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The Val-Tones aka The Baltineers

Posted on by dion1

 

The Baltineers (Baltimore, Maryland)
aka The Val-Tone

 

Personnel :

Percy Cosby (Lead)

William Kennedy

Thomas Smith

Joseph Wiggins

 

Discography :

The Val-Tones
1955 - Tender Darling / Siam Sam (DeLuxe 6084)

The Baltineers
1956 - Moments Like This / New Love (Teenage 1000)
1956 - Tears In My Eyes / Joe's Calypso (Teenage 1002)

 

Biography :

Originally from Baltimore, Maryland, The Val-Tones were discovered by Henry Stone, DeLuxe A&R man while they were working a club in Miami, Florida. The members Were Percy Cosby (Lead), William Kennedy, Thomas Smith, And Joseph Wiggins. The Act has been together for about three years and have been touring the country from border to border and coast to coast. The Quartet cut "Tender Darling" b/w "Siam Sam" for the Deluxe Label.

   

The Val-tones change their name to the Baltineers and recorded four sides for The Teenage Label owned by Bill "Bass" Gordon and Ben Smith . Bill "Bass" Gordon, recorded with the Colonials for the Gee label in 1954. He began the Teenage label in New York in 1955. The label, Black-owned and operated, was one of the rarities among the independant labels in the mid-1950s.
Thanks to Marv Goldberg

 

Songs :

The Val-Tones

  
Tender Darling                              Siam Sam



The Baltineers

  
Moments Like This                                      New Love       


Tears In My Eyes / Joe's Calypso


...

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The Seniors (5) aka The Angelenos ? and The Angeiinos ?

Posted on by dion1

The Seniors (5) aka The Angelenos ?

The Seniors (5) (Los Angeles, CA.)
aka The Angelenos ?
aka The Angeiinos ? 

 

Personnel :

Rudy Ray Moore

?

 

Discography :

The Seniors (5)
1960 ~ Hully Gully Fever (And The Flu Bug Too) / Pitter Patter Heart (Kent 342)
1960 - My Soul / Emily (The Turks) (Ball 001) 

The Angelinos
1961 - On An Island / As Long As I Have You (Peepers 2824( (first pressing)

The Angelenos
1961 – Don’t Cry Baby / As Long As I Have You (Peepers 2824) (second pressing)
1961 - Hully Gully Fever / Come On Baby (Peepers 2827) (first pressing)

Bobby Lawrence & The Angelenos
1962 - Hully Gully Fever / Come On Baby (Peepers 2827) (second pressing)

 

 

Biography :

Rudy Ray Moore born March 17, 1937 in Fort Smith, Arkansas recorded some songs for Federal Records in the early 1950s. The most famous of these recording sessions is "Step it up and go." Although Moore's singing career didn't hit the big time, he did deliver some truly great soulful rock n' roll songs in a similar vein of Richard Berry. Moore moved to Los Angeles, California in 1959. Several more singles were released by various labels, including his own Vermont Records, with Moore performing either as a solo artist or with other vocal groups like The Seniors.

The Seniors (5) aka The Angelenos ?   The Seniors (5) aka The Angelenos ?
Rudy Ray Moore                                                                                                                     

In 1960, with The Seniors Rudy Ray Moore recorded "Hully Gully Fever (And The Flu Bug Too)" b/w "Pitter Patter Heart" On Kent records and  "My Soul" on Ball. In 1961 we find the same version of "Hully Gully Fever" by The Angelenos also from los angeles. It may be possible that this is the same group with Rudy Ray Moore replaced by Bobby Lawrence...



Songs :
(updated by Hans-Joachim) 


The Seniors (5)

  
           Hully Gully Fever                                   My Soul                


Pitter Patter Heart

The Angelinos


On An Island


The Angelenos

  
Hully Gully Fever                          Don't Cry Baby

  
As Long As I Have You                         Come On Baby       




...

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The Inspirators (1) aka The Five Stars (1)

Posted on by dion1

The Inspirators (1) aka The Five Stars (1) 

The Inspirators (1) (Brooklyn, New York)
aka The Five Stars (1)

 

Personnel :

Cleo Perry (Lead)

William Massey (First tenor)

Clifton Johnson (Second Tenor)

Barney Fields (Baritone)

Buster Boyce (Bass)

 

Discography :

The Inspirators (1)
1955 - If Loving You Is Wrong / Three Sixty (Treat 502)
1958 - Starlight Tonight / Oh What A Feeling  (Old Town 1053)

The Five Stars (1)
1955 - We Danced In The Moonlight / Let's Fall In Love [as the 5 Stars] (Treat 505)

 

Biography :

The Inspirators were among the myriad doo wop groups to emerge from Brooklyn's Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood. According to Marv Goldberg's profile in the March 1997 issue of Discoveries, lead Cleo Perry, first tenor William Massey, second tenor Clifton Johnson, baritone Barney Fields, and bass Buster Boyce were all high-school students when they began their collaboration in 1949. Inspired by local heroes including the Velours and the Strangers, the Inspirators were a regular presence on the Brooklyn club circuit and placed second during their lone appearance at the Apollo Theater's renowned amateur showcase, but their career remained stuck in neutral until the mid-'50s, when they became fixtures of the neighborhood surrounding New York's famed songwriting capital the Brill Building. While harmonizing on the street corner, the quintet captured the attention of Treat Records general manager Larry Newton, who extended a contract offer.

The Inspirators (1) aka The Five Stars (1)    The Inspirators (1) aka The Five Stars (1)

The Inspirators' debut single, "If Loving You Is Wrong," hit retail in April 1955 but attracted little attention. For reasons unknown, Newton credited the follow-up, "Let's Fall in Love," to the Five Stars, but it too failed to catch on at radio. The Inspirators returned to Treat to cut several additional sessions, all of which remain unreleased. Newton finally terminated the group's contract in early 1958, and at mid-year their final single, "Starlight Tonight," appeared on the Old Town label. Its failure essentially spelled the Inspirators' demise, although Perry later toured clubs and the Catskills as a solo act, cutting singles for Dot under the aliases Lee Perry and Perry Lee. ~ Jason Ankeny

 

Songs :

The Inspirators (1)

  
If Loving You Is Wrong                                Three Sixty       

  
 Starlight Tonight                             Oh What A Feeling

The Five Stars (1)

  
We Danced In The Moonlight                    Let's Fall In Love            


...

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The Modern Ink Spots aka The Cardinals (4) aka The Equadors

Posted on by dion1

The Cardinals (4) aka The Equadors aka aka The Modern Ink Spots 

Top : O.Drummond, B.Davis, M.Robinson & R. Grant - 

Bottom : R.Foreman, A.Turner & L. Thomas

 

 The Modern Ink Spots (Philadelphia, PA)
aka The Cardinals (4) aka The Equadors




Personnel :

Al Turner (Lead)

Oscar Drummond (First Tenor)

Rilly Foreman (Second Tenor)

Lynn Thomas (Baritone)

Reginald Grant (Bass)

Mitchell Robinson (Guitar)

Billy Davis (Drums)





Discography :

The Equadors

Single:
1958 - Sputnik Dance / A Vision (RCA EPA 4286)
Ep :
1958 - Sputnik Dance / I'll Be The One / A Vision / Stay A Little Longer (RCA EPA 4286)

The Modern Ink Spots
1962 - Spotlight Dance / Together (In Your Arms) (Rust 5052)

The Cardinals (4)
1963 - Why Don't You Write Me / Sh-Boom (Rose 835)

 

 


Biography :

Philadelphia R&B group the Equadors formed in 1955. According to Marv Goldberg's profile in the February 1999 issue of Discoveries, lead Al Turner, first tenor Oscar Drummond, second tenor Rilly Foreman, baritone Lynn Thomas, and bass Reginald Grant were all high-school friends born and raised in the same North Philly neighborhood. Originally dubbed the Chants, the quartet typically performed alongside accompanists Mitchell Robinson on guitar and Billy Davis on drums, eventually making them full-time members of the roster. Local real estate salesman Larry Kerrin soon agreed to manage the Chants, landing them a plum gig in New Jersey opening for Ray Charles and Pigmeat Markham. The exposure nevertheless failed to launch the group to the next level, and in mid-1956 they began appearing as the Equadors, replacing Kerrin with WHAT DJ Lloyd "Fatman" Smith. Upon signing with the Jolly Joyce Booking Agency, the group landed a record deal with RCA Victor, and in early 1958 traveled to New York City to record a four-song session issued in full a month later.

The Cardinals (4) aka The Equadors aka aka The Modern Ink Spots    The Cardinals (4) aka The Equadors aka aka The Modern Ink Spots
                                                                                              King Curtis

The EP format actually hampered the Equadors' chances at radio, where the conventional single reigned supreme, and although the lead track, "Sputnik Dance" (featuring the great King Curtis on saxophone), was subsequently reissued with flip side "A Vision," the damage was done. The Equadors nevertheless performed the single on American Bandstand, and toured the East Coast on a bill with Frankie Lymon and Paul Anka. In early 1960 Jolly Joyce execs rechristened the Equadors the Modern Ink Spots in a scheme to position the group for the supper-club circuit. The ploy was a success, with gigs at upper-crust nightspots like the famed Peppermint Lounge soon to follow. Although their repertoire now consisted of the usual ballads and standards, the Modern Ink Spots gradually worked some of their old R&B material back into their sets.

The Cardinals (4) aka The Equadors aka aka The Modern Ink Spots    The Cardinals (4) aka The Equadors aka aka The Modern Ink Spots

Baritone/tenor Gary Evans joined the lineup in 1962, around the same time drummer Davis left the group. His replacement, Claude Higgs, signed on in time to cut the lone Modern Ink Spots single, the Rust release "Spotlight Dance." Prior to a 1963 booking in Quebec, the Modern Ink Spots learned of a rival group with the same name already touring Canada -- after another quick change, they traveled north as the Cardinals, and under that moniker recorded "Why Don't You Write Me" for the Rose imprint. In the final months of their career they again performed as the Modern Ink Spots, but split in 1965 when Turner signed on with the Philadelphia Police Department.
http://www.uncamarvy.com/Equadors/equadors.html

 

 


Songs :

The Equadors

  
Sputnik Dance                           I'll Be The One

  
        A Vision                                   Stay A Little Longer



The Modern Ink Spots


  
Spotlight Dance                      Together (In Your Arms)


 


The Cardinals (4)


  
Why Don't You Write Me                                Sh-Boom
          








….

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The Five Dapps aka The Dapps

Posted on by dion1



The Dapps (Detroit)
aka The Five Dapps


Personnel :

Johnnie Mae Matthews (Lead)

James Bennett (Lead)

George Wooden

Emry Franklin (Guitarist)

Albert Williams


Discography :

The Five Dapps
1958 - You're So Unfaithful / Do Wop A Do (Brax 208)

Johnnie Mae Matthews & The Dapps
1959 - Dreamer / Indian Joe (Northern 3727 )
1959 - Mr Fine / Some Day (Chet Oliver)  (Northern 3729)


Biography :

Celebrated as the "Godmother of Detroit Soul," Johnnie Mae Matthews was born December 31, 1922, in Bessemer, AL.  When she was 12 the family relocated to New Jersey, and in 1947 Matthews alone moved to Detroit, where she married and raised a family, largely limiting her musical aspirations to singing and playing piano at home. In 1957 she joined a local quintet called the Five Dapps  and eventually recorded her first 45 in 1958. It was released on the Brax label, a short lived enterprise funded by local realtor George Braxton.

  

Songwriter James Bennett sang lead on Do Wop A Do - a Chuck Berry styled Rock n' Roll number complete with guitar breaks. Johnnie Mae took over on the slower flip side, a jazzy-blues song titled You're So Unfaithful. The other three Dapps were  George Wooden, guitarist Emry Franklin and Albert Williams, who had the soubriquet, "Fruit". Later in 1958, Matthews formed her own record label, dubbed the Northern Recording Company, so named in honor of the popular brand of toilet tissue. Headquartered in an office at 2608 Blaine, just a few blocks from her home, she launched the imprint on just $85 borrowed from her husband's paycheck from the Ford Motor Company, in the process becoming one of the very first African-American women to own and operate her own label.


The Distants

With sessions typically recorded at either nearby Special Studio or radio station WCHB, Northern launched largely as a vehicle for Matthews' own performing career. Its premiere release, 1959's "Dreamer," was credited to Johnnie Mae Matthews & the Dapps, while the follow-up, "Mr. Fine," featured as its flip side "Someday," a solo turn by local singer Chet Oliver. She went on to manage the "The Distants" who were later renamed "The Temptations", Northern Recording Company later issued their debut single "Come On".

 

 

 

Songs :
(updated by Hans-Joachim) 

The Five Dapps

   
You're So Unfaithful                         Do Wop A Do

 Johnnie Mae Matthews & The Dapps

 
Mr. Fine / Some Day

 

 

...

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The Rip-Chords (1)

Posted on by dion1

The Rip-Chords (1) 

The Rip-Chords (1) (Chicago, IL)

 Personnel :

Leon Arnold (Lead / First Tenor)

John Gillespie (Alto)

George Vinyard (First Tenor)

David Hargrove (Second Tenor)

Lester Martin (Bass)



Discography :

The Knights Of Rhythm
Unreleased
1955 - Forever Loving You (Vee-Jay)
1955 - Lorrie (Vee-Jay)

The Rip-Chords (1)
1956 - I Love You The Most /  Let's Do The Razzle Dazzle  (Abco 105)

Leon Arnold
1961 - But, Goodbye / Here's To The Girl (Wes 7751)

 

Biography :

Chicago doo wop quintet the Rip-Chords formed in 1954 -- according to Marv Goldberg's profile in the April 1979 issue of Goldmine -- lead tenor/songwriter Leon Arnold, first tenor George Vinyard, second tenor David Hargrove, alto John Gillespie, and bass Lester Martin first performed as the Five Knights of Rhythm. Upon signing with Ted Daniels, a local impresario who also guided the careers of the Calvaes and the Five Thrills, the Five Knights of Rhythm cut a record deal with the Vee-Jay label, in the summer of 1955 cutting a split session with the El Dorados; in truth, however, Vee-Jay was most interested in Arnold's compositional prowess, and while the label never released the group's session, it later issued as an El Dorados cover of Arnold's "Forever Loving You." (His "Lights Are Low" subsequently appeared on another El Dorados disc as well.)

The Rip-Chords (1)   The Rip-Chords (1)

The experience upset the Knights so much that they rechristened themselves the Rip-Chords before signing to the local independent label Abco to issue their official debut single "Let's Do the Razzle Dazzle" in 1956 -- when the record barely registered on Chicago radio, the group dissolved. Arnold resurfaced in 1961 with a solo single on the tiny Wes label before quitting the music business for good.

http://www.uncamarvy.com/Ripchords/ripchords.html

 


Songs :

The Rip-Chords (1)


I Love You The Most /  Let's Do The Razzle Dazzle


...

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The Pelicans (1) aka The Kidds (1)

Posted on by dion1

The Pelicans (1)  aka The Kidds (1)

The Pelicans (1)  (New Orleans)
aka The Kidds (1)

 

Personnel :

Walter Lewis

Willie Hannah

Carl Ledbetter

Wardell Brown

 

Discography :

The Pelicans (1)
Single :
1954 - Chimes / Ain't Gonna Do It (Imperial 5307)
Unreleased :
1954 - Miss Lucy (Imperial)
1954 - Down In Mexico ((Imperial)

The Kidds (1)
1955 - I Won't Be Back / You Broke My Heart (Post 2003)
1955 - Drunk, Drunk, Drunk / Are You Forgetting Me (Imperial 5335)

Wee Willie Wayne bb The Kidds (1) (Uncredited)
1955 - I Remember / Travelin' Mood (Solo) (Imperial 5355)

 

Biography :

Vocal group from New Orleans, The Group consisted of Walter Lewis, Willie Hannah, Carl Ledbetter and Wardell Brown. Their tracks were from a session of eight songs (IM-755 to IM-762) recorded by The Pelicans in Los Angeles on August 20 1954 . Tracks were released variously as by the Pelicans or as by The Kidds but they were the same group.

 

Songs :

The Kidds (1)

  
 You Broke My Heart / I Won't Be Back            Drunk, Drunk, Drunk / Are You Forgetting Me

The Pelicans (1)

  
Chimes / Ain't Gonna Do It                          Miss Lucy           


Down In Mexico

Wee Willie Wayne bb The Kidds (1) (Uncredited)


I Remember / Travelin' Mood (Solo)

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The Larktones

Posted on by dion1

The Larktones

 The Larktones (Queens, NY)

 

Personnel :

Leroy Parrish (Lead)

Jimmy Tyler

Lou Courtney

Chambers

 

Discography :

1958 - Nosy Neighbors / Why Are You Tearing Us Apart (Riki 140)
1958 - The Letter / Rockin' Swingin' Man (ABC 9909)

 

Biography :

The Larktones' complete ouput were two singles in 1958: the first on Rik and the second, 'The Letter'/'Rockin', Swingin' Man', surprisingly on ABC-Paramount (9909). Leroy Parrish sang Lead with the Larktones originated out of projects of Rockaway Queens NY. The main group from Rockaways was Leroy Parrish, Lou Courtney, Jimmy Tyler and Chambers.

 

Songs :
(updated by Hans-Joachim) 


   
The Letter                       Why Are You Tearing Us Apart

    
Nosy Neighbors                              Rockin' Swingin' Man


...

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The Bi-Tones

Posted on by dion1

The Bi-Tones (New Rochelle, New-York)

 

Personnel :

Joey Amato

Joe Ferrara

 

Discography :

Singles :
1960 - Beatnik Girl / Oh, How I Love You So (Bluejay 1000)
1960 - Once In Awhile (The Chimes) / Oh How I Love You So (Tag 444)

Unreleased :
N/A - In My Lonely Room
N/A - Jeanette, Jeanette

 

Biography :

The Del Satins started out as The Jokers, with Joey Amato singing lead. Joey went on to other things in the music business, and later came back as their guitar player.


The Del Satins  : Tommy Ferrara, Richie Greene, Stanley Ziska, Freddy Ferrara & Leslie Cauchi (Joey Amato on guitar)

In 1960, Joey Amato Cut four song with Fred and Tom Ferrara's younger brother, Joe.  Two songs are released on Bluejay records under the name of the Bi-Tones.



Songs :

   
Oh, How I Love You So                              Beatnik Girl

   
In My Lonely Room                                Jeanette, Jeanette

...

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The Belairs (5) aka The Four Bel-Aires (1)

Posted on by dion1


The Belairs (5) (Georgetown, D.C.)
aka The Four Bel-Aires (1)

 

Personnel :

Alfred "Nookie" Robinson (First Tenor)

Warren Ricks (Second Tenor)

Robert "Slick" Russell (Bariton)

Vernon Ricks (Bass)

 

Discography :

The Four Bel-Aires (1)
1958 - Where Are You / Tell Me Why (X-tra 113)

The Belairs (5)
1963 -  Where Are You / Tell Me Why (Time SQ 23)

 

Biography :

The start of the 4 Bel-Aires was at the Mt. Zion United Methodist Church, in Georgetown, D.C. There, in 1955, bass Vernon Ricks and baritone Robert "Slick" Russell started harmonizing on R&B songs when they worked in the kitchen on Sunday mornings. They were eventually joined by first tenor Alfred "Nookie" Robinson (whose name is usually shown, incorrectly, as "Albert").
Finally, when they sounded like they had a shot at fame and fortune, Vernon brought in his cousin, second tenor Warren Ricks, and the 4 Bel-Aires were born. Although there were only four singers, a fifth member was guitarist Mike Jackson. The guys ranged in age from 13 (Warren) to 21 (Alfred).

   

There was a local Saturday evening radio program in D.C. called Teenarama (on WOOK, 1340 AM; this was before it moved to TV in 1963). A couple of teenagers (Calvin Hackett and Marjorie Bowman) acted as DJs, spinning hit records and inviting local groups to perform. Sometime around late 1957, the invitation was extended to the 4 Bel-Aires (who sang their arrangement of the Mello-Moods' "Where Are You"). Their singing impressed the "adult" member of Teenarama, Al "Big Boy" Jefferson, a DJ who had a nightly WOOK show, broadcast from the front window of Waxie Maxie Silverman's Quality Music store (located around the corner from the Howard Theater). In 1962, Ben Smith sold all his X-Tra masters to Slim Rose of Times Square Records. That's the reason that "Where Are You" and "Tell Me Why" appeared on Times Square in November 1963 (although the group was listed as the "Belairs").
http://www.uncamarvy.com/4BelAires/4belaires.html


Songs :

   
Where Are You                                     Tell Me Why 


...

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