Band,
R&B/Soul and Pop
A.k.a. The Trips
US soul group from Los Angeles, CA. The Los Angeles-based Exits made only four singles -- three on Gemini and one on Kapp Records (really three, their debut came out twice) -- but two of them, "Under the Streetlamp" and "Another Sundown in Watts," feature some of the '60s finest soul group harmony. Their sound married late-'50s doo wop with mid-'60s soul and the material was a teary-compound of aspiration and hope and despair and hopelessness. They recorded their first song and biggest hit nameless and the producer came up with their name as James Conwell (lead), Godey Colbert, Esko Wallace, Louis Hendricks, and Charles Colbert were leaving the studio under the gleaming exit sign over the door. A new name was in order as they had recorded "Love Can't Be Modernized" b/w "There's That Mountain" in early 1967 as the The Trips for Soundsville Records.
![]() | Jimmy Conwell voc US |
![]() | Esko Wallace |
Track list and 30sec audio provided by
Title | Artist | Year | Type |
---|---|---|---|
Getting Together / Another Sundown In Watts | Brother's Guiding Light / The Exits | 2002 | Single |
Another Sundown In Watts / I'm So Glad | The Exits | 1969 | Single |
Under The Street Lamp / You Got To Have Money | The Exits | 1967 | Single |
I Don't Want To Hear It | The Exits | 1967 | Single |
Under The Street Lamp / Cindy's Birthday | The Exits, Johnny Crawford | Single |