John Ellison, a coalminer's son, grew up in West Virginia. He learned to play guitar and wrote his first songs when he was 13, later moving to New York City and then Rochester. Soul Brothers Six cut two records on two tiny labels before inking with Atlantic on the strength of Ellison's Some Kinda Wonderful. But sales of follow-ups -- You Better Check Yourself, Your Love Is Such a Wonderful Love, Thank You Baby for Loving Me, and Drive -- were embarrassing and Atlantic dropped the group before the end of the decade.
Around this time, Joe Johnson, James Johnson, Charles Pevy, and Eddie Reno replaced the Armstrong Brothers, who left disgusted and soured by the Atlantic ordeal. This new lineup waxed three singles on Phil La of Soul from 1972 to 1974: Funky, Funky Way of Making Love, You're My World, and Let Me Do What We Ain't Doin'. None hit nationally but they worked steadily throughout the country anyway. A substantial royalty check from Grand Funk Railroad's rendition of Some Kinda Wonderful revitalized Ellison's songwriting juices. He secured a deal with a small label in Rochester, and scored a Carolinas beach hit that did some business in Europe as well.
Ellison has cut two solo albums to date, appeared in the AE movie #Rev, and marketed a Some Kinda Wonderful spice via the Allen Beef Company. ~ Andrew Hamilton, Rovi