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The Willows (1) aka The Five Willows

Posted on by dion1

The Willows (1) aka The Five Willows

Top : John Thomas Steele and Ralph Martin - Bottom : Tony Middleton, Joe Martin and Richie Davis

The Willows (1) aka The Five Willows (Harlem, New York)

 

Personnel :

Tony Middleton(Lead)

Richie Davis(First Tenor)

Ralph Martin(First Tenor)

Joe Martin(Baritone)

John Thomas “Scooter" Steele(Bass)

 

Discography :

The Five Willows
1953 - My Dear, Dearest Darling / Rock Little Francis(Allen 1000 / Lost-Nite 174)
1953 - Dolores / All Night Long(Allen 1002 / Lost-Nite 183)
1953 - The White Cliffs Of Dover / With These Hands(Allen 1003 / Lost-Nite 187)
1953 - Love Bells / Please Baby(Pee Dee 290 / Lost-Nite 192)
1954 - Lay Your Head On My Shoulder / Baby, Come A Little Bit Closer(Herald 433)
1955 - Look Me In The Eyes / So Help Me(Herald 442)

The Willows (1)
Singles :
1956 - This Is The End / Don't Pull, Don't Push, Don't Shove(Club 1014/michelle 501)
1956 - Church Bells Are Ringing / Baby Tell Me(Melba 102)
1956 - Church Bells May Ring / Baby Tell Me(Melba 102)
1956 - Do You Love Me /  My Angel (Melba 106)
1957 - My Angel / Little Darlin'(Melba 115)
1959 - This Is The End / Dont Push, Don't Pull (Michelle 501)
1959 - You / My Dear, Dearest Darling (Warwick 524)
1961 - There's A Dance Goin' On / Now That I Have You (Four Star 1753)
1964 - It's Such A Shame / Tears In Your Eyes (Heidi 103)
1964 - Sit By The Fire / Such A Night (Heidi 107)
Unreleased :
1957 - Fooled By Her Kisses/ Lazy Daisy (Mercury)

Tony Middleton & The Willows (1)
1957 - First Taste Of Love / Only My Heart (Eldorado Eld 508)
1957 - Let's Fall In Love / Say Yeah (Gone 5015)

Tony Middleton
1958 - I'm On My Way / Lover (Saxony 104)
1959 - Count Your Blessings (See What Love Has Done) / I Just Want Somebody (Triumph 600)
1959 - The Universe / Blackjack (Triumph 605)
1960 - Untouchable / I Need You (Alto 2001)
1960 - Unchained Melody / Sweet Baby Of Mine (Big Top 3037)
1961 - I'm Gonna Try Love (One More Time) / Is It This Or Is It That (Roulette 4345)


Biography:

The Story of The Willows goes back to 114th Street in Harlem, where Tony Middleton (born June 26, 1934) in Richmond,Virgin) lived in I952. He received an invitation to Mrs. Clarisse Martin's house on 115th Street while he was training his boxing at a local gym. Mrs. Martin's twin sons, Joe and Ralph were rehearshing under her guidance with John Thomas “Scuotem Steele (bass) and Richie Davis (1. tenor)  . Being very impressed by Tony‘s fancy footwork and choreography in the ring she knew for sure that the chance to archive some success with this guy in the group would be great - if she could teach them assiduity and discipline. Having been the main impulse behind the recording career of The Willows from 1952 to 1965, she let them practise every day. So you could find the group singing at the corner of 115th and Lenox Ave. in hospitals,at church benefits and at dances at the Chelsea Vocational High School. While still known as “The Dovers», they sometimes used Doc Green as additional singer. One of Green's favourite songs was “The Whiffenpoof Song" by the Cabineers, and so the group decided to try their luck with the same company the Cabineers had recorded for. Abbey Records under the management of Pete &, Goldie Durain had meanwhile moved and changed its name to Allen Records.

The Willows (1) aka The Five Willows

The first release for Allen under the name of The Five Willows was the street song "My Dear, Dearest Darling", introducing for the first time the famous bass intro by John Thomas “Scooter" Steele to the public. This gimmick was carefully planned to be their trademark. later reviewed in "Little Darlin'" and "Do You Love Me". Billboard magazine called this release in June “kinda weird and somewhat hypnotic", and so you can hear the group sometimes out of key, while the flipside "Rock Little Francis" (the obligary iump) sounds amateurish, but nevertheless interesting.  Tony was also featured as lead on "The White Cliffs Of Dover". While he shared the vocals with Richie on "Dolores"  - the latter coupled with "All Night Long" on their second Allen release in September.  At the end of 1953, their third Allen record was out, but again no chart entries were noted for "With These Hands" (lead by Richie). When Pete Durain decided to part business with Mr. Allen. The Willows went with him and recorded their next release for Pee Dee Records in early 1954, entitled "Love Bells" b/w "Please Baby". Pete Durain himself went out of business in 19510, but the group was able to record four sides for Herald  in the same style, but again without success.

The Willows (1) aka The Five Willows

When Tony met Morty Craft in 1955, who had just left his partners at London Records to form his own Melba label, a chance to record again was in sight. TheWillows  (as they were known now, just dropping the “Five") offered him a ballad entitled CHURCH BELLS MAY RING. which was written by Tony from an idea of his wife Betty. When first released as "Church Bells May Ring"  (mislabeled on early copies), it had transformed into a wonderful rocking tune with a now famous bass bridge (“Hello hello again,my friend, I'm hopin‘ that we'll meet again"). close harmony-and as a gimmick chimes (played by the still unknown Neil Sedaka from a suggestion by Morty Craft) plus a shuffle rhythm. Hitting the R&B charts on April 18,1956, the song reached no. 11 and stayed for 2 weeks, but it had more success before on the pop charts, first appearing at no. 74: on March 28 then climbing to the middle of the Top 100 listing. Soon cover versions by The Cadets. Sunny Gale and The Diamonds followed, and The Diamonds' version nearly outsold The Willows original on all main markets.

The Willows (1) aka The Five Willows
1956 at the Alan Freed Easter Show - The Brooklyn Paramout : T.Middleton, R. Martin, F. Donovan, Ri. Davis and J. Martin

The same story happened again, and so the guys didn‘t get paid more then S 200 for their million seller, even after they took Morty Craft to court, where he declared bankruptcy then. Ironically. the bass bridge at the hit song was sung by Richard “Rico» Simon, a neighborhood friend just substituted for “Scootem" Steele for that session only. Two more records on Melba followed in late 1956,  early 1957, but no follow-up gave The Willows the succes the sure had exspected. Especially "Little Darlin‘ " was in the same vain as "Church Bells May Ring" . While "My Angel" was one of the earliest writing affords of Neil Sedaka and his school pal Howard Greenfield. All Melba recordings  featured the bass riffing of Freddie Donovan. because “Scootem" permanently missed rehearsals, and Tony had to let him go.

The Willows (1) aka The Five Willows  The Willows (1) aka The Five Willows

When they left Melba through the help of attorney Aber Greenberg, who had sued Morty Craft for the missing royalties and got their release. they turned the contract over to Carl Edelson, who had his office of Club Records in the same building (1550 Broadway) as their attorney (and Melba Records, too). Four songs were recorded at a September 19,1556 session, but only two were released (see Relic LP 51122) in November on Club,while “Frantically» stays in the can (Edelson later re-released the Club record on his Michelle label in 1963). Eldorado Records, owned by Buchanan and Goodman(of “Flying Saucers» fame) was their next stop in early 1857 (also located 1550 Broadway). and a big band style recording was released in April - "First Taste Of Love" b/w "Only My Heart". They eventually went to Mercury, recording two songs with piano backing by Fats Domino. which were their best tracks according to Richie, Joe and Ralph.

The Willows (1) aka The Five Willows

When Richie went into the service in 1985, The Willows continued without him, although two very good songs were released on Gone Records at the end of 1957. With a little bit of promotion, "Let's Fall In Love" (backed with "Say Yeah") could have been a hit for the group. Richie recorded two (still unreleased) songs in Detroit with a different backing group (including Tony), before Tony himself decided to quit the group. The remaining members (plus Richie) backed a guy named Bobby Holiday on “Tiajuana» 8.  “My Letter", while the Martin twins, Freddie Donovan, Joe's wife Dotty and another singer once again did a session for Morty Craft, from which "My Dear, Dearest Darling"  and "You"  (a different version of “Church Bells May Ring" is still unreleased) with lead vocals by Dotty. Under the guidance of Mrs. Martin, the group stayed together until I965, having released their last two records for Heidi (an Atco subsidiary) in 19611. Richie sang lead on “It's Such A Shame" and “Sit By The Fire"  while the latter featured once again Freddie's bass vocals. Tony Middleton has done countless solo recording since then and is still active in the music field and as an actor. So he was nominated in 1972 for a Grammy Award for his recording of “Don't Ever Leave Me.»



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The Zircons (2) aka The Capes

Posted on by dion1

The Zircons (2) aka The Capes

The Zircons (1965)

The Capes (Chattanooga, Tenn.)
aka The Zircons (2) 

 

Personnel :

Eugene Meadows

Emmanuel Thompson

Robert Eppinger

Wilson Meadows

Wallace Meadows

 

Discography :

The Capes
1960 - The Vow / Jeanie (Chat 5005

The Zircons (2)
1962 - No Twistin' On Sunday / Mama Wants To Drive (Federal 12452)
1962 - Mr. Jones (Is A Bad Man)  / Get Up And Go To School (Federal 12478)
1964 - Don't Put Off For Tomorrow  (What You Can Do Today) / Where There's A Will  (Heigh Ho 606-607)
1965 - Sit Down Girl / I couldn't Stop Crying  (Heigh Ho 608-609)
1967 - Go On And Cry, Cry / Was It Meant To Be This Way (Heigh Ho 645-646)
1969 - Finders Keepers / You Ain't Comin' Back (Capitol 2667)

 

Biography :

Wilson, Wallace, Eugene Meadows, Robert Eppinger and Emmanuel Thompson first started as the Capes, they recorded a ditty called "The Vow" b/w  "Jeanie" for Chat in February 1960. In 1961, They signed a record deal with King Records as The Zircons. The name for the group has caused some confusion over the years as it seems that the name had been used in the late 50's early 60's on several other groups recording for Winston, Dot and a number of other small labels. But the name was soon to become firmly theirs the following year when their first release "No Twisting On Sunday" came out on the King subsidiary Federal: "No Twisting on Sunday" b/w "Mama Wants To Drive".

The Zircons (2) aka The CapesThe Capes (1960) L to R : Eugene Meadows, Emmanuel Thompson, Robert Eppinger, Wilson Meadows, Wallace Meadows

Actually the Capes and the Zircons were the same group, which just changed names. After one more release for the label the group headed further north to New York.  Here over the next five years they cut three singles for the Heigh-Ho label, including "Go On And Cry, Cry". In the early 70's they also cut one single with Capitol records "Finders Keepers". On Capitol (without Eppinger and Thompson) Wilson, Wallace & Eugene Meadows came with the name 'The Meadows' and soon learned there were other acts that had already chosen the name. 

The Zircons (2) aka The Capes
The Meadows

Wilson Meadows continued with his brothers as the Meadows on Radio Records - an LP recorded at Muscle Shoals with the legendary studio band , and scored an R&B chart hit in 1977 with "I Can't Understand" by the Meadows Brothers on Kayvette.

 

Songs :
 (updated by Hans-Joachim)

The Zircons (2)

     
Mr. Jones  (Is A Bad Man)            No Twistin' On Sunday           Get Up And Go To School

     
Mama Wants To Drive                Don't Put Off For Tomorrow ....           Where There's A Will....


     
I Couldn't Stop Crying              You Ain't Coming Back        Finders Keepers


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The Cordials (1) aka The Carians

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The Cordials (1)  (Columbus, Ohio)
aka The Carians

 

Personnel :

Ron Rieser (Lead Singer)

Dave Rathburn (Top Tenor)

Paul Perry (Second Tenor / Alternate Lead)

Pug Pepper (Baritone)

Phil Stobart (Bass)

 

Discography :

The Cordials (1)
1960 - I'm Ashamed / Sentimental Journey (Cordial 1001)

The Carians
1961 - She's Gone / Snooty Friends (Indigo 136)
1961 - Only A Dream / Girls (Magenta 04)

 

Biography :

The Cordials were all from Central High School in Columbus. The group consisted of  Ron Rieser (Lead Singer), Dave Rathburn (Top Tenor), Paul Perry (Second Tenor / Alternate Lead), Pug Pepper (Baritone) and Phil Stobart (Bass).

Phil Stobart later sang with Phil Gary & The Catalinas. The Cordials  only cut two songs under this name " I'm Ashamed" b/w "Sentimental Journey" then changed to the Carians and released two other singles. "She's Gone" is the male version of The Chantels song "He's Gone", written by Arlene Smith of the Chantels.

 

Songs :
Updated by Hans-Joachim

 
The Cordials (1)


I'm Ashamed

 

The Carians

     
       She's Gone                     Only A Dream / Girls                    Snooty Friends     

 

 

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The Rivingtons aka The Four After Fives aka The Crenshaws aka ...

Posted on by dion1

The Rivingtons aka The Four After Fives aka The Crenshaws aka ...

The Rivingtons  (Los Angeles)
 

aka  

The  Friends (3)
The Four After Fives
The Crenshaws
The Sharps (1)
The Twisters (2)
The Ebbtides (3)

 

 

 


Personnel :

Carl White (Lead)

Al Frazier (Tenor)

Sonny Harris (Lead)

Turner "Rocky" Wilson Jr (Bass)

 

 


Discography :

The Rivingtons
Singles:
1962 - Papa - Oom - Mow - Mow / Deep Water (Liberty 55427)
1962 - Kickapoo Joy Juice / My Reward (Liberty 55513)
1962 - Mama - Oom - Mow - Mow / Waiting (Liberty 55528)
1963 - The Bird's The Word / I'm Losing My Grip (Liberty 55553)
1963 - The Shaky Bird (Part 1) / The Shaky Bird (Part 2) (Liberty 55585)
1963 - Cherry / Little Sally Walker (Liberty 55610)
1964 - Wee Jee Walk / Fairy Tales (Liberty 55671)
1964 - I Tried / One Monkey (Reprise 0293)
1964 - All That Glitters / You Move Me Baby (Am I Moving You) (A. R. E. 100)
1964 - You Move Me Baby / All That Glitters (Vee Jay 634)
1964 - I Love You Always / Years Of Tears (Vee Jay 649)
1965 - The Willy / Just Got To Be More (Vee Jay 677)
1966 - A Rose Growing In The Ruins / Tend To Business (Columbia 43581)
1966 - Yadi - Yadi - Dum - Dum / Yadi - Yadi Revisited (Columbia 43772)
1967- Little Sally Walker (Columbia)
1967 - You're Gonna Pay / I Don't Want A New Baby (Quan 1379)
1969 - Pop Your Corn (Part 1) / Pop Your Corn (Part 2) (RCA 74-0301)
1973 - Papa - Oom - Mow - Mow / I Don't Want A New Baby (Wand 11253)

The Rivingtons aka The Four After Fives aka The Crenshaws aka ...

Liberty 55553


Lps :
1963 - Doin' the Bird(Liberty LST-3282)
Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow / Love Pill / Long Tall Sally / Unchain My Heart / You Are My Sunshine / Happy Jack / Mama-Oom-Mow-Mow / Kickapoo Joy Juice / Slippin' And Slidin' / Old Time Love / Have Mercy Mercy Baby / Standing In The Love Line

The Rivingtons aka The Four After Fives aka The Crenshaws aka ...


 

The Ebbtides (3)
1959 - Lonesome / Love Doctor (Jan Lar 101)
 

The Four After Fives
1961 - Hello Schoolteacher! / I Gotta have somebody (All Time 9076)

The Sharps (1)

Singles:
1956 - Six Months, Three Weeks  / Cha - Cho Hop (inst.) (Tag 2200/Chess 1690)
1957 - Come On / Sweet Sweetheart (Jamie 1040/Vik 0264)
1957 - Our Love Is Here To Stay / Lock My Heart (Lamp 2007)
1957 - What Will I Gain / Shugglin' (Aladdin 4301)
1958 - All My Love  / Look What You've Done To Me (Combo 146/Dot 15806)
1958 - Look At Me / Have Love, Will Travel (Jamie 1108)
1958 - Here's A Heart / Gig - A - Lene (Jamie 1114)

Unreleased :
1958 - Honey Babe (aka Tapun, Tapun) (Combo)
1958 - Hold Me (Combo)
1958 - I’m Such A Lovin’ Man (Combo)

Thurston Harris & The Sharps (1)
1957 - Little Bitty Pretty One / I Hope You Won't Hold It Against Me (Aladdin 3398)

Thurston Harris bb The Sharps (1)
1958 - Do What You Did / I'm Asking Forgiveness (T.Harris)  (Aladdin 3399)

Sammy Turner & The Twisters (2)
1959 - Sweet Annie Laurie / Thunderbolt (Big Top 3007)

The Crenshaws
Singles :
1962 - Moonlight In Vermont / He's Got The Whole World In His Hand's (W.B.  5254)

Eps :
1965 - Off Shore / Let The Good Times Roll / Wishing Star / Manana  (W.B. 5505)

 Dante & His Friends (3)
1961 - Are You Just My Friend / Something Happens (Imperial 5798)
1962 - Miss America / Now I've Got You (Imperial 5827)
1962 - Magic Ring / Am I The One (Imperial 5867)

 

 

 

 




Biography :

Most people in the early 2000s are surprised to find out about the Rivingtons -- that's primarily because people mostly discover their existence when they hear one of the group's three hits, "Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow," "Mama-Oom-Mow-Mow (The Bird)," and "The Bird's the Word," which are much, much better known in their composite re-recording by the Trashmen (as "Surfin' Bird"). And when they hear the Rivingtons' version, they're inevitably surprised by the fine singing and superb R&B phrasing, miles away from the Trashmen's punk stylings. Their version of the song was just as nonsensical, but it had amazing class and panache, and it's more than that -- it's part of a story of superb singing, bird dances and surfin' birds, great dances and even better times, before the world of the 1960s got all dark and serious and too dangerous for good clean fun. The Rivingtons were a West Coast vocal group whose lineup featured Al Frazier, Carl White, John "Sonny" Harris, and Turner "Rocky" Wilson Jr. That lineup went through myriad reshapings to get there, along with renamings -- they weren't even the Rivingtons to start with.

The Rivingtons aka The Four After Fives aka The Crenshaws aka ...

It all started with Al Frazier, in high school in Los Angeles at the end of the 1940s, who sang baritone and formed his own group, the Mello-Moods, whose ranks included future Platters member Paul Robi. They had aspirations to record, but never got that lucky -- Frazier went into the army and served in Korea, which didn't interrupt his desire for a music career. When he got out he formed a new outfit, a mixed male/female quartet called Emanons (which was "No Names" backwards). They were good enough to wrangle a TV appearance locally in 1952, but that was as far as they ascended. Then, in 1953, Frazier crossed paths with lead singer Thurston Harris, bass singer Matthew Nelson, baritone Leon Hughes, and tenor Willie Ray Rockwell, at an amateur night run by the legendary deejay Hunter Hancock -- they had a group but no moves, and Frazier had some moves to suggest, and suddenly they were a quintet, then went back to being a quartet when Hughes left the lineup. The four-man outfit, called the Lamplighters, were signed to Federal Records, part of Syd Nathan's King Records, and began making their name all over the West Coast during the run -- up to the middle of the 1950s.

The Rivingtons aka The Four After Fives aka The Crenshaws aka ...

They were doing well, young men loving their work and getting lots of it, and then, while on the East Coast, Thurston Harris suddenly got homesick for Indianapolis and decided to leave the act. The group was on hiatus and might have stayed that way if Willie Ray Rockwell hadn't pointed Frazier to a pair of singers, tenor John "Sonny" Harris and lead Carl White, with Nelson returning to establish the lineup that would carry them for the next few years. The only problem was that the record company felt it was ill-advised to release a new Lamplighters single with a new lead singer, so instead of picking up where the latter group had left off, they were renamed the Tenderfoots and forced to rebuild their reputation and audience. They got four records out on Federal without any significant sales or airplay, and their bookings were similarly slim. They tried to bring Thurston Harris back into the lineup but that didn't last. And they spent time appearing on other artists' records -- including a credit as "the Jacks" behind Paul Anka on "Blau-Wile-Deveest-Fontaine," and were signed to the Jamie label as the Sharps by producer Lester Sill (of future Phil Spector fame) in 1956.

The Rivingtons aka The Four After Fives aka The Crenshaws aka ...

They bounced around some more, to Aladdin Records, where they even ended up singing behind Thurston Harris, on records including "Little Bitty Pretty One." Their next stop was Tag Records and then to Combo Records, with "Look What You've Done to Me," which was later picked up by Dot Records for national distribution. Then it was back to Jamie, where they cut more sides of their own and sang behind Duane Eddy, among others (they were the Rebels in that incarnation). Finally, at the very end of the 1950s, Matthew Nelson left the fold and was replaced on bass by Turner "Rocky" Wilson Jr., and that lineup sang behind artists including bandleader/actor/trumpeter Ray Anthony (of Mamie Van Doren fame). There was also a stint as the Four After Fives and another as the Crenshaws, working with producer Kim Fowley on "Hello School Teacher," and backing Roy Milton, and cutting sides for Warner Bros.. Their break came one day when they were fooling around in the studio and Rocky Wilson suddenly came up with the "papa-oom-mow-mow" vocal line, done basso, and everyone loved it. The resulting LP was startlingly compelling record that Fowley steered, along with the group, to a pair of producers, Jack Levy and Adam Ross. They came up with a $1200 advance for the song and against an eventual contract with group, and the name the Rivingtons (derived from the two having once lived on Rivington Street on New York's Lower East Side). They offered the recording to Capitol, who turned it down as a little too far-out (that from a label that recorded Yma Sumac and released the single "Tsukiaki").

The Rivingtons aka The Four After Fives aka The Crenshaws aka ...

Instead, it went to Capitol's younger rival, Liberty Records, who bought it but then sat on it for six months trying to figure out how to sell a song called "Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow." The group and their managers had no doubt how to sell it -- play it, sing it, get it heard. Which is exactly what they did, at a performing showcase for deejays in Los Angeles. The deejays loved what they heard, and asked for a record to promote, and the managers duly provided them with "Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow." It spread across the Los Angeles airwaves, and out from there to California, and suddenly there was no decision to be made about marketing the song -- it sold itself, and all Liberty had to do was ship them, the song did the rest. One of the reasons for its appeal was that yes, it was a nonsense song, but the members sang it with such spirit and élan, that it wasn't a "guilty pleasure" or an embarrassing novelty record -- it was silly, but it was also viscerally exciting like the very best R&B dance records, and sung that way. Like an amazing number of other "novelty" singles -- "Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer", "Short Shorts," and "Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow's distant successor, "Na Na Hey Hey (Kiss Him Goodbye)," it was cut initially as a joke, an after-thought, at the end of a session, and worked its way into the vernacular infectiously. An album followed, entitled Doin' the Bird, in late 1962, that the group wasn't too happy about, and a follow-up single, "Mama-Oom-Mow-Mow," but not before "Kickapoo Joy Juice" interrupted their momentum.

The Rivingtons aka The Four After Fives aka The Crenshaws aka ...

They followed with up with "The Bird's the Word," which capitalized on the first two records on that theme, and then "The Shaky Bird." They rode the crest of a wave for a year, into the second half of 1963. By that time, a Minneapolis-based surf band called the Trashmen co-opted the boom started by the Rivingtons, combining their first and third Liberty singles into a composite work entitled "Surfin' Bird," pushing the beat into warp nine and rocketing them to the Top Ten and linking the Rivingtons forever to the tail-end of the surf music craze and also, to an extent, displacing the originals -- by the time the Ramones began playing it a decade or so later, it was already a standard piece of punk band repertory. The Rivingtons kept making good records but never found a replacement for the "bird" craze around which to wrap their work. "Cherry" was a straight R&B ballad, and "Weejee Walk," which closed out their Liberty career, was an attempt at another dance piece. The group bounced around some more, between Reprise Records and Adam Ross's own label, and Columbia Records, before forming their own label, Quan, in 1967. They were Carlos & the Rivingtons at one point, and in 1973, amid the oldies craze, they did an updated version of "Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow." Carl White, who passed away at the end of the decade, was succeeded by Andrew Butler, and as of the early 1990s, a version of the Rivingtons was still performing. In 1991, EMI Records, which had acquired the Liberty library, issued Liberty Years, a 23-song compilation of the group's Liberty sides. It's glorious, a magnificent collection of stunning vocals, and as priceless and essential a body of music as the best work of Bo Diddley, Johnny Otis, or any other foundation rockers you care to name.
Bruce Eder, Rovi





Video :


Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow 

 

 

 

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Pat Cordel & The Crescents (1)

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Pat Cordel & The Crescents (1)
The Crescents - (left to right) Carman Romano, Vito Picone, Pat Croccitto Cordel & Ronnie Jones

Pat Cordel & The Crescents (1) (Staten Island, NY.)
ref: The Elegants


Personnel :

Pat Croccitto Cordel (Lead)

Vito Picone

Ronnie Jones

Carman Romano (Baritone)


Discography :

1956 - Darling Come Back / My Tears (Club 1011 / Michele  503 / Victory 1001)


Biography :

Vito Picone and original member Carmen Romano met in the 1st grade at P.S. 39 in the South Beach Section of Staten Island NY. Both had a young widowed mother and just one sibling and lived two blocks away from each other, it was inevitable that the two would become friends immediately. As they approached the 4th grade, the NYC Board of Education started a music program and oddly enough Vito and Carmen were chosen as two of the four trombone players. The other two were Vinny Licastri who became Vito's best friend (who would later die of leukemia at age 16, the night The Elegants recorded "Little Star") and Ronnie Jones.

Pat Cordel & The Crescents (1)
The  Elegants taken at N.Y.'s Brooklyn Fox Theater. They Borrowed jackets(Too Large) from the Danleers.

Vito, Carmen and Ronnie would form their first singing group in 1955 with a pretty trumpet player in the band named Patricia Crocitto (daughter of the owner of a popular night club Crocitto's). They fashioned their sound after the red hot vocal group "The Teenagers" because Patricia had the high Frankie Lymon sounding voice and Vito could do the bass like Sherman Barns. They called themselves "Pat Cordel and The Crescents".After winning a singing contest, where the 1st prize was a recording contract, they recorded two songs "Darling Come Back" written by Vito and "My Tears" written by the whole group. One of the first white rock and roll artists to have a recording contract, they toured with such acts as The Willows, The Fi-Tones, The Solitaires, etc. in mostly "Black" venues. After their manager/Record Label Owner was tragically killed in Little Italy, they disbanded. Pat became one of the June Taylor dancers (Jackie Gleason Show), Ronnie became a commercial artist. Vito and  Carmen decided that they enjoyed the entertainment world and would like to continue. The Elegants .


Songs :

  
Darling Come Back                            My Tears            



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The Sa-Shays aka The Darlings (2) aka ....

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The Sweethearts (2) aka The Darlings (2)  aka......
Oma Heard

 

The Darlings (2) (Los Angeles, CA)
aka The Sweethearts (2)
aka The Sa-Shays
aka The Utmosts
aka The Dynels
aka The Postalettes
aka The Delicates (2)

 

Personnel :

Oma Heard (Lead)

Carlotta "Cookie" Robertson (Lead)

Maxine Waters

Julia Waters

 

Discography :

The Sweethearts (2)
1961 - They Talk Too Much / Puppy Love (Hi-III 116)
1961 - Summer Days / What Is Love (Hi-III 117)

The Sa-Shays
1961 - You Got Love / Boo Hoo Hoo (Zen 101 / Alfi 1)
1963 - Here Comes The Love / I’ll Make You Love Me (Zen 109)

The Utmosts
1962 - I Need You / Big Man (Pan Or 1123)

The Dynels
1962 - Boy Friend / Let's Do It Again  (Dot 16382)
1964 - Just A Face In The Crowd / C'mon Little Darlin’ (Natural 7001)

The Postalettes
1963 - He Played One, Two, Three, Four / Like Chalypso (Instrumental) (Dore 662)

The Darlings (2)
1963 - To Know Him Is To Love Him / Train Out Of Memphis (Instrumental) (Dore 663)
1963 - He Played One, Two, Three, Four / My Pillow (Dore 677)
1966 - The Horn Goes Beep Beep Beep / Floatin' On Cotton Candy (Instrumental) (Dore 775)

The Delicates (2)
1963 - My Pillow / He Played One, Two, Three, Four (Dee Dee 677 / Celeste 676)

 

Biography :

The Darlings, a female quartet comprising Oma Heard, Carlotta "Cookie" Robertson (Gaynell Hodge’s niece who In 1960 with Joyce Chapel & Marie Love recorded as The Chiffons and The Unforgettables) and the sisters Maxine and Julia Waters, were managed and produced by a former artist named Bobby Sanders - real name: Jerome Lenoir. In 1963, Dore issued two consecutive singles by the group under different names, the first as the Postalettes singing 'He Played 1, 2, 3, 4' (a variation of 'The Paddiwack Song'), the second as the Darlings with their punchy revival of 'To Know Him Is To Love Him', heard here. Sanders produced all four at the same (with Grayson arranging) and assigned the masters over Dore on 23 January 1963.

The Sweethearts (2) aka The Darlings (2)  aka......   The Sweethearts (2) aka The Darlings (2)  aka...... 

Three of the four girls had previously sung in a Fremont High School group named the Sweethearts, who recorded for producer H.B. Barnum in 1961 and moonlighted on obscure one-off 45s as the Utmosts and the Sa-Shays.  Although amateur, they were already establishing career paths as versatile session vocalists and barely knew their identity from one release to the next - immediately prior to signing for Dore, they had recorded a one-off 45 for producer Steve Venet (himself a former Dore artist) as the Dynels on Dot.

The Sweethearts (2) aka The Darlings (2)  aka......   The Sweethearts (2) aka The Darlings (2)  aka...... 

                                                                                                   Oma Heard

Something about 'He Played 1, 2, 3, 4' piqued Lew Bedell interest because a few months later, he re-issued it with a new B-side ('My Pillow') on Dore 677 crediting the Darlings. Then again, in October 1963 on Dee Dee 677 as by the Delicates!. And he wasn't finished yet. Possibly frustrated by his inability to break the record, Bedell sold the master to a couple who ran a tiny R&B label, Celeste, out of their LA home, prompting a further re-issue with the revised title 'This Old Man' on Celeste 676. Oma Heard later sang with Ike Turner's Ikettes, did session work and recorded under her own name for Motown in the late 1960s, while the Water sisters worked as background singers on countless sessions by such diverse artists as Paul Simon, Diana Ross, Bruce Springsteen, Billy Paul and Rod Stewart.

 

Songs :

The Sweethearts (2)

  
   They Talk Too Much                            Puppy Love         

  
Summer Days                                  What Is Love

The Sa-Shays

  
You Got Love                          Boo Hoo Hoo

  
Here Comes The Love                I’ll Make You Love Me

The Utmosts

  
I Need You                                    Big Man

The Dynels

  
     Boy Friend                                     Let's Do It Again

  
Just A Face In The Crowd                   C'mon Little Darlin’        

The Darlings (2)

  
To Know Him Is To Love Him                             My Pillow                   

The Delicates (2)


My Pillow


...

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The Appeggios aka The Convincers aka The Arrows

Posted on by dion1

The Arrows (Los Angeles)
aka The Convincers aka The Appeggios


Personnel :

Leroy Bishop  (Lead)

Mel Alexander  (Second Tenor)

Frank Alexander (Bass)

Frank Dixon (High Tenor)

Malvin Perkins (Baritone)
                        


Discography :

The Arrows
Singles :
1958 - Indian Bop Hop / Annie Mae (Flash 132)

The Convincers
Singles :
1962 - Rejected Love / Go BacK Baby (Movin' 100)
Demos :
1959 - Betty
1959 - Sufferin With The Blues
1959 - My Baby Don't Love Me
1959 - What Did I do

The Appeggios
Singles :
1963 - Mary / I'll Be Singing (Aries 01)
Demos :
1956 - Rejected Love
1956 - We Belong Together
1956 - She's Not Bad
1956 - Lonely
1956 - Baby Let Me Come To Your House Tonight


Biography :

The group begin as the Arpeggios in New Orleans and sang strictly gospel, switching to the Arrows to sang R&B. The Original members are Mel Alexander (Second Tenor), Frank Alexander (Bass), Leroy Bishop (Lead), Frank Dixon (High Tenor) & Sidney Jones (Baritone).

  
Mel Alexander                                                                                                                                     

One by one  the Arpeggios came out to California. The Arrows composed of Mel Alexander, Frank Alexander, Leroy Bishop, Frank Dixon  & Malvin Perkins signed a contract with Charlie 'Flash' Reynolds of Flash record on 29th July,1958. Two months later "Indian Bop Hop" backed with "Annie Mae" hit the Streets.


The Appeggios with Mel Alexander on lead (Los Angeles, 1957)

They Changed their name from the Arrows to the Convincers. The Convincers were made up of Mel, his brother, Jones, Dixon and Willie Gibson on lead. The Group recorded the Beautifull "Rejected Love" spliced with "Go BacK Baby" for Movin' Records. In 1963, Mel & his quarter Friends, now renamed the Arpeggios (Misspelled Appeggios) with the Convincers' Line-up recorded "Mary" backed with "I'll Be Singing" for the Tiny Los Angeles based Aries label.

 

Songs :
 (Update By Hans-Joachim)

The Arrows

 
Indian Bop Hop                    Annie Mae

The Appeggios

     
I'll Be Singing                    Mary        Baby Let Me Come To Your House Tonight

       
Lonely                                 She's Not Bad                       Rejected Love


We Belong Together


The Convincers

     
 Rejected Love                   What Did I do                        Go BacK Baby

  
My Baby Don't Love Me                       Betty

 

.....

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The Jades (4) aka The Debonairs (1) aka The Debonaires (2)

Posted on by dion1

The Jades (4) aka The Debonairs (1) aka The Debonaires (2)

The Debonairs (1) (Long Beach, CA)
aka The Debonaires (2) aka The Jades (4)

 

Personnel :

Arthur Holly (Lead)

David Kelly

Joe Sprewell (Tenor , Piano)

Willie "Hootie" Melvin

Bobby Miles (Bass)

 

Discography :

The Debonairs (1)
Singles :
1957 - Why Can't We Be As Other Lovers Are / The Bill Collector (Combo 129)
1957 - Cause Of A Bad Romance / For The Woman I Love (Combo 149)
Unreleased :
1957 - In My Memories (Combo)
1957 - Christmas Time (Combo)
1957 - Crazy Santa Claus (Combo)
1957 - Nita (Combo)

The Debonaires (2)
Singles :
1959 - Every Once In A While / Mama Don't Care (Dore 526)
1961 - Every Once In A While / Gert's Skirt (Dore 592/702/795)
1962 - Hold Back The Dawn / Mama Don't Care (Dore 654)
1964 - Everybody's Movin' / Mama Don't Care (Dore 712)
Unreleased :
1959 - Dorothy (Dowley)
1959 - Laura (Dowley)
1959 - Fare Thee Well (Dowley)

The Jades (4)
1963 - Hold Back The Dawn / Mama Don't Care (Dore 687)

 

Biography :

The Debonairs from Long Beach, California, evolved through numerous line-up changes into an accomplished amateur vocal group in the early 50s. They recorded some material for Johnny Otis' Dig label in 1956 and for Dootsie Williams in 1957 but this was shelved.

The Jades (4) aka The Debonairs (1) aka The Debonaires (2)    The Jades (4) aka The Debonairs (1) aka The Debonaires (2)

Jake Porter                                                                                                         

Jake Porter was one of the select group of independent record company owners who gave us the best of West Coast R&B and doo-wop music. Starting in the early 50s and persevering until the early 70s, Jake recorded numerous groups, duos and R&B outfits for his Los Angeles-based Combo label. Jake Porter recorded the Debonairs and released "Why Can't We Be As Other Lovers Are" b/w "The Bill Collector" and "Cause Of A Bad Romance" b/w "For The Woman I Love". When these failed to sell, they split up.

The Jades (4) aka The Debonairs (1) aka The Debonaires (2)

Reforming in 1959 with different personnel, the Debonaires laid down some tunes for the Downey label, run from a record store in the LA suburb of that name but, yet none of this was issued. Their next stop, a session for Dore on 17 June 1959, 'Every In A While', an outstanding ballad featuring Joe Sprewell on lead. It became such a favourite of Bedell's that he issued it four times between 1959 and 1967. In an attempt to update the arrangement, some extraneous overdubs including strings were added to the 1967 pressing .

 

Songs : 

 

The Debonairs (1)

  
Cause Of A Bad Romance                   The Bill Collector       

  
Why Can't We Be As Other Lovers Are          For The Woman I Love         

  
Crazy Santa Claus                              Christmas Time     

  
    Nita                                             In My Memories

 

The Debonaires (2)

  
              Doroyhy                         Every Once In A While / Gert's Skirt

  
 Hold Back The Dawn                            Mama Don't Care        


Everybody's Movin'

 

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The Glens (2) aka The Gladiators (1) aka The Feathers

Posted on by dion1


Paste Up Picture : Karl White, Billy Mann, Rene Beard

The Glens (2) (Los Angeles)
aka The Gladiators (1) aka The Feathers

 

Personnel :

Billy Mann (Tenor)

Rene Beard (Second Tenor)

Karl White (Baritone)

Cleo White (Bass)

 

Discography :

The Gladiators (1)
1957 - Girl Of My Heart / My Baby Doll (Dig 135)

The Glens (2)
1960 - A Little Less Talk / Cherish My Love (Laitini 6666/Sudden 104)

 

Biography :

In 1957, The Feathers with out Johnny Staton (Rene Beard, Karl White, Cleo White, and Roy Allen) then became the Gladiators, releasing "My Baby Doll"/"Girl Of My Heart" on Johnny Otis' Dig label in March 1957 . In 1960, with second tenor Billy Mann in place of Roy Allen, they recorded as the Glens for Laitini ("Cherish My Love"/"A Little Less Talk". That record was re-released on Sudden in the following year.
http://www.uncamarvy.com/Feathers/feathers.html


Songs :

The Gladiators (1)


Girl Of My Heart /  My Baby Doll

The Glens (2)

    
Cherish My Love                                 A Little Less Talk

 ...

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