• The Marigolds aka The Solotones

     The Marigolds  (Nashville, Tennessee)
     aka The Solotones  
    (By Hans-Joachim)

     

     

     

    Personnel:

    Johnny Bragg (Lead Tenor)

    Edward Lee Thurmon (Tenor)

    William Stewart (Baritone)

    John Edward Drue (Tenor)

    Harold Hebb (Tenor)

    Willie Wilson (Bass)

     

     


    Discography

    The Marigolds
    Singles :
    1955 - Rollin' Stone / Why Don't You (Excello 2057)
    1955 - Two Strangers/ Love You - Love You - Love You (Excello 2061)
    Unreleased :
    1955 - Don't Say Tomorrow  (Excello)
    1955 - Rollin’ Stone (alt. take)  (Excello)

    Johnny Bragg & The Marigolds
    1956 - It's You Darling, It's You / Juke Box Rock And Roll (Excello 2091)

    The Solotones
    1955 - Pork And Beans / Front Page Blues (Excello 2060)

    Johnny Bragg (solo)
    1956 - Foolish Me! / Beyond The Clouds (Excello 2078)

     

     

    Biography:

    The Prisonaires, as the name suggests, were a group of inmates led by Johnny Bragg, at the State Penitentiary in Tennessee who were in for a variety of reasons but, through their singing, were touted as evidence of the prison’s successful rehab program.  Sam Phillips took notice and brought the group to record at Sun where the group cut “Walking In The Rain” written by member Robert Riley and Johnny Bragg, which was a sizable hit even being covered by Johnny Ray. 

    The Marigolds aka The Solotones    The Marigolds aka The Solotones

    The group was allowed day passes to tour, even becoming a favorite of the Governor while continuing to record during their imprisonment.  After the third single, several members of the group were paroled, so Bragg formed a new Prisonaires renamed the Sunbeams that included Harold Hebb  (brother of Bobby Hebb, "Sunny," #2 Pop, #3 R&B, 1966), William Stewart, Willy Wilson, and Henry "Dishrag" Jones .


    Henry Dishrag Jones (piano) Harold Hebb, Johnny Bragg, John Drue, L.B. McCollough(guitar), Alfred Brooks, Willy Wilson

     Meanwhile, in July 1954, Sun issued the last Prisonaires single "There Is Love In You," which Billboard described as a "pretty ballad sung skillfully, sparked by a baritone lead. This is one of the group's best to date."  Al Brooks joined the group later, replacing William Stewart. In 1955 the Sunbeams became the Marigolds and recorded in Nashville for Excello Records.

    The Marigolds aka The Solotones    The Marigolds aka The Solotones

    The Excello-released "Rollin' Stone" became a number eight R&B hit while the group was still based in the Tennessee penitentiary.   After the Marigolds Bragg changed names again recording the Solotones and then under his own name before spending some additional time in prison for parole violations eventually hanging up his recording career though he continued to sing, as do many, in church.
    http://www.vocalgroupharmony.com/ROWNEW/RollinSt.htm

     

     

    Songs :

    The Marigolds

         
    Rollin’ Stone                   Rollin’ Stone (alt. take)                    Why Don’t You

         
    Two Strangers        Love You - Love You - Love You        It's You Darling, It's You

      
    Juke Box Rock And Roll           Don’t Say Tomorrow

    The Solotones

      
    Pork And Beans                    Front Page Blues

     

    Johnny Bragg (solo)

      
    Foolish Me!                   Beyond The Clouds




     

     

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