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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Emperors (also billed as The Emperor's) were an American soul band from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, formed in the early 1960s.

The group had its first breakthrough when producer Phil Gaber noticed the group and recorded their first single, "Karate", in 1966.[1] The song was released on Mala Records and became a hit; the song was a regional smash in the Philadelphia area, reached the Top 30 of the national R&B charts, peaked at #55 on the Billboard Hot 100, and reached #46 in Canada.[2][3] Their follow-up single was a cover of Don Gardner's tune "My Baby Likes to Boogaloo", and another single, "Searchin'", followed in 1967 before the group signed with Brunswick Records. One single, "Karate Boogaloo", followed on the label before Bobby Fulton left the group to start Soulville Records. The group then renamed itself Emperors Soul 69 and recorded the single "Bring Out Yourself" for Futura Records before disbanding.[1]

The group's output was reissued on LP and CD in 2002.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Folk Tale: The Emperors New Clothes read by Harry Shearer for Speakaboos
  • Fairy tale The Emperors New Clothes (with subtitles)

Transcription

Once upon a time, there was an Emperor, who was so very fond of new clothes that he spent all of his money on buying them. He did not worry about his land or army or people or ruling his empire at all. He had a different suit for each hour of the day. One day, two tricksters appeared at the kingdom. They dressed and acted as though they were trustworthy men and claimed to be clothes makers. They said that they knew how to weave clothing that had the most beautiful colors and patterns. But, they said to anyone who would listen, "Our clothing is very different from anything else you know of. Our clothing is invisible to anyone who is either a simpleton or who is unfit to hold their office." But, they said to anyone who would listen, "Our clothing is very different from anything else you know of. Our clothing is invisible to anyone who is either a simpleton or who is unfit to hold their office." When the men told the Emperor about their clothing, he thought to himself, "What fabulous clothes! If I wore a suit made of these fabrics, I could determine which of my men is unfit for their office and I could tell who is wise and who is foolish." "Now," said the Emperor to the clothes makers, "you must weave me a suit immediately." Then, he gave the weavers a large bag of money so that they could begin their work immediately. He also told his servants to take the weavers to a large room in the palace so that he could check on them while they worked on his suit. The two weavers, who were great tricksters and did not know how to weave at all, set up two weaving looms and pretended to work very hard. Days passed, and the Emperor wanted to know how much work had been done on his suit. But, he did not want to visit the weavers himself, because he knew that a simpleton or a person unfit for his job would not be able to see the fabric. And, the Emperor did not want to know if he was such a person. So, he decided to send someone else to find out how the weaving was going. He sent his old faithful minister, who he knew to be very wise and very worthy of his job. The faithful old minister went to the room where the tricksters were working with all of their might at their empty looms. But when he entered the room, the old man was shocked and embarrassed. He could not see anything on the looms. They looked empty to him. The impostors asked him to come very close to the looms, and while pointing to the empty looms, asked the minister whether he liked the design and the colors. The poor old minister looked and looked, but he could not discover anything on the looms, and for a very good reason. There was nothing there! "What!" he thought to himself. "Is it possible that I am a simpleton? I have never thought so, and I cannot let anyone know if I am. Or, what if I am unfit for my office? Well, no one can know that either. I will just pretend I can see the fabric." Then he listened very closely as the impostors named the different colors and described the pattern of the imaginary fabric. When he saw the Emperor, he repeated what the imposters had said, and the Emperor was very happy, for the suit sounded wonderful. More time passed, and the Emperor sent more and more officers of court to see how much longer it would take for the suit to be completed. Each one looked at the empty looms, and each was afraid that he was a simpleton or unfit for his job. And so, each listened to the imposters' descriptions of the suit, and then repeated it to the Emperor. Soon, the whole empire was talking about the Emperor's suit, and they all knew what it meant if one could not see it. They were all very excited to find out who among them was wise or foolish. And now, it was time for the Emperor himself to see the suit, which had cost him a lot of money. He went to the weaver's room, with a few of the officers of the court who had already seen the suit. When he looked at the empty looms, an officer asked him, "Isn't this suit absolutely magnificent?" "How can I not see the suit?" thought the Emperor to himself. "Am I a simpleton, or am I unfit to be the Emperor? That would be horrible!" "Oh! I love what you have done with fabric. The suit is absolutely fabulous," said the Emperor to the weavers. He too had decided to pretend to see the suit so that no one would know that he was a simpleton or unfit to be Emperor. The officers advised the Emperor to wear the suit to the upcoming festival, which was to begin with a parade led by the Emperor and he agreed. On the day of the parade, the Emperor came to the weavers. One of the tricksters held his arms up as if he were carrying a jacket and said, "Your Majesty, here is your jacket, please try it on." The other pretended to be holding something as well, and said, ""Your Majesty, here are your trousers, please try them on." The Emperor took off his silk suit, which was very regal and tried to put on the invisible one. Finally, the Emperor walked out of the palace and led the parade through the city. All the people looking on cried out, "Oh! How beautiful are our Emperor's new clothes! What a magnificent suit he has." No one would admit that they could not see the Emperor's clothes because no one wanted to be thought of as a simpleton or unfit for their job. "But the Emperor has nothing on at all!" said a little child. "Listen to the voice of an innocent child!" exclaimed the child's father, and what the child had said was whispered from one person to another. Finally, all the people cried out, "The Emperor has nothing on at all!" The Emperor was very upset because he knew that the people were right, but he knew that the procession must go on until he could get back to his palace.

Members

  • Danny Sullivan on B-3 organ with double stack Leslie speaker?
  • James Jackson
  • Donald Brantley
  • Bobby Fulton
  • Edgar Moore
  • David Peterson
  • Billy Green
  • Tyrone Moss
  • Milton Brown Jr.
  • Steve Stephens
  • Ronnie Burnett
  • Dred”Perky” Scott

References

  1. ^ a b Jason Ankeny, The Emperors at Allmusic
  2. ^ Charts, Billboard.com
  3. ^ "RPM Top 100 Singles - February 18, 1967" (PDF).

External Links

This page was last edited on 20 June 2024, at 07:44
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