Then she was offered a chance to be in another movie Twist Around the Clock where she sang two new songs and the movie finale. As a result, she went to Los Angeles to further her career, but nothing panned out. But she met up with Clay Cole who had a TV show in New York that booked talented acts that were less known and took them on the road. Vicki was a teenage star on the rise and toured with the Clay Cole show for WPIX in N.Y. many times and was a regular at Palisades Park for Clay’s live shows there.
After the teen movies and the “twist” craze had ended, she was in other bands like The Nomads and helped in sessions with The Bad Seeds in Kentucky (not the band from Texas) and recorded a single for the Columbia label “King of the Soapbox b/w He’s Lying” with jangling bell-like guitars and wonderful harmonies.
Her brothers were putting a band together with Bill Spencer (guitars, vocals), Dan Spencer (drums), Dan Evans (organ, piano, keyboards, vocals) and George Peel (bass, vocals). Vicki joined them as (lead vocalist) and they became The Rottin’ Kids. They were showcased on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson and, during this time, they also got sponsored by Hazel Bishop who was promoting fake nails for women. This is when they became The Fabulous Fakes. The product ended up being defective and pulled off the market which is when they shortened their name to simply The Fakes.
Soon after, the band thought of a new name as The Bubble Gum Machine which was based on five different flavors (five band members) and had nothing to do with bubblegum music. However, when Wes Ferrell and Tony Romeo got a hold of the band and signed them up, they wanted to expose the band as just that. They jumped at the chance to put out a full album’s worth of tunes.
The sessions occurred at A&R Studios located at 322 West 48th Street in New York. For the album, the band played all their own instruments and did all the singing just as they had been doing for live performances. There were some studio horns and other instruments that were added and some vocal overdubs. Unusual for the times as most studio sessions had session players substituting for band members.
When The Bubble Gum Machine album was released, there was a lot of thought that this band was a studio fabrication. Wes Ferrell and Tony Romeo were known for producing recording sessions with studio players in house that were never bands, as such. Albums were released that had no information with pictures of supposed band members that were really actors dressed like hippies for a photo op. This was a popular practice for record labels used as a tax write off. Two singles were released with songs from the LP and another non-album promotional single Do You Really Love Me b/w One More Mountain to Climb all on the Senate label.
The album packaging along with the band members only listed on a first name basis coupled with the fact that the band had previously called themselves The Fakes took hold. Rumors abound, the public never thought they were a real band. This was something that haunted them for years and hampered sales for the record.
Several east coast appearances occurred at festivals, venues and other TV variety shows like The Merv Griffin Show and The Mike Douglas Show. They were featured back on The Tonight Show and then played Army and Navy bases along the east coast. They were asked to be part of a PBS Broadcast and became one of the very first rock bands to be seen live in Stereo on Public Television. Their contract expired with Wes Farrell and then they renamed themselves as Horatio.
Different players came and went. About six years were spent touring and doing live TV, radio and interviews. During this time, they recorded about 10 singles, two were released on the Event Record label. But all good things come to an end and eventually the band broke up.
Read the full story about this band in the book I wrote called THE PSYCHEDELIC DIGEST only found on Amazon.
Musically the album has several cover songs and some teenybopper sounds, but they show signs of pure magic mushroom brilliance with spacey guitar and mysterious vocals with the song “No Love to Be Found” which was written by Billy.
This was their only LP. An original Senate label release. Stereo copy.
Cover has some minor shelf, edge, corner and ring wear with a 4" split at the top. Record is clean with some light marks that DNAP. Record plays clean with NO unusual noises or ticks. Generic inner sleeve.
Getting rare. Plays great.
Long time buyer from E-bay and other record websites since the 90's.
Please bear with me. I'm selling off my entire record collection (about 40,000 LPs) listing them one at a time.
A long and arduous task. Lots of gems and rare stuff.
Check out the book I wrote called "THE PSYCHEDELIC DIGEST" only found at Amazon.com.
GRADING DETAILS - SHIPPING DETAILS - RETURNS - FEEDBACK - ETC.
Auctions are listed for 7 days.
ITEMS PULLED FROM THE AUCTION LIST - Keep in mind that if I continue to relist auction items that have been sitting for weeks with NO ACTION and several watchers with NO BIDS, I may pull the record and sell it to my local buyer. This can occur before the auction ends. LPs will typically be discounted before this happens. So, please bid if you are at all interested. Bids can always be retracted for no reason.
All records are Graded to the best of my ability and are rated VINYL FIRST / THEN COVER. For Double LPs Vinyl / Vinyl / Cover.
GRADING DETAILS – Everything I list will be at least VG+ or better, both visually and audibly, unless I state otherwise. 95% of what is offered and up for bid is very clean with maybe 1 or 2 minor flaws. If it’s very rare, it may be offered with obvious visual marks, scratches, warps and might make some low-level noise. But this would be a rare instance. I’ll describe any flaws as best I can. I ASK THAT YOU READ THE FULL DETAILS AS DESCRIBED BY ME ABOUT THE LOOKS AND SOUND OF THE RECORD. Don’t base everything on a simple grading rate M, EX, VG++, etc. I’m not that good at it.
AUDIBLE GRADING – All vinyl records are played before they are listed. Some records look bad and play good. Others look perfect but play badly. Any visual flaws that I see will be described and I will let you know if they make an audible noise. 95% of the records up for bid are very clean sounding. You may hear a minor tick or click as its spinning but typically light hairline scratches and sleeve marks Do Not Affect Play (DNAP) and should not detract from your overall listening pleasure.
VISUAL GRADING - PLEASE READ THIS!!!
COVERS - I'm a 73-year-old guy with Strabismus (an eye disorder). I try to visually describe every flaw that I can see, but sometimes I miss a small tear or a tiny seam split.
SHELF WEAR generally means that the cellophane was removed when the LP was new and it sat on a shelf or in a box without a plastic sleeve, before they were available, for several years, so there can be some rub blemishes, sticker residue if it was purchased used, tiny tears, slight seam splits and other defects.
EDGE WEAR usually means the picture wrap around the edge has been worn, sometimes into the cardboard itself. This usually happens on the top or bottom edge.
CORNER WEAR is the same as edge wear but sometimes there will be a dent or ding at the corner. All 4 sides are suspect for this occurrence.
RING WEAR occurs when a record was not stored in a protective sleeve for a very long time. Back in the day, plastic sleeves were not easily available. Most of us as teenagers, ripped off the cellophane and didn’t consider how the record cover was being stored. Most of the record covers laid on the floor or were stored in the closet or on a shelf for easy access. If they sat for a long time, earth movement, that nobody feels, causes vibration and the record sleeves would rub together and wear on the cover picture or illustration causing the ring wear and other flaws.
THE VINYL RECORD ITSELF - I will try to visually grade both sides of the vinyl record. There might be some sleeve rubs or marks on some of these. All of my records were played more than once, unless they are sealed. If I mention ticks and or clicks in the description, that means that you can visually see and sometimes hear the imperfection. Most of these Do Not Affect the Play (DNAP). I try my best to see any flaws but understand I don’t Inspect these LPs with a High Lumens Tactical Light and a Magnifying Glass. If the visual flaws are obvious or severe, I try and describe these as best as I can. If there are a lot of visual scratches, it won’t be listed. The exception is if the LP is very rare. I will list a rare record that looks bad but plays pretty good without skips.
SPINDLE MARKS can be obvious if a record was popular and played a lot. The record label material and finish will determine if marks are visible. Most of the big labels don't have this problem because the finish is unusually pretty solid and durable. It's the small and private labels or a matted finish where most spindle marks will be noticed. I don't mention these for any of my listings but if that is a concern to you, ask me before you make a bid.
INNER SLEEVES - Most of the inner sleeves are simple paper sleeves and have slight splits, bends and tears on older LPs. If they’re really bad or split in half, I replace them with a newer paper or plastic sleeve. GENERIC means a blank paper sleeve.
WARPED RECORDS normally occur when they are stored near high heat. I will never send a warped record unless it is very slight and doesn't affect play. If you live somewhere in the world that has high temperatures that could affect package delivery. Insurance is a must to guarantee no loss on the item you bought. You are responsible for this request and there is an additional charge for insurance. Let me know. There is NO REFUND for a record that was sent not warped when packed but was delivered as warped and unplayable. I cannot put records on ice for delivery to high heat areas of the world. Buy package insurance so there won't be any $$$$$ loss in case this happens.
HIGH END RECORDS - There will be a few more pictures for any records that are high end items. I will give a more critical inspection and description of both cover and vinyl. Ask for more pictures if you need them and I can send them to you.
PACKAGING - LPs will be packaged in the proper corrugated cardboard box, we all know about, with extra cardboard pads. Each LP will have a clear plastic sleeve. The record itself will be removed and shipped within the inner sleeve, outside the cover or inside the fold of a gatefold cover all within a plastic outer sleeve to prevent any seam splits. All of the boxes I package records in are new and there are typically no problems. I can also ship in a Whiplash Box which protects the edges and corners. But I will only do this if you request it.
SEALED RECORDS - The vinyl record will NOT be removed from a sealed LP purchase for shipping. I would advise you to add additional insurance for all sealed LPs that are being shipped to high heat areas due to possible heat warping. No obligation, but it safeguards against some potential problems.
PAYMENT - Payment is good only through E-Bay options, either PayPal or Credit Card, and is due within 7 days unless you let me know. I will send you at least three invoices with reminders to pay during the 7-day period. If payment has NOT been received within that 7-day payment period and you have NOT contacted me, the order will be canceled and the record will be offered to the second place bidder or will be relisted.
I WILL SHIP WORLDWIDE, BUT INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING IS DETERMINED BY THE WEIGHT OF THE PACKAGE. DO NOT MAKE A PAYMENT UNTIL I SEND YOU AN INVOICE.
INVOICES - E-Bay will always send you an invoice for each item ordered. If you ordered one item, there is no problem. Go ahead and make the payment. But, they DO NOT combine the shipping cost for multiple purchase orders. So, when they invoice you, the minimum shipping cost will multiply times that of however many items you won. Example: 5 items won will appear as 5 times the minimum postage rate. DO NOT PAY the separate E-Bay invoices you receive for multiple orders. Only I can discount the postage rate for two or more items ordered. So, wait for me to invoice you if you've won two or more items. I package them all together and send you an invoice with discounted postage costs.
PAYMENT EXTENTION - If you have won an auction and see another item that ends beyond the 7-day maximum payment period, let me know and I will hold your item until that bid period ends. This would be a special circumstance that would not typically extend beyond 10 days. I will invoice you for the full amount and expect payment at that point.
POSTAGE COST - Typically, the minimum cost for USPS Media mail in the USA would be 1-2 LPs $5.50 USD. Canada 1-2 LPs around $24.00 USD. Europe, Japan and other countries around the world, $33.00 USD for 1-2 LPs. Additional LPs as per total weight. I will send an invoice with the total postage cost. Everything is shipped via USPS. I don't use the E-Bay International shipping.
TRACKING - Each package will be assigned a USPS tracking number. Tracking for International shipping only covers destinations within the USA and only gives Dates of Arrival for all countries outside of the USA. Customs delays can and do occur. Your package may have arrived in your country and/or city, but it is probably sitting at your customs depot. (Sometimes for weeks) It would be up to you to call them and provide the tracking number for details about your package.
POSTAGE DISCOUNT - I combine the shipping for multiple record purchases but will only send a maximum of 10-12 records per package. Additional postage will be determined by the total weight of the package. An invoice will be sent to you by me.
ADDITIONAL COSTS - Priority Mail, Insurance, etc. is available at additional costs. Let me know and I will send an invoice.
REFUNDS - I will Refund for any item purchased and received that was not fully as described. Grading is difficult and is the usual cause of concern. We're talking used and 30-60 years old. THERE ARE NO PERFECT RECORDS. Even sealed records can have visual and audible flaws, ticks, clicks, skips and heat warps. IF YOU OPEN A SEALED RECORD AND IT IS WARPED SO BADLY THAT IT DOESN'T PLAY, that usually means it was stored near or shipped in high heat. I have no way of knowing. All sealed records should be insured, just in case that happens. But with regard to a warped record that was sealed and is unplayable, contact me anyway, I will make it right. Any other flaws found on a sealed record that was opened by you, deems the LP non-refundable. If there is a concern, please contact me. We can always work things out.
DAMAGES DURING DELIVERY CAUSED BY THE POSTAL SERVICE - Any damages that are caused due to unfortunate circumstances during the delivery process, broken records, scrapes, heavy package dents caused by something heavy set on the box, warpage caused by excessive heat during delivery, etc. should be handled through E-Bay. They guarantee that packages arrive in the condition as described. If there are obvious damages to the package and the record is unplayable, email me with pictures of the record and the package as delivered and let me know. I mark all packages with "Fragile. Do Not Bend" notices marked in RED, so they should be careful. But $&#t happens. I will not be responsible for damages that were not incurred by me. But E-Bay can refund the transaction with proof. Pictures speak a thousand words.
Please message me through E-Bay to discuss any problems or concerns. ANY OBVIOUS MISTAKES I MADE IN THE DESCRIPTION OF AN ITEM PURCHASED WILL BE HONORED AND PARTIALLY OR FULLY REFUNDED. But email me through E-Bay to discuss the situation first. I'm always happy to work things out. Every customer is cherished.
Positive Feedback is happily accepted and reciprocated.