| DARONDO
"A street savvy Al Green"
UNLEASHED
MAGAZINE
"A special voice, one that truly merits more exposure and
attention."
NASHVILLE CITY PAPER
A mystery to most, Darondo records are high on the wants-lists
of many collectors. He is spoken about in hushed-tones by other
Bay Area musicians. Back in the day he was seen cruising around
town in a white Rolls Royce (with a "Darondo" license
plate). He opened-up for James Brown and lived a colorful lifestyle
hanging with folks like the notorious Fillmore Slim. Take a listen
to these tracks, released for the first time together on an album,
and you may agree that he could have been the next Al Green or
Sly Stone. But about 25 years ago Darondo disappeared.
Releasing three singles in the early 1970s (as Darondo, Darondo
Pulliam, or the miss-spelled Dorando) he mixed low-rider soul
with blues and r'n'b. He delivered in a variety of styles from
the socially-charged "Let My People Go" to the sexually-driven
funk of "Legs". All three singles were recorded in the
San Francisco Bay Area, and both sides of each of the singles
are fantastic productions.
"You can hear a little bit of everything," says Darondo
about his music style. "There's a little jazz and a little
soul. They say if you Black you supposed to have soul. I got Latin
flavor in me so there's some Latin in it. Definitely got the Blues
in it. I sound kinda' country but I grew up in the Bay Area,"
he adds.
But after the release of his three 45s Darondo stopped recording.
“It was mostly me, just having a good time with a real good
hobby,” he says. “It wasn’t about money but
about having fun. Something I just liked to do. Maybe your dream
is to be a James Brown or Frank Sinatra but those were just mostly
dreams to me.”
Outside of the music business Darondo was living life to the full,
and it eventually caught up with him. “Folks would say ‘Daron
got that dough…Daron Do…that’s how I got the
name. I used to get my suits tailor made, one of a kind, like
my rings. A player can’t have the same ring as someone else.
Got my rings specially made with diamonds and stones. But in order
to get yourself together you had to get away from all the fastness.
I was driving around in a Rolls Royce, I was a fast young man,"
adds Darondo.
Darondo now lives in Northern California with his wife and family
and is delighted to hear his music is getting a second wind courtesy
of DJs and collectors like the UK-based Gilles Peterson who recently
picked "Didn't I" for his "Digs America" compilation.
The six tracks from the three original singles are featured here,
along with three previously unreleased songs that were recently
discovered on a demo reel. The demo reel was sitting in a box
of VHS copies of his cable TV shows which we had requested to
use for images in the CD booklet. Recorded in the early 1970s,
tracks from the demo reel were taken into a San Francisco studio
in the summer of 2005 for enhancement. Darondo over-dubbed missing
background vocals and guitar parts alongside up and coming San
Francisco soul man Bing Ji Ling. Darondo warmed up quickly, he
hasn’t lost his touch. After the session Darondo confessed
that he was inspired to start playing again…so there is
hope for a full-blown Darondo revival!

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