•  The Murmaids

    Top : Stan Ross, owner of Gold Star Studios; 
producer Kim Fowley Ruth Conti, president of Chattahoochee Records
    Bottom : Sally Gordon, Terry Fischer and Carol Fischer

    The Murmaids (Los Angeles, CA)
    (By Hans-Joachim) 

     

    Personnel : :

    Carol Fischer

    Terry Fischer

    Sally Gordon

     

    Discography :

    The Murmaids

    Singles
    1963 - Popsicles And Icicles / Blue Dress (Chattahoochee 628)
    1963 - Popsicles And Icicles / [Bunny Stomp (instrumental)] (Chattahoochee 628)
    1963 - Popsicles And Icicles / Comedy And Tragedy (Chattahoochee 628)
    1963 - Popsicles And Icicles / [Huntington Flats (instrumental)] (Chattahoochee 628)
    1964 - Heartbreak Ahead / He's Good To Me (Chattahoochee 636)
    1964 - Wild And Wonderful / Bull Talk (Chattahoochee 641)
    1964 - Bull Talk / Wild And Wonderful (Chattahoochee 650)
    1965 - Stuffed Animals / Little White Lies (Chattahoochee 668)
    1966 - Little Boys / Go Away (Chattahoochee 711)
    1968 - Paper Sun / Song Through Perception (Liberty 56078)

    Album
    1980 - Popsicles & Icicles,You Cheated (prev. unrel.*), Mr.Sandman (prev. unrel.*), Blue Dress, Playmates (prev. unrel.*), Wild And Wonderful, Alone (prev. unrel.*), Heartbreak Ahead, So Young (prev. unrel.*), Bull Talk, Don't Forget (prev. unrel.*), Three Little Words (prev. unrel.*) (Chattahoochee LP 628)
    *Recorded around 1963

    The Lady-Bugs
    1964 - How Do You Do It / Liverpool (Chattahoochee 637)

     

    Biography :

    The Murmaids can safely be classed as one-hit wonders - but that one hit, "Popsicles and Icicles," not only characterizes an entire innocent era of pop music and the early phase of '60s girl-group music, but was a key early career jump for several of the participants. The Murmaids were Carol Fischer, Terry Fischer, and Sally Gordon of Los Angeles. They'd grown up together and had begun singing, and when the singing began to show promise in their middle/late-teens, the Fischer sisters' mother brought them into Chattahoochee Records, a tiny Los Angeles-based label, for an audition.

     The Murmaids

        The label's recording manager was Kim Fowley, who provided them with a song called "Popsicles and Icicles," composed by David Gates, an Oklahoman with musical aspirations who'd been knocking around Los Angeles for the last few years, writing songs and playing the odd session. The mix of dreamy melody and ethereal girl-trio voices was a quick chart success, "Popsicles and Icicles" scaling into the Top Ten in late 1963.

     The Murmaids     The Murmaids

    It was, alas, to be the first and last time that the Murmaids were to occupy the attention of chart compilers. And, ironically, by the time the song was a hit, Carol and Terry Fischer had started college, and this was of much greater concern to them -- The trio did cut a few more songs in an effort to follow up on "Popsicles and Icicles'" success, but only "Heartbreak Ahead" in early 1964 managed to get any airplay. Without a full-time professional commitment to touring or personal appearance, the Murmaids proved a one-off success, "Popsicles and Icicles" disappearing, but not without leaving a lot of fond memories for radio listeners. Fowley kept working to get another chart hit, without success, and later Murmaids singles were very likely the work of other singers.

         The Murmaids
    Jacki deShannon & The Murmaids under the name The Lady Bugs                                                                                                                    

    The last Murmaids single appeared in 1968, by which time Fowley had begun working with the Clinger Sisters, a girl group (and former regulars on television variety shows, including Danny Kaye's program) who had turned toward a more rocking sound on Columbia Records. David Gates, whose song had given the Murmaids their one claim to fame, was taking his big steps to stardom around that time, forming the group Bread in 1969, which would bring him massive success both as a songwriter ("Make It With You," etc.) and as a pop-rock star during the early '70s. The Murmaids themselves remain a fixture of early/mid-'60s girl group collections. Their records - and they left behind the equivalent of about an album of surprisingly good material - recall the Paris Sisters, the Fleetwoods, the Teddy Bears and the rest of the innocent side of girl-group music.

    http://www.themurmaids.com
    http://www.classicbands.com/MurmaidsInterview.html
    http://www.history-of-rock.com/murmaids.htm

     

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