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The G-Notes aka The Gino Sisters aka Jeff & The Gino's

Posted on by dion1


The G-Notes (Thousand Oaks, Ca)
aka The Gino Sisters aka  Jeff & The Gino's




Personnel:

Linda Gino

Nancy Gino

Colleen Gino




Discography :

The G-Notes
1958 - I Would  / Ronnie (My Teenage Dream) (Tender 510/Jackpot 48000)
1959 - Broken Down Merry-Go-Round / Johnny, Johnny, Johnny (Guyden 2012)
1959 - If They Only Knew / Say You're Mine (Form 102)

The Gino Sisters
1958 - Be My Special Valentine (with Carol Kurman) / Valentine Rock (inst) (Hart 1691-51)
1958 - Gone You're Gone (?)

Jeff & The Gino's
1963 - Let me out / One Summer In a Million (Mercury 72138)

Frankie Ervin (bb The G-Notes & Ricky Page)
1959 -  Believe Me/Why Don't You Go? (Guyden 2010)



Biography :

The G-Notes was a female band comprised of the Gino Sisters: Linda (12 yrs) , Nancy (10 yrs) and the youngest Colleen (3 yrs).  They are from California where their father Sam Gino had built a recording studio in Thousand Oaks.  


The G.Notes with Dick Clark

"I Would " /" Ronnie" Original Issue on Tender 510  from mid 1958 Both sides credited to George Motola and Ricky Page  and Eddie Cochran on guitar, recorded at Goldstar studio (Hollywood). "Johnny, Johnny, Johnny " on their second single  is again credited to Motola-Page and again With Eddie Cochran on guitar.  Cochran liked the song so much he cut it himself re-titled "Jeanie, Jeanie, Jeanie".

 

The Trio made many television appearances. In February 1959, a Frankie Ervin record appeared on Philadelphia's Guyden label, owned by Harry Finfer .

  
Frankie Ervin                                                           Ricky Page

George Motola told him they had some hot tunes and gave him $25 a side. The two songs, recorded in Los Angeles, were "Believe Me" and "Why Don't You Go?". The backup was provided by Ricky Page and the G-Notes .

  
Colleen and Ricky Nelson                                                      

In 1963, The two older sisters Linda and Nancy cut a single  for Mercury with  a young boy as "Jeff & The Gino's". Linda and Nancy were later members of a singing group called The Youngfolk which was comprised of 7 members (5 male and 2 female) between the age of 18 and 20 years old. They performed in coffee houses in and around Hollywood, CA and appeared on several television variety shows. 


The Youngfolk
Colleen Gino, the youngest of the G Notes later sang with Kenny Cetera (younger brother of Peter Cetera from the popular band Chicago).  In 1982 the two recorded the song “Are you ready for me” which was produced by Colleen’s father Sam Gino and appears on the B side of Colleen’s single titled “Don’t stop now” on the Vistone Records label.  Among Colleen’s collection of records are the two singles “Soft Café” and “New York Rebel” which were recorded in Rome, Italy and appeared on the JDC record label located in San Pedro, CA.
http://www.rockabilly.nl/references/messages/ricki_page.htm
http://www.uncamarvy.com/FrankieErvin/frankieervin.html



Songs :

The G-Notes

     
Ronnie                                        I Would                      Say You're Mine

   
Johnny Johnny Johnny" / "Broken Down Merry Go Round     If They Only Knew


The Gino Sisters


Gone You're Gone


Frankie Ervin (bb The G-Notes & Rickie Page)

  
Believe Me                                       Why Don't You Go?

 

 

 

....

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The Velvetones (2)

Posted on by dion1

The Velvetones (2) (Los Angeles)
aka The Velvitones

 

Personnel :

Eddie Lewis (Tenor/Lead)

Bryant Whitfield

Vernon Garrett

Tommy Williams

 

Discography :

The Velvitones
1959 - A Prayer at Gettysburg / Little Girl I Love You So (Milmart 113)

The Velvetones (2)
1957 - Glory Of Love / I Love Her So (Aladdin 3372)
1957 - I Found My Love / Melody Of Love  (Aladdin 3391)
1960 - My Every Thought / Little Girl I Love You So  (Aladdin 3463)

   

 

Biography :

Early in 1957, Eddie Mesner of Eddie and Leo Mesner's Aladdin Record Company, decided to cut a vocal group rendition of "The glory of love," a re-worked song dating back to Andy Kirk, made popular in 1949 by Larry Darnell in its original form then entitled "I'll get along somehow."  For the session Mesner rounded up Bryant Whitfield  and four other L.A. singers creating a kind of "thrown together" crew, a practice common in those days.

 Three of the other four singers are Vernon Garrett (the same as had a hit with "Without you" on Ventura in 1969) , Eddie Lewis who sang lead and took care of narration and Tommy Williams. All other Aladdin titles are by a Velvetones group comprised of other singers. However the group released a single on the Milmart label in 1958. The name of the group is spelled differently due to a typo on the Milmart pressing. They are the Velvitones with "Little Girl I Love You So" (from the aladdin 3372) and "A Prayer at Gettysburg" with Eddie Lewis at the narration.

 

Songs :

The Velvetones (2)

     
Glory Of Love                  I Love Her So                      I Found My Love

     
Melody Of Love                 My Every Thought                Little Girl I Love You So

The Velvitones


A Prayer at Gettysburg

 .....

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The Cables

Posted on by dion1


(L to R) : Don McCarthy, Chris Kendall, Larry Dolgin & Jim Britt

The Cables (San Francisco)

 

Personnel :

Don McCarthy (Lead Tenor)

Larry Dolgin (Second Tenor)

Jim Britt (Baritone)

Chris Kendall (Bass)

 

Discography :

1961  - Choo Choo / Moonlight And Roses (Bring Mem'ries Of You) (RCA 47-7839)

Biography :

Vocal & instrumental group from San Francisco, the Cables were formed by leader of the group, Don McCarthy (tenor), bass is Chris Kendall, while Jim Britt and Larry Dolgin are Baritone & second Tenor. The Cables recorded two sides for RCA Victor in Los Angeles. Their "Moonlight And Roses" made the charts in the Southwest . The reverse was a satire on rock and roll mumbling and gets a big play on teen-age dance shows (guitar solo on Choo-Choo by Howard Roberts).

The Cables  

The Cables appeared at Fack's No. 2 in San francisco in 1959, subsequent bookings at the best rooms in the Northwest included Seattle's Magic In, the early Bird of Spokane, Vancouver's Frontier Room and the Glengarry Club in Edmonton. A Seven Week booking in the big show room at the New Frontier in Las Vegas, was followed by an outstanding succes at the Chi-Chi in Palm Spings.


Songs :


Choo Choo

 

.....

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The Teenangels (2)

Posted on by dion1

The Teenangels (2) (Mobile, Alabama)

 

Personnel :

Patricia Patrick

Terry Everett

Bonnie Daugherty

 

Discography :

1963 - Tell Me My Love / Ain't Gonna Let You (Sun 388)

 

Biography :

Jimmie Otto Rogers ( son of Bluebird country star Jesse Rogers and cousin of yodelin' Jimmie Rogers) came to Sun with Luke McDaniel.  In 1958, Rogers went back to Mobile, Alabama to work as a songwriter and independent producer. He sold masters to Top Rank, Roulette, Dot, and other labels, and in April 1963 he sold two acts to Sun, the Teenangels and the Quintones. The Teenangels consisted of Patricia Patrick, Terry Everett, and Bonnie Daugherty, and they recorded two songs in March 1961 at Roger's Melotone Studio. The record wasn't officially released.

   
 
Sun pressed promo copies, but Rogers was dissatisfied the promotional effort Sun was putting into it and grabbed the masters back.  The Teenagels were clearly fashioned after The Fleetwood's, a best-selling act in 1961. In fact, the Teenangels even look like the Fleetwoods. By late 1963, when the disc would have appeared, the Fleetwoods sound was well past its prime and Sun's promotional efforts were best described as minimal.
http://www.706unionavenue.nl/80658542


Songs :

    
Tell Me My Love                               Ain't Gonna Let You

 .... 

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The Holidays (2)

Posted on by dion1

The Holidays (2) (Oakland, Ca.)


Personnel :

Ken Pleasents (Lead/Tenor)

John Foster (Lead/Tenor)

Elton Stevens (Tenor)

Stan Harris (Second Tenor)

Isaah Brown  (Baritone)


Discography :

Singles :
1958 - Never Go To Mexico / [Johnny George - Music City Hop (instrumental)] (Music City 818)
1961 - Got My Letter / The New Trucking (Lyons 107)
1963 - Send Back My Love / Deacon Brown Vs. The Devil (Galaxy714)

Unreleased :
1958 - I'm Going (Music City)
1958 - Station L.O.V.E.  (Music City)
1958 - Hoochie Coochie Man (Music City)
1958 - Angel iIn My Heart (Music City)
1958 - Church Bells Will Ring (Music City)
1958 - PS My Darling (Music City)
1958 - Wouldn't Believe (Music City)




Biography :

The Holidays were formed in 1955 by Kenneth Pleasents at Oakland High. In 1957, The Holidays were composed of Ken Pleasents, Tenor and lead; Elton Stevens, Tenor; John Foster, Lead Tenor; Stan Harris, Second Tenor and Isaah Brown , Baritone. The group went to Ray Dobard at Music City. They stood in Dobard's makeshift back room studio with its rag-covered walls and recorded five songs, "I'm going,""Station L.O.V.E.,""Hoochie Coochie Man," the ballad "Angel" , and a novelty which sounded like an answer record to the Coasters' waxing of "Down in Mexico" without the Latin beat entitled "Never go to Mexico."


Elton Stevens, Ken Pleasents, John Foster, Stan Harris & Isaah Brown

Some weeks later when the record came out, the group rushed down to the pressing plant on East 14th Street in Oakland, expecting to pick up a 45 rpm record with two of their own numbers on it, only to find a novelty song on one side ("Never go to Mexico") and an instrumental, "Music City Hop" . By 1961, the group was being managed by Fat Daddy Lyons, founder and proprietor of the Lyons label on which blues soloist Eddie Foster is best remembered. Fat Daddy recorded the Holidays with Wylie Trass who also waxed for Lyons as a single.

  

The group's one Lyons record, "Got my letter," was a pretty ballad marred only by the cheap pressing and poor fidelity. Anguished lead vocals and wailing harmonies prevailed. "The new trucking," the jump tune chosen for the reverse, was a conscious effort to climb on the prevailing dance-craze bandwagon and is significant because good close-harmony singing is certainly better demonstrated here than on other more melodic Holidays recordings. In 1963, the Holidays cut their third and final record for Galaxy entitled "Send Back My Love."


Songs :
(updated by Hans-Joachim) 

 
     
Never Go To Mexico                   Got My Letter                 Send Back My Love

       
Deacon Brown Vs. The Devil        Station L.O.V.E                Hoochie Coochie Man

       
Angel In My Heart            Church Bells Will Ring             PS My Darling


Wouldn't Believe
 

_

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The Slades aka The Spades (1)

Posted on by dion1

 

The Slades  (Austin, Texas)
aka The Spades (1)

 

Personnel :

Don Burch

John Goeke

Tommy Kasper

B.Doyle (Bass)

 

Discography :

The Spades (1)
1957 - Baby / You Mean Everything To Me (Domino 200/100/ Liberty 55118)

The Slades
Singles:
1958 - You Cheated / The Waddle (Domino 500)
1958 - No Time / You Gambled (Domino 800)
1959 - Summertime / You Must Try (Domino 1000)
1961 - Just You / It's Better To Love (Domino 901)
1961 - Take My Heart / It's Your Turn (Domino 906)
Unreleased :
N/A - I've Had It (Domino)
N/A - Ling Ting Tong (Domino)
N/A - Little Star (Domino)
N/A - So Tough (Domino)
N/A - Gee Whiz (Domino)
N/A - In The Still Of The Night (Domino)

Joyce Webb & The Slades
1958 - After You've Gone / Right Here (Domino 300)

Joyce Harris  & The Slades
1961 - I Cheated / Do You Know What It's Like To Be Lonesome (Joce Harris)(Domino 905)

 

Biography :

Don Burch, Bobby Doyle, John Goeke, and Tommy Kasper -- formed at Lamar High School in Austin TX, later adding Jimmy Davis. Signing with the fledging Domino Records after graduation, they put college on hold, much to their parents' chagrin. In 1957, Burch's composition "You Mean Everything to Me" started making noise.  Unable to distribute nationally, Domino leased it to Dot Records for $600. On both Domino and Liberty Records they were the Spades, but the name offended people, so Liberty pressed more copies and renamed them the Slades without informing anybody.


Joyce Webb & The Slades

The fellows originally picked Spades after the playing card suit; it had nothing to do with race or trying to be black. The Spades, a white group, had a Black/Chicano sound. "You Cheated" became their biggest hit. Its flip "The Waddle, " a dance song, was the original plug side. Joyce Webb was also on the Slades "You Cheated"- she was singing the Doo Wop   in  the background! She continued singing backups on many Domino sessions and had her  own  group the "Debs". The Slades  recorded at the University of Texas' Radio House, and later at Austin Recording. Bobby Doyle, a blind child prodigy, played standup bass on the sessions. Domino started with 11 people who pooled resources for financing.

  

Jocks thought little of Domino's pick, but loved "You Cheated" and played the aching ballad. Once again, bigger companies clamored for a lease deal, but Domino refused, upset at the small amount received before, and furious that the sales plummeted under Liberty's imprint. Domino's refusal prompted a distributor to provide funds for George Motola, head of Tender Records, to cut a cover version. Motola assembled a group of Los Angeles R&B singers and cloned the recording. Now you had two choices: the Slades, and the Shields.

  

 Tender leased the Shields' cover to Dot Records and it smoked the original -- zooming to number twelve, while the Slades' stalled at number 42 in 1958. The cover benefitted Domino, who also published the song. But the competition destroyed the Texas natives' shot at fame. "You Gambled" followed, it made Billboard's Hot Pics then died. In 1959, they released "Summertime" to deaf ears. They had no releases in 1960. "Just You" dropped in 1961, and later that year "Take My Heart" came and went unnoticed. A final release, "I Cheated" answered "You Cheated." Joyce Harris changed the lyrics and sang lead. Caucasian also, Harris developed her soulful singing style by hanging around blues musicians in her hometown, New Orleans. When the answer song failed, the guys called it a date. Only Davis had his heart in music, and their parents wanted them to quit.

  

Besides, they hated touring: in Arkansas, they practically got booed off the stage, and were only appreciated in West Texas. Kasper operates a business and has a computer degree. Burch is a family man and a grandfather; his son is a doctor. Goeke teaches at a Lutheran college. Davis drifts but stays around music. Harris lives in Bogalusa, LA. The company and Burch profited from "Mr. Blue, " a number one hit, because Dolton Records made the Fleetwoods' remake of "You Mean Everything to Me" the B-side.

The Domino Records Story, available on Ace Records, includes almost every Slades' recording, and some by other Domino artists. According to Lora Jane Richardson, an original owner "Ace didn't want the country songs the group cut." Domino forged on releasing records on Joyce Harris, the Daylighters, and others. You won't find "You Cheated" on many compilation albums. According to Richardson "the little checks (one arrived for $12.64) aren't worth all the paperwork you have to do."
http://www.colorradio.com/Slades.htm
http://www.colorradio.com/joyce_harris.htm

 

Songs :
 (Update By Hans-Joachim) 

The Spades (1)

  
Baby                          You Mean Everything To Me


The Slades

       
You Cheated                 The Waddle                        No Time 

       
You Gambled                       You Must Try                        Just You 
        
It's Better To Love                    Take My Heart                     It's Your Turn

      
Ling Ting Tong                       Little Star                          So Tough

  
Gee Whiz                        In The Still Of The Night


Joyce Harris  & The Slades


I Cheated

 

Joyce Webb & The Slades


After you've gone

 ...

 

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The Masters (4) aka The Symbols (2) aka The Beltones (1)

Posted on by dion1


(Beltones/Symbols) B. Brown, R. Brown, B.Cottman, A.Pope, C.Williams

The Symbols (2)  (Jamaica, Queens, New York)
aka The Beltones (1) aka The Masters (4)

 

Personnel :

Andrew Pope (Lead)

Clayton "Dickie" Williams(First Tenor)

Buster Cottman (Baritone)

Robert Brown(Bass)

Wilbur "Buzzy" Brown (Second Tenor)

 

Discography :

The Beltones (1)
1957 - I Talk To My Echo / Oof Goof (Hull 721)

The Symbols (2)
Unreleased:
1958 - Crying My Heart Out  (Old Town)
1958 - Lover, Lover, Lover  (Old Town)
1958 - Last Rose Of Summer  (Old Town)
1958 - Country Boy  (Old Town)

The Masters (4)
1961 - A Man Is Not Supposed To Cry / Look Out (End 1100)
1962 - Crying My Heart Out / I'm Searching(Le Sage 713/714)

 

Discography :

The Beltones were a product of the thriving Jamaica, Queens, doo wop community that also launched the Rivileers, the Deltairs, and the Five Sharps. According to Marv Goldberg's profile in the December 2000 issue of Discoveries, the quartet was founded in 1954 by lead Andrew Pope, first tenor Clayton "Dickie" Williams, baritone Herb Rooney, and bass Robert Brown -- the latter also moonlighted in rival vocal group the Love Larks, and when their career began taking off, Brown exited to join their ranks full-time.


The Love Larks

With new bass Alva Martin, the Beltones eventually signed to Hull Records, recording their debut single, "I Talk to My Echo," in the summer of 1956. For reasons unknown Hull did not issue the disc until the following spring, and when it predictably failed to generate much excitement, the label parted ways with the group. By that time, the Love Larks were no more, so Brown returned to the Beltones, prompting Martin's exit. Brown brought with him fellow Love Larks alum/second tenor Wilbur "Buzzy" Brown (no relation). Soon after, Rooney resigned, and with new baritone George "Buster" Cottman, the Beltones signed to the legendary Old Town label to cut a four-song session in the spring of 1958.

   
The Masters (4)  :B.Cotteman, H.Rooney, C.Williams, D.Banks, F.Turner)  

While the group mulled a name change to the Symbols, Hull got wind of the session and threatened a breach of contract suit, effectively rendering any moves moot. Old Town shelved the tapes, and although the Beltones continued touring the Queens live circuit for more than a year, in 1960 Pope was called to military duty, and "Buzzy" Brown quit soon after. The remaining trio convinced Rooney to return, adding lead David Banks and changing their name to the Masters. This lineup recorded the 1961 End Records effort "A Man Is Not Supposed to Cry," followed a year later by "Crying My Heart Out," originally written by Pope for the Old Town session. In 1962 the Masters dissolved and Rooney joined their sister group, the Masterettes, which as the Exciters later recorded the classic smash "Tell Him."
http://www.uncamarvy.com/Beltones/beltones.html

 

Songs :

The Masters (4)

  
A Man Is Not Supposed To Cry                 Look Out

  
Crying My Heart Out                         I'm Searching


The Beltones (1)

  
I Talk To My Echo                                 Oof Goof


The Symbols (2)

  
Crying My Heart Out                   Lover, Lover, Lover

  
Last Rose Of Summer                         Country Boy

 

.....

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The Everglades (1) aka The Go-Togethers ref The Ebbtides (5)

Posted on by dion1


    Charles Henderson, Johnny Johnson & Dave Bell - Top : Johnny Banks

The Everglades (1)  (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
aka The Go-Togethers ref The Ebbtides (5)

 

Personnel :

Johnny Banks

Charles Henderson

Dave Bell

Johnny Johnson

 

Discography :

The Ebbtides (5)
1956 - Only Be Mine / What's Your Name Dear (Teen 121)

Johnny Banks & The Everglades (1)
1961 - While Sitting In The Chapel / Do You Miss Me (BPV 112277)

The Everglades (1)
1962 - I Went To The S&S / Tell Me Pretty Baby (Brenne 502)

The Go-Togethers
1963 - Train / Time After Time (Coast 100)




Biography :

Charles Henderson began singing with fellow Ben Framklin High Scool. In 1955, Charles Henderson with Johnny Banks, Horace Adams, Robert Lee and Betty McCann formed a group, Following a year of tedious practice, Johnny Banks made the connection with Teen/Sound Records in 1956. At The Reco-Arts Studio , they cut " What's Your Name Dear" with "Only Be Mine". Appearances ensued, most arranged by manage rRobinson. The Baby Grang in Harlem, another in Reading, Pensylvania, the O.V Catto hall at 16th & Fitzwater near Center City, the Ice House in South Jersey, a sleek show at the uptown theater accompanying the Blue Notes the Channels & The Continentals..…


WDAS concert - Uptown Thheater (ca 1960)

Some years later, Dave Bell and Johnny Johnson replaced Horace Adams and and McCann. This reformed aggregation was christened the Everglades by Johnny Banks. Six years or so following their dustup with teen records, they found themselves on the doorstep of BVP Records.  The Everglades cut "While Sitting In The Chapel" /" Do You Miss Me". But the BVP platter wended its way to nowhere and the group cut another record for Brenne "I Went To The S&S" and "Tell Me Pretty Baby". The group have two other songs: "Train" and "Time After Time" released one year later on the Coast Label under the strange name "The Go-Togethers".

 

Songs :
(updated by Hans-Joachim) 

The Ebbtides (5)

  
Only Be Mine                              What's Your Name Dear

Johnny Banks & The Everglades (1)

  
While Sitting In The Chapel                      Do You Miss Me

 The Everglades (1)


I Went To The S & S / Tell Me Pretty Baby

The Go-Togethers


Train / Time After Time
  

...

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The Coquettes (2)

Posted on by dion1

The Coquettes (2) (New York)

 

Personnel :

Joann Bongiorno (Vocal/Accordion/Sax)

Ruth Russo (Vocal/Guitar/Trumpet/Banjo)

Carole Schneider (Vocal/Guitar/Trombone)

Karen Chanda (Vocal/Bass)

 

Discography :

1957 - Sidewalk Sweethearts / Ask Anyone Who Knows (Columbia 41059)
1958 - When We're All Through School / The Music Goes Round And Round (Columbia 41117)
1959 - I'm Making Believe / Won't Somebody Hear My Prayer (M-G-M 12820)
1960 - Somebody's Watching All The Time / Wedding Bells (M-G-M 12909)

 

Biography :

Vocal & Instrumental group from New York , variously a quartet or quintet. They were a popular lounge band throughout the '50s/'60s  and appeared in venues throughout the United States.   The Group cut two singles for Columbia and two others for MGM between 1957 and 1960. Joann Bongiorno, Ruth Russo and Carole Schneider wrote "Won't Somebody Hear My Prayer" for MGM.

   

This is the same group (with several members change) who had a minor hit in 1967, "I'll Release You," an answer to Engelbert Humperdinck's hit "Please Release Me.


Joann Bon & The Coquettes

Joan Bon (often credited as Joann Bon) and The Coquettes were a popular girl group  in the late 1960s, who cut five singles and two album for MTA between 1967 and 1969.

 

Songs :

  
I'm Making Believe                   Won't Somebody Hear My Prayer


Sidewalk / Sweethearts

 ......

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The Three Kays aka The Arnold Sisters aka The Three K's

Posted on by dion1

The Three Kays aka The Arnold Sisters aka The Three K's
Kathy, Kay & Karen

The Three Kays (Cincinatti, Ohio)
aka The Arnold Sisters aka The Three K's

 

Personnel:

Kathy Arnold

Kay Arnold

Karen Arnold

 

Discography :

Vicki Spencer bb The Three Kays
1961 - I Wait / Hello Mr. Dream (Fraternity 883)

The Three Kays aka The Arnold Sisters aka The Three K's

The Arnold Sisters   
1964 - Jelly Bean / Angel Laughter (Sound Stage 7)

The Three K's
1964 - Jelly Bean / Angel Laughter [Carousel 1001]

 

Biography :

The Three Kays were a vocal trio composed by Kathy, Kay and Karen Arnold. In MarCh/April  1961, Vickie Spencer was living in Florence Kentucky when she met the Arnolds while attending Boone County High School.  A day, she hear girls sing their harmony, Their voice quality is the same so upper and lower notes blend perfectly in a natural harmony. Vickie called their dad Verne Arnold  and asked permission to coach them. Vickie Spencer brought them along to sing background music for tunes she was recording for Fraternity Records in Cincenatti.  Some months later, at the age of 16 Vicki Spencer leaves for Hollywood and appeared as a featured performer in not one but two motion pictures with Dion and Chubby Checker. Those were Teenage Millionaire (with Jimmy Clanton) and Twist Around The Clock (with Clay Cole). The teen-age Arnolds (they range from 14 to 17) will continue to perform locally as The Three Kays, but it will be necessary to wait until 1964 for the girls to record two songs, "Jelly Bean" and Angel Laughter" released under two different labels... as well as under two different names: The Arnold Sisters and The Three K's.

 

Songs :

Vicki Spencer bb The Three Kays

  
Hello Mr. Dream                                      I Wait           

The Arnold Sisters

  
 Jelly Bean                                         Angel Laughter

...

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