Rex Woodard – Music Detective was one of the first fans to make a difference and tell the TRUE Story of The Four Seasons and in doing so he may have created a myth. That of Jersey Boys – The Musical.
To modern day fans of the Four Seasons it may seem amazing that there was a time when we were scrambling around for news, backstories and lost tracks on cassette tape. There was no internet and a quarterly newsletter [delivered by 'snail mail'] was all we had and the group were regarded as an oldies group with no future. It's easy to forget how hard it was then to get information and even released music on vinyl or cassette..
But then in the UK came 'My Eyes Adored You', 'The Night', and 'Who Loves You' before their biggest ever success as a group 'December 1963(Oh What A Night)'. Back then during the early 1970s Rex was gathering research that would decades later lead to the record breaking show 'Jersey Boys'. Rex Woodard was a champion of today's Four Seasons 'music detectives' still gathering information and seeking out more 'lost' music by them than we could ever have imagined existed.
So it was with a degree of pride in music historians that I read of his widows success in establishing his contribution to the show 'Jersey Boys' was finally recognised. 'Then and Now' the jointly written bio by Rex and former Four Season Tommy DeVito was judged to have contributed to 10% of the shows success and for his widow a share of his royalties from the show and film. It has never been seen by the fans except in it's interpretation in the stage show. When will Rex's joint work finally go public? Possibly never as that was maybe part of the legal settlement with Tommy and his estate. And Valli and Gaudio have escaped any liability for copyright breach. Rex's widow failed to convince the U.S. Supreme Court to review a ruling that the Broadway musical “Jersey Boys” infringed his unpublished autobiography in 2021. Perhaps after the forthcoming TV film a published book may be possible.? The new film is probably needed to pay for all the lawyers involved.!! But it will not be the full story. The forthcoming Snapper Box Set will be a major step nearer musically.......and we battle still for the rest.
Rex's contribution was based on years of research and 'foundation' articles that resonate today When he persuaded Tommy DeVito to 'dish the dirt' back in 1989 it should have been a coup for Four Seasons fans but back then their 'brand' was low key and no publishers were interested. After Rex's premature passing in 1990 the draft understandably didn't surface. It had lost it's champion. But we are all to be grateful that Tommy DID make it available to the stage shows scriptwriters. We got 'Jersey Boys' and history made The Four Seasons 'iconic'.
But Rex also anticipated the continuing battle to recover the Motown unreleased without realising what we now know. Rex wrote in Goldmine in August 1981[A Lesson in Survival].....”The myth must die! For several years now, almost every rock and roll encyclopedic source has faithfully instructed it's readers that the legendary Four Seasons bit the dust sometime around 1969, only to be resurrected as an entirely new group in 1975. Lies!”
Well the 'myth' is dead BUT no-one [in the Four Seasons Partnership or Universal Motown] wanted us to hear the truth even as 2017 began......and since then our Four Seasons Motown 'Unreleased' Campaign Facebook Page has achieved the breakthrough of another over 25 unreleased tracks showing the brilliance of Frankie and the group's achievement between 1969 and 1974 in the forthcoming Snapper Music Box Set.
In Rex's 1980 article he documented the history of those intervening years and the groups creative work during that time. Today with the inspiration of that work and data from some anonymous Motown connections, we have, by 2022 extended his work with subsequent research, to reveal the deliberate suppression of between 30 and 40 tracks, completed and left in the Universal Motown vaults unheard by the fans since. Rex's research was at the heart of our campaign for their release.....and in the release of 13 and 8 alternative versions we have achieved partial success. And to follow that in June 1982 he published what is regarded as the definitive article detailing the history of the Four Lovers in the same magazine.
As we enter the post 'Jersey Boys' era.....now the shows in New York and London are potentially closing [leaving the national touring shows to carry 'the sound'].......we are still hoping the bio that has been the subject of so much legal time over the last 12+ years will finally be published. The recent PBS concert by an 88 year old Frankie Valli probably heralds the end of the 'LIVE' concerts, but maybe the forthcoming Snapper Music Box Set will herald a new period of documenting and restoring the history of the group and their music over the next few years.? Rex's legacy should be the cornerstone of that objective. And our battle to get the music left in the vaults will continue. He'd want us to fight for that.
Ken Charmer
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