BRUTE FORCE Nobody Knows / King Of Fuh vinyl 7" Apple psych funk Tokens Chiffons

Sold Date: January 31, 2021
Start Date: January 7, 2021
Final Price: £11.00 (GBP)
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BRUTE FORCE "Nobody Knows" b/w "King Of Fuh" (Ace NW 7)
Limited edition vinyl 7"—brand new and unplayed, direct from the label!
In 2020,  Ace celebrated its 45th anniversary. Singles have always been a vital part of their release schedule and they are marking this with the release of seven limited edition seven-inchers.
Brute Force ® is the pseudonym and trademark of Stephen Friedland, an American singer and songwriter. In 1964, while in New York City as a young adult, he met the producers Hugo and Luigi, who co-wrote the Elvis Presley hit ‘Can’t Help Falling In Love’. They introduced Friedland to the Tokens, known for their hit ‘The Lion Sleeps Tonight’. Not only was Friedland hired as a songwriter for the Tokens’ music publishing company, he also became the group’s keyboardist.
Side A is Brute Force’s version of his song “Nobody Knows What’s Going On My Mind But Me’, better known as a hit for the Chiffons.
In 1967, Friedland recorded as Brute Force with the album “I, Brute Force, Confections of Love”, which was produced by John Simon, later renowned for his work with the Band. In late 1968, Brute Force recorded his song ‘King of Fuh’ which is the story of a mythical king who ruled the kingdom of Fuh. The music and lyrics begin innocuously until they get to these lines: “I said the Fuh King—he went to wherever he wanted to go/Mighty mighty Fuh King/All hail the Fuh King.”
After the song was recorded, a friend of Friedland, Tommy Dawes of the Cyrkle, forwarded it to his manager, Nat Weiss, who knew Beatles manager Brian Epstein. According to Friedland, George Harrison was very receptive to the song and said so in a phone call. But Capitol, Apple’s distributor in the USA, refused even to press the record, much less distribute it. Eventually, Apple privately issued the single for UK release, planning to stock mail order outlets and selected record shops. The distribution plan never really caught on and the record quickly disappeared. Apparently 1000 copies were pressed as APPLE 8, and now command 4-figure sums on the rare occasion they come onto the collectors market!