New Orleans R&B was best known for its solo artists, but
the Spiders rank among the Crescent City's pre-eminent vocal groups, and were certainly the best the city produced during the '50s.
The Spiders actually began life circa 1947 as a gospel group called the Zion City Harmonizers; they later changed their name to the Delta Southernaires, and made a few recordings and radio appearances from 1952-1953. With encouragement from legendary New Orleans studio head
Cosimo Matassa, the group switched to secular R&B and signed with Imperial in late 1953. The newly christened
Spiders were centered around brothers
Hayward "Chuck" Carbo and
Leonard "Chick" Carbo, the latter a bass singer who sometimes split lead vocals with his brother; the other members of the quintet were
Joe Maxon,
Matthew West, and
Oliver Howard. Their first single, "I Didn't Want to Do It," went to number three on the R&B charts in early 1954, and other sides like "You're the One," "Tears Begin to Flow," and "I'm Slippin' In" were top sellers as well, making
the Spiders a hot concert draw.
Maxon and
West both left the group in 1955 and were replaced by Bill Moore and Issacher Gordon.
The Spiders' string of R&B Top Tens continued that year with "21" and the
Dave Bartholomew-penned "Witchcraft," their second Top Five hit and biggest overall seller (it was later covered by
Elvis Presley). Imperial began grooming
Chuck Carbo for a solo career in 1956, which caused dissent within the group; by the end of the year,
Chick Carbo had signed to Atlantic as a solo artist himself, and
the Spiders effectively dissolved. A final single in 1957, "That's My Desire," failed to catch on, as did a posthumous from-the-vaults release in 1960, "Tennessee Slim." Neither of the Carbo brothers scored any significant chart hits, although
Chuck did return in the late '80s and early '90s, cutting an album for Rounder in 1993.
Chick passed away in 1998.
–
Steve Huey, Rovi