The Customer Is Always F kin Wrong (obscure early 60s soul)
Unleash a little pentup frustration with this obscure early 60s vinyl entry, brought to you via ai music magic. The middle siblings of nine children, The Middle 3 relied solely on each other to weather the storm of their troubled early home life in Detroit. We worked every job we could find so we could get out. But we could only take so much, you know Wendel Lewis said of the origins of their first hit. I quit the restaurant, and Kelvin and Marvin quit Woolworths and had basically nothing. We met downtown, sat down on the street, and started singing to cheer ourselves up. People walking by flicked us coins here and there and suddenly it felt like we finally had a direction. We stuck together, Wendel said in a Nick At Nite interview. We got jobs together, we quit jobs together, we were broke together, we were rich together, we wrote together, we sang together, we were fathers together. When questioned about that last part, Lewis brushed off the inquiry and rotated in his brother Marvin,
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