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The Daniels aka The Elements aka The Elgins (1) aka The Bagdads

Posted on by dion1

The Elements aka The Elgins (1) aka The Daniels aka The Bagdads
The Elgins 1959 (L to R) William DeVase, Oscar McDonald, Kenny Sinclair, Darryl Lewis and Jimmy Smith.

The Daniels  (Southern California)
aka The Elements aka The Elgins (1) aka The Bagdads

 

Personnel:

Jimmy Smith (Lead)

William Devase

Darryl Lewis

Kenny Sinclair

Oscar McDonald

 

Discography :

The Elements
1960 - Lonely Hearts Club / Bad Man  (Titan 1708)
1961 - My Illness / Extra Extra (By the Elgins) (Titan 1724)

The Elgins (1)
1961 - Uncle Sam's Man / Casey Cop (Flip 353)  
1961 - Extra Extra /  My Illness (By the Elements) (Titan 1724)
1961 - Extra! Extra! / Heartache, Heartbreak (Titan 1724)                 
1962 - A Winner Never Quits / Finally  (Lummtone 109)
1962 - A Winner Never Quits / Johnny I'm Sorry (Lummtone 109)
1962 - Johnny I'm Sorry  / You Got Your Magnet On Me (Lummtone 110)
1963 - Lost My Love In The Big City  / Finally (Lummtone 112)
1963 - Your Lovely Ways / Finding A Sweetheart (Lummtone 113)
1965 - Street Scene / You Found Yourself Another Fool (Valiant 752)

The Daniels
1963 -  Big City  / Finally (Lantam 01) 

The Bagdads

Singles :
1968 - Livin' In Fear / Let's Talk About the Bad Times (Double Shot 128)
1968 - Bring Back Those Doo-Wopps / Green Power 1968 (Double Shot 133)
1969 - Love Has Two Faces / Jelly (Double Shot 140)
1970 - Keep Those Mini Skirts Up / Let's Talk About the Bad Times (Double Shot 151)
Unreleased:
1969 - Push Me Baby (Double Shot)

 

Biography :

Oscar McDonald and Jimmy Smith  attended high school together in Beaumont, Texas.  Jimmy, on occasion, laments the fact that he came in second place in several talent contests in Texas to Johnny Nash, of "I Can See Clearly Now" fame. Darryl Lewis, Kenny Sinclair and William Devase attended high school in southern California. Darryl and Kenny were original members of the Six Teens, of "A Casual Look" fame, along with Darryl's cousin Trudy Williams. After leaving the Six Teens, Kenny hooked up with William to sing in various groups while in high school.

The Elements aka The Elgins (1) aka The Daniels aka The Bagdads
The Elgins (1960)

Cappie, as Darryl is affectionately called by close friends, reunited with Kenny, his brother Carl, and William. He brought Jimmy into the group to sing lead. This quintet recorded "Lonely Hearts Club" b/w  "Bad Man" for the Titan label in 1960 under the name of the Elements. They also recorded "My Illness" as the Elements for Titan, but this was to go unreleased at the time. Soon thereafter, Carl left the group to devote more time to pursuing an acting career. Jimmy brought Oscar McDonald into the group and the Elgins were born. Along with a change in personnel was a label change to Flip.

The Elements aka The Elgins (1) aka The Daniels aka The Bagdads    The Elements aka The Elgins (1) aka The Daniels aka The Bagdads

This was a return to familiar shores. Flip had been the recording home for the Six Teens. Jimmy Smith had also recorded "I Cry And Cry Every Night" b/w "Night Time" for Flip  in 1959 backed by the Lockettes. The Elgins recording on Flip of "Uncle Sam’s Man" b/w "Casey Cop" was released in 1960 and established the group on the west coast.  The success of "Uncle Sam’s Man" certainly caught the attention of  George Brown at Titan records.

The Elgins (1) aka The Elements aka The Daniels  aka The Bagdads
The Bagdads (1968)

Rembering that he still had an  unreleased recording by the group (prior to the name change) still in the vaults,  Brown decided to  capitalize on their recent success and issued "My Illness" b/w "Extra Extra"  in 1961 under the name Elgins rather than  the Elements . 1962 saw the record reissued with the title of "My Illness" changed to "Heartaches Heartbreak", a somewhat less somber  name for the tune.    1962 saw yet another label change for the group, this time to Lummie Fowler's Lummtone label. Their first release, Lummtone 109 was "Finally" b/w "A Winner Never Quits". Barbara Lewis, who had replaced Devase in the group at the time, is heard on  "Finally", behind the lead of Darryl Lewis. Their next release, also in '62 was "Johnny I'm Sorry" b/w "A Winner Never Quits", and was also issued as Lummtone  109. "Johnny I'm Sorry" took on new life when it was issued again as Lummtone 110 this time b/w "You Got Your Magnet On Me Baby".

The Elements aka The Elgins (1) aka The Daniels aka The Bagdads
The Elgins (2003)

Devase was back in the group for their next outing on Lummtone which was "I Left My Heart In The Big City" b/w "Finally", which was resurrected from their previous release. This record was also released on the Lantam label as by the Daniels. The Elgins final recording for Lummtone in 1963 was "Your Lovely Ways" b/w "Finding A Sweetheart". In 1965, the Elgins released a more POP sounding record "Street Scene" b/w "You Found Yourself Another Fool" for the Valiant label. Sinclair, Devase and McDonald recorded again between 1968-1970 as the Bagdads, putting out four singles, most notable of which was "Bring Back Those Doo-Wops" b/w "Green Power" for the Double Shot label.

http://www.harmonytrain.com/Artists/Elgins.htm
http://www.colorradio.com/elgins.html
http://www.electricearl.com/dws/elgins.html

http://www.soulfulkindamusic.net/bagdads.htm
 

 

 



Songs :
(updated by Hans-Joachim) 


The Elements

  
Lonely Hearts Club / Bad Man                          My Illness                 


The Elgins (1)

     
Uncle Sam's Man / Casey Cop          Extra! Extra!                Heartache, Heartbreak    
               
     
 A Winner Never Quits / Johnny I'm Sorry

  
    You Got Your Magnet On Me        Lost My Love In The Big City  / Finally

  
Your Lovely Ways / Finding A Sweetheart          You Found Yourself Another Fool

  
Street Scene                                Finally  



The Daniels


Big City 


The Bagdads



  
Bring Back Those Doo-Wopps / Green Power

     
                 Push Me                      Livin' In Fear            Let's Talk About The Bad Times

   
Love Has Two Faces                                   Jelly

 



….

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Dion & The Timberlanes

Posted on by dion1

Dion & The Timberlanes  

Dion & The Timberlanes (Bronx, New York)


Personnel :

Dion DiMucci (Lead)


Discography :

Dion & The Timberlanes
1957 - The Chosen Few / Out In Colorado (Mohawk 105 / Jubilee 5294)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

Other Timberlanes' Recording

Rosanne June & The Timberlanes
1956 - Unselfish Love / When A Woman Cries (Caprice 053)
1956 - I've Done My Livin' For Today / Don't Make Me A Promise (Rosanne June)(Caprice 058)

The Timberlanes
1956 - Music Box Lullabye / Sweet Dreams Sweetheart (Dragon 101)
1956 - You Better Get With It / Wedding Bells (But Not For Me) (Dragon 102)
1956 - Sweet Kentucky Rose / The Bamboo Tree  (Dragon 103)
1956 - Home Is Where The Heart Is / No More Love  (Dragon 104)
1958 - You Can't Put A Fence Around The Sun / Lend A Helping Hand (Dragon 107)

Joyce Heath & The Timberlanes
1959 - Promise Me Sweetheart /(The Legend Of) The Great Philadelphia Lawyer (RCA 7536)

Joyce Heath bb The Timberlanes
1958 - You're Mine All Mine / I Only Dreamed It (Dragon 106)
1961 - A Letter To A Disc Jockey / Our First Kiss (Dragon 412)
1961 - I Wouldn't Dream Of It / I Can't Say The Same About You  (Dragon 415)


Biography :

Dion Francis Di Mucci was born to an Italian-American family in the Bronx, New York. As a child, he accompanied his father, Pasquale DiMucci, a vaudeville entertainer, on tour, and developed a love of country music – particularly the work of Hank Williams. He also developed a fondness for the blues and doo-wop musicians he heard performing in local bars and on the radio. His singing was honed on the street corners and local clubs of the Bronx, where he and other neighborhood singers created a cappella riffs.

Dion & The Timberlanes     Dion & The Timberlanes

In early 1957, he auditioned for Bob and Gene Schwartz, who had just formed Mohawk Records. They recorded Dion singing lead on a song which had been arranged by Hugo Montenegro and pre-recorded with everything but the lead vocals. The backing vocals were by a group called "The Timberlanes", whom Dion had never met.The resulting single, "The Chosen Few", was released under the name, Dion and the Timberlanes, and became a minor regional hit.

Dion & The Timberlanes    Dion & The Timberlanes

 Writing about this experience later, in his autobiography, The Wanderer, Dion said that he had never met the Timberlanes and didn't even know who they were. "The vocal group was so white bread, I went back to my neighborhood and I recruited a bunch of guys --three guys-- and we called ourselves Dion and the Belmonts." The Timberlanes were involved with other Artists as well as Dion. They were the premier Artists on the Dragon label, having at least 5 releases for the label on their own.

Dion & The Timberlanes

1957 - Dion & the Belmonts

They also backed up other Artists,  most notably Joyce Heath (another Dragon alumni). There's a "Val  Gagliano" common to some releases (Joyce's husband).  Heath recorded a  song on RCA backed with the Timberlanes in 1959 called "Promise Me, Sweetheart" that was a note-for-note remake of "The Chosen Few", though at a (slightly) faster pace. The song could be taken as an answer record.



Songs :

Dion & The Timberlanes

  
The Chosen Few                                Out In Colorado


Joyce Heath & The Timberlanes

  
The Great Philadelphia Lawyer                 You're Mine All Mine         

  
         Our First Kiss                            A Letter To A Disc Jockey


The Timberlanes

  
Sweet Dreams Sweetheart                          Music Box Lullabye       



 


...





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The Empires (1) aka The Prestos aka The Whirlers

Posted on by dion1

 The Whirlers aka The Empires (1) aka The Prestos
Johnny Barnes, Bobby Dunn, William Goodman & Les Cooper

The Empires (1) (Harlem, New-York)
aka The Prestos aka The Whirlers





Personnel :

Johnny "Buddy" Barnes (Lead)

Les Cooper (Tenor)

William Goodman (Bass)

Bobby Dunn (Baritone)





Discography :

ʉ۬The Empires (1)

Singles :
1954 - My Baby, My Baby / Corn Whiskey (Harlem 2325)
1955 - Magic Mirror / Make Me Or Break Me (Harlem 2333)
1955 - I Want To Know  / Shirley (Wing 90023)
1955 - Tell Me Pretty Baby / By The Riverside (Wing 90050)
1956 - My First Discovery  / Don't Touch My Gal (Wing 90080)
1956 - Whispering Heart / Linda (Whirlin' Disc 104)

Unreleased :
1955 - Happy Am I  (Wing)
1955 - Your Christmas And Mine  (/Wing)
1955 - You Are My Baby (Wing)
1955 - The Clock (Wing)

 


Lightnin' Junior & The Empires (1)
1955 - Somebody Changed The Lock / Ragged And Hungry (Harlem 2334)   


The Prestos
1955 - Looking For Love  /' Til We Meet Again (Mercury 70747)

The Whirlers
1957 - Magic Mirror / Tonight And Forever (Whirlin' Disc 108/Port 108)





Biography :

The Empires hailed from Harlem, so it's only right that they began their recording career on the Harlem Records label. Consisting of Buddy Barnes, William Goodman, Bobby Dunn, and Les Cooper, the group came together in earnest in 1953, practicing R&B, pop, and gospel tunes, and occasionally performing in the area at small venues.  After a long search for a label to record them, they happened upon Morty Shad's Harlem label and released “Corn Whiskey” backed with “My Baby My Baby” ( Harlem #2325).

The Whirlers aka The Empires (1) aka The Prestos

Because they were from the Empire State, they first used the name the Empires. That single was a bust, but they got more chances at Harlem Records and in 1955 released the first version of one of their most beloved ballads, “Magic Mirror ,” backed with “Make Me or Break Me” (Harlem #2333).  They were then relegated to providing background vocals for an artist listed as Lightning Junior on Harlem (#2334). Lightning Junior was an alias for blues artist Champion Jack Dupree, but when nothing happened with this single, the Empires were released from Harlem Records. From there, the group landed at Mercury Records and recorded for both Mercury and their Wing imprint label under different names.

The Whirlers aka The Empires (1) aka The Prestos
Clockwise from top left : James Pender, William Goodman, Bobby Dunn, Johnny Barnes & Les Cooper

On Mercury, they were the Prestos for one great release titled “Till We Meet Again ” backed with “Looking for Love” (Mercury #70747), and on the Wing wing, they kept their Empires name and released three singles, with “By the Riverside” being the most successful of the three (Wing #90050) in 1956. Mercury was really pushing and promoting their Wing subsidiary very heavily in all major markets of the country. Sadly, the records received much more trade promotion than actual airplay, and Wing eventually folded (not for a lack of trying) . Like their label mates the Platters and the Penguins, the Empires/Prestos were also managed by Buck Ram, but they did not attain the same level of success.

The Whirlers aka The Empires (1) aka The Prestos   The Whirlers aka The Empires (1) aka The Prestos

Citing the success of the Channels on the Whirlin' Disc label, the group pitched a recording contract with the company and got it. The result was two singles for the label—the first was a two-sided ballad release, “Linda” backed with “Whispering Heart” as by the Empires (Whirlin' Disc #104) in 1956, followed by a remake of “Magic Mirror” backed with a great up-tempo number called “Tonight and Forever". the latter as by the Whirlers (Whirlin' Disc #108) in 1957, a name inspired by the name of their label. This was one of the last releases for Whirlin' Disc, and it never got the push it deserved and flopped. At this point, the Empires/Prestos/Whirlers broke up, but there is a happy ending. Lead singer Les Cooper had a big instrumental hit in 1962 for the Everlast Records label (#5019) called “Wiggle Wobble.” It peaked at number 12 on the R&B charts and number 22 Pop. Despite many follow-ups for a myriad of record labels, Cooper was never able to cash in again.
http://www.uncamarvy.com/Empires/empires.html




Songs :


The Empires (1)

     
       Corn Whiskey                        Magic Mirror                      Make Me Or Break Me

     
I Want To Know                          Shirley                                Tell Me Pretty Baby

     
By The Riverside               My First Discovery                      Don't Touch My Gal

  
Whispering Heart                             Linda       



Lightnin' Junior & The Empires (1)

  
Somebody Changed The Lock                    Ragged And Hungry   



The Prestos


Til We Meet Again  / Looking For Love


The Whirlers

  
       Magic Mirror                              Tonight And Forever











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The Hi-Tones (2) aka The Trentons aka The Shytones aka The Shy-Tones


Posted on by dion1

The Shytones aka The Hi-Tones (2) aka The Trentons aka The Shy-Tones

(top L to R) Frank Barrata, Bill Sangiovanni & Fred Alvarez. (bottom L to R)  Al Scavuzzo, Ben Passantino & Rich Peluso 

The Hi-Tones (2)  (Brooklyn, N.Y.)
aka The Trentons aka The Shytones aka The Shy-Tones


 


Personnel :


Graham Lee True (Lead)

Sal Covais (First tenor)

Albert Scavuzzo (Second tenor)

William Scarpa (Baritone)

Fred Alvarez (Bass)

Frank Barrata

 

Discography :


The Shytones
1957 - Annette / White Bucks (Spot 14/15)
1957 - White Bucks / Bandstand Rock (Spot 14/15)
1957 - Annette / Bandstand Rock (Spot 15)

The Shy-Tones
1958 - A Lover's Quarrel / Just For You (Goodspin 401)

The Hi-Tones (2)
1958 - A Lovers Quarrel / Just For You (Fonsca 201)
1961 - No More Pain / I Don't Know Why (Fonsco 202)

The Trentons
1959 - All Alone / Star Bright (Inst.) (Shepherd 2204)

 

Biography :

The Shytones were one of many groups that grew up loving vocal harmony and singing on the street corners. They had a great sound, but too short of a career. The Shytones never made it big selling records, but they were celebrities in their own neighborhood, and at the local hops and shows . They cut just a few records, but with a group name change and a few different labels with the same songs.  They were given the name Shy-Tones/Shytones because their lead singer suffered from "stage fright" and had great difficulty performing in from of an audience. This lead a promoter to comment (something like) "Are you guys the Hi-Tones or the Shy-Tones?" The name stuck and the name "Hi-Tones" was not used after that.

The Shytones aka The Hi-Tones (2) aka The Trentons aka The Shy-Tones


The Shy-Tones "A Lover's Quarrel" B/w "Just For You was Reissued"  as "Lovers Quarrel" in April 1961 on Fonsca (# 201) with label credit to the Hi-Tones. A slight variation of the group had a release on the Spot label as the Shytones. The group was basically a Brooklyn (NY) group, with one member from Staten Island (NY). On this recording they were: Fred Alvarez, Frank Barrata, Ben Passanante, Rich Peluso, Bill Sangiovanni, Albert Scavuzzo , & Graham Lee True .

The Shytones aka The Hi-Tones (2) aka The Trentons aka The Shy-Tones
    The Shytones aka The Hi-Tones (2) aka The Trentons aka The Shy-Tones


                                                                                                       Al Scavuzzo

The Shytones performed at many local hops and dances, and even got the chance to perform at one of Murray The K's big rock and roll show. They had some airplay on a couple of local stations, and were even a pick hit of the week on WINS. The group broke up when Al Scavuzzo tragically passed away on his 21st birthday.
http://www.colorradio.com/shytones.html


Songs :

The Shytones

  
Annette / Bandstand Rock                White Bucks

The Shy-Tones

  
A Lover's Quarrel                           Just For You

The Hi-Tones (2)

  
I Don't Know Why                       No More Pain

The Trentons


All Alone  / Star Bright (Inst.)

...

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The Matadors (3)

Posted on by dion1

The Matadors (3) (Bronx, New-York)
Ref. The Miracles (4)


Personnel :

Smokey Robinson

Clarence "Humble" Dawson

Pete "Peewee" Moore

Ronnie "Whitey" White

James "Rat" Grice


Discography :

Unreleased :
1955 - Adios, My Desert Love


Biography :

While attending Northern High School in 1955 Smokey Robinson started his own vocal group the Five Chimes. The group included along with Robinson, Pete Moore, Ronnie White  James Grice and Clarence Dawson. When Dawson quit Emerson Rogers (Claudette's brother) was added and the name was changed to the Matadors. Cleveland quit the group after getting his girlfriend pregnant and Bobby Rogers who was Claudette's cousin took his place.


The Miracles

Robinson's initial influence was another great group, Nolan Strong and the Diablos. In 1955 Robinson and the Matadors (as the Miracles originally called themselves) did an a cappella demo of the Diablos' "Adios, My Desert Love" that revealed a distinctive though rough Robinson falsetto already taking shape.



In 1956 Emerson was drafted and his place was taken by his sister Claudette Rogers. In 1957 the Matadors auditioned for Jackie Wilson's manager who turned them down because he felt they sounded too much like the Platters. A young writer named Berry Gordy was there and he liked the Matadors. By early 1958 Gordy along with Jackie Wilson's cousin Tyrone Carlo had written an answer song to the Silhouette's hit "Get A Job" called "Got a Job". Berry brought the song to the Matadors, since they now had a girl in the group re-named themselves the Miracles, and helped get it recorded on End Records in March 1958.


Songs :


Adios, My Desert Love




….

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