• The Jive Five (Brooklyn, New York)
    The Early Years






    Personnel :

    Eugene Pitt (Lead)

    Norman Johnson (Bass)

    Richard Harris (Second Tenor)

    Billy Prophet (Baritone)

    Jerome Hanna (First Tenor)





    Discography :


    The Jive Five

    Singles:
    1961 - My True Story / When I Was Single (Beltone 1006)
    1961 - Never, Never / People From Another World (Beltone 1014)
    1962 - Hully Gully Callin' Time / No Not Again (Beltone 2019)
    1962 - What Time Is It / Beggin' You Please (Beltone 2024)
    1962 - Do You Hear Wedding Bells / These Golden Rings (Beltone 2029)
    1963 - Johnny Never Knew / Lily Marlene (Beltone 2030)
    1963 - Rain / She's My Girl (Beltone 2034)
    1964 - United / Prove Every Word You Say (Sketch 219)

    Unreleased :
    1962 - Hurry Back (Beltone)
    1962 - You Know What I Would Do (Beltone)
    1962 - The Girl With The Wind In Her Hair (Beltone)
    1962 - I Don't Want To Be Without You Baby (Beltone)

    Eugene Pitt (bb The Jive Five )
    1962 - She's My Girl / Every Day Is Like A Year (Beltone 2027)






    Biography :

    Eugene Pitt hailed from Brooklyn's Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood, musically influenced by his father, a gospel singer, who taught Eugene and his sisters how to harmonize; they performed gospel songs in churches until about 1950, when he entered his restless teenage years. The atmosphere of Brooklyn's streets, with doo wop singers everywhere, stirred a desire for rhythm and blues stardom and by mid-decade he had joined a group called The Akrons . A little later Eugene sang with a group headed by Claude Johnson, but they separated when Johnson left for Long Island to join The Genies, the outfit that later scored a national hit with "Who's That Knocking."


    Top : Norman Johnson, Richard Harris & Eugene Pitt - Bottom : Billy Prophet & Jerome Hanna

    In 1959 Pitt put together his own group, The Jive Five, with friends from the neighborhood. He and Jerome Hanna sang tenor, supported by Richard Harris, Thurmon "Billy" Prophet and bass singer Norman Johnson. Not much happened at first; Pitt was working as a stock clerk in a supermarket in early '61 when all five jivers auditioned for Les Cahan and Joe Rene at the Beltone Studio on Broadway in New York. Cahan, who'd been running the studio for several years, had decided to branch out with Beltone Records and made a spectacular splash shortly afterwards with Bobby Lewis's "Tossin' and Turnin'," the biggest hit of the entire year. One of the songs the Jive Five sang that day was an original ballad by Pitt and Oscar Waltzer, "My True Story," based on Eugene's own experience of losing a girlfriend to one of his (former?) pals.


    Billy Prophet, Eugene Pitt, Jerome Hanna, Norman Johnson & Richard Harris

    Doo wop was at the peak of its early 1960s "revival," a time of renewed interest in many '50s recordings. "My True Story," with backing by Rene's band, had an addicting 'Cry, cry-y-y...' vocal hook (often resulting in record store customers who didn't know the actual title offering their own wailing "Cry-cry-cry" in attempts to identify the song). It captured the essence of older doo wop but got off to a slow start at the beginning of summer '61; by September, though, it had gained momentum, moving into the top ten on the pop charts while hitting number one R&B. The uptempo flip side "When I Was Single" lamented married life (without mention of a "Mother-In-Law" as Ernie K-Doe had done with great success a few months earlier) and had a following of its own.

       

    The quintet followed with the low-charting "Never, Never" at the end of the year, an outstanding track regardless of its similarity to the debut single. Many of the Beltone B sides could have been hits under the right circumstances, including this 45's flip, "People From Another World," a wild slice of flying saucer paranoia. "Hully Gully Callin' Time," with the expanded label credit The Jive Five with Eugene Pitt, was the group's contribution to a current dance craze. Next came the best ballad since the initial release, "What Time Is It?" Pitt's falsetto (often used to supplement his lead vocals) is at full throttle on this track, which might have been much bigger had it been possible to turn the clock back a year or two prior to the fall of '62.

    The Jive Five

    After this, Billy Prophet left to pursue a solo career and, tragically, Jerome Hanna developed walking pneumonia and passed away, leaving the group in search of replacements. Andre Coles signed on briefly. Casey Spencer joined for a longer stretch. Figuring ballads were the Five's forte, Cahan put out "These Golden Rings" late in the year and it did well, making an appearance on the R&B charts. "Rain," with its hypnotic 'drip...drop...' backing vocals by J.R. Bailey, Bobby Phillips and Charles Brooks, all former members of The Cadillacs, appeared in early 1963 as Beltone Records fell deeper into financial straits with distributor King Records. With no major hits since the Bobby Lewis and Jive Five smashes of '61, Cahan had stood by as finances gradually dwindled.


    (On United Artists) Eugene Pitt, Norman Johnson, Casey Spencer, Beatrice Best & Webster Harris

    The label ceased operation in early '64 but Cahan kept the recording studio going as before.The Jive Five An "extended family" of singers came and went over the next couple of decades, the one constant being lead singer Eugene Pitt. After a one-shot '64 release on the tiny Sketch label, "United" (remaking the 1957 hit by Otis Williams and his Charms), they signed with United Artists Records in 1965.




    Songs :


         
    My True Story                   When I Was Single                     Never, Never

         
    People From Another World      Hully Gully Callin' Time           No Not Again

         
    What Time Is It               Beggin' You Please                        She's My Girl

         
    Every Day Is Like A Year     Do You Hear Wedding Bells           These Golden Rings

         
    Johnny Never Knew                Lily Marlene                           Rain

         
    United                                   Hurry Back            You Know What I Would Do

          
    The Girl With The Wind In Her Hair       I Don't Want To Be Without You Baby      Prove Every Word You Say



     

     

     





    2 comments


    Follow this section's article RSS flux
    Follow this section's comments RSS flux