golly Miss Mollyby MICHIGANROCKSANDROLL39,567 views
3:21
Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels - Devil with the Blue Dress - by JJby MrJJsDrumTV23,349 views
7:50
devil with the blue dressby bossermaniakus16,800 views
7:07
Mitch Ryder - C.C. Rider_Money (That's What I Want)by MyyyTunes3558 views
3:25
Mitch Ryder - CC Riderby ufgatormitch1,445 views
3:20
Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels "C.C. Rider" 1966by SLAMCREEPER34,672 views
2:17
Bobby Fuller Four - I Fought The Law (1966)by TheRockabillie9,114 views
4:42
Mitch Ryder - Devil With a Blue Dress onby ufgatormitch21,722 views
2:41
The Searchers - C. C. Rider / Jenny Take A Ride (1966)_HQby nyrainbow456,698 views
2:28
Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels- Walking the Dogby Circuit7Active5,235 views
4:40
MITCH RYDER - "WHEN YOU WERE MINE"by bluzdudemi16,186 views
5:11
Bob Seger - "Famous Final Scene"by stlblair23,648 views
3:04
Wanyne Cochran and the C. C. Ridersby TimTK8,703 views
9:29
Bruce Springsteen - Detroit Medley (Winterland, 1978)by SaturnTrack1,980 views
3:16
Chrissie Hynde (The Pretenders) - Little Latin Lupe Luby jadedingenue23,921 views
3:06
Music To Watch Girls By ~ By Bob Crewe Generationby texpaco27,270 views
2:35
Eric Burdon & Animals - See see rider 1967by fritz5133138,292 views
2:54
Martha and the Vandellas - Nowhere To Runby FunkSoBrudda78,493 views
1:41
Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels - 1966by BobbyColePopMusic163,249 views
4:14
MITCH RYDER - "JENNY TAKE A RIDE"by bluzdudemi7,456 views
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My fave Detroit Wheels song! It was in hte movie,CC Ryder,too! Staring Joe Namath.It's the Wall of Sound,without Phil Spectre.
ChimeraAZ 4 months ago
your 100% right and I am with you on this mate, only thing is they keep removing it.
keleeds 5 months ago
This is the man John Mellenkamp got his inspiration from.
You can hear it.
DerGlaetze 7 months ago
thank u for re-posting this video - ur a great man - please leave it here - this song is one of the greatest of it's time - even in today's time
jules9696 7 months ago