This Minneapolis group, best known for their single "Cry, Cry, Cry," was popular in their area at CYO and teen dances, and was more often listed as "Little Artie and the Pharaohs," though on this single the "Little" has been dropped. The group included brothers Artie and Al Herrera, who went on to record as Kane & Abel (with the Phil Spector-esque single "Breakdown and Cry"). They then eventually evolved into the band The Mob, who gained attention as soulful Blood, Sweat, and Tears clones, without the annoying horn section. The Mob sat along side groups like The Shocking Blue ("Venus") on Jerry Ross' Colossus Records. These days, Artie lives in Chicago and works in a Panasonic warehouse, while the other members have jobs with Harley-Davidson, Amtrak, and the South Milwaukee power plant.
Cuca Records who released the single is a wonderful example of an independent label in the 60s who found success. Based in Sauk City, Wisconsin, they had an open-door policy where owner James Kirchstein recorded artists of all genres and ethnicities on second-hand equipment he bought from the widow of Milwaukee's Phau Records' owner after he passed away. Originally wanting to name the label Swastika Records (he thought he'd appeal to south-central Wisconsin's large German population with what he considered to be a German good luck symbol), he was talked out of the potential (!?) Nazi association, and settled with "Cuca" which was the nickname of his wife's Mexican-American cousin from Los Cusas, New Mexico. Need more trivia? Check out an incredible complete history of the label here.
Today's track is the flip of Artie's cheesy dancer "Foxy Devil," and though intending to be a sweet ballad, it sounds more creepy/sinister/desparate than loving to this listener, and if you ask me, it would be the perfect anthem for a deranged stalker. It's just so cool and smokey! Let us know what you think. Not sure how hard this one is to find, but I have never seen another copy, online or otherwise...
Cuca Records who released the single is a wonderful example of an independent label in the 60s who found success. Based in Sauk City, Wisconsin, they had an open-door policy where owner James Kirchstein recorded artists of all genres and ethnicities on second-hand equipment he bought from the widow of Milwaukee's Phau Records' owner after he passed away. Originally wanting to name the label Swastika Records (he thought he'd appeal to south-central Wisconsin's large German population with what he considered to be a German good luck symbol), he was talked out of the potential (!?) Nazi association, and settled with "Cuca" which was the nickname of his wife's Mexican-American cousin from Los Cusas, New Mexico. Need more trivia? Check out an incredible complete history of the label here.
Today's track is the flip of Artie's cheesy dancer "Foxy Devil," and though intending to be a sweet ballad, it sounds more creepy/sinister/desparate than loving to this listener, and if you ask me, it would be the perfect anthem for a deranged stalker. It's just so cool and smokey! Let us know what you think. Not sure how hard this one is to find, but I have never seen another copy, online or otherwise...




