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The Velquins aka The Vel-Quin Singers

Posted on by dion1

The Velquins aka The Vel-Quin Singers

The Velquins (St. Paul, Minn.)
aka The Vel-Quin Singers

 

Personnel :

John Stafford (Lead)

Eddie Ballard (Tenor)

Sylvester "Peachy" Eaves (Baritone)

Clarence "Huffy" Wright (Bass)

Allan Jones

 

Discography :

The Velquins (Valquins)
1959 - My Dear / Falling Star (Gaity 161/162)

Bobby Wharton & The Little Green Men  with The Vel-Quin Singers
1962 - I'll Cry / You Don't Believe Me (no group) (Golden Wing 3284)

George Davo bb the Velquins (Uncredited)
1958 - All Through With You / Candy Man (no group)  (North Star-2073)

 

Biography :

The Same St. Paul, Minnesota scene that brought us the Wisdoms also gave us Gaity labelmates the Velquins, who had started out in 1956 as the Cranes, then the Jades, and ultimately settling on the Velquins as their group name.

The Velquins aka  The Vel-Quin Singers
(L to R : John Stafford, Clarence "Huffy" Wright, Allan Jones, Eddie Ballard & Sylvester "Peachy" Eaves. Kneeling: Buzz Ransom

The Velquins used local rockers the Teen Kings as their backing band.  The Twin cities had fierce territorial rivalries amongst vocal groups but the Velquins were always welcome behind enemy lines. A University of Minnesota frat once asked them to sing a boiling pot at a jungle theme party! The Velquins unsuccessfully auditioned for both Chess and Vee-Jay in Chicago.

The Velquins aka The Vel-Quin Singers   The Velquins aka The Vel-Quin Singers

They did back George davo on his single "All through with you" on North Star, and recorded their own lone Gaity release "My Dear" / "Falling Star", bringing in Henry Jones of the Five Blind Boys to beef up their sound. All copies misspelled the group name as the Valquins. The Group sang also on "I'll Cry" by Bobby Wharton & The Little Green Men under the name of The Vel-Quin Singers.



Songs :

The Velquins

    
Falling Star                                       My Dear


Bobby Wharton & The Little Green Men  with The Vel-Quin Singers


I'll Cry

...

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The Smoothtones (1)

Posted on by dion1

The Smoothtones (1)
1953 - Kenny McMillan, Alfred Gaitwood, Joe Martin, Enoch Hale, Walter Lowry
Thanks to Liam

The Smoothtones (1) (Pittsburgh)

 

Personnel :

Alfred Gaitwood (Lead)

Enoch Hale (First Tenor)

Joe Martin (Second Tenor)

Walter Lowry (Baritone)

Kenny McMillan (Bass)

 

Discography :

1955 - Bring Back Your Love / No Doubt About It (Jem 412)

 

Biography :

The Smoothtones surfaced in 1953 in Pittsburgh. The lead, Alfred Gaitwood, was from Alabama and found himself in Pittsburgh with a U.S. Air Force unit. Gaitwood rounded up  Enoche Hale (First Tenor), Joe Martin (Second Tenor), Walter Lowry (Baritone), and Kenny McMillian (Bass). Gaitwood named the group the Smoothtones. Paul Ruffin was their manager.


L to R : Alfred Gaitwood,  Walter Lowry, Paul Ruffin (Manager), Bill powel (DJ), Kenny McMillan, Jud Hunter & Joe Martin

Hale was drafted in 1954 and was replaced by Jud Hunter at First Tenor. Through networking, Gaitwood met Lennie Martin, who ran the operations at Jem Records . (Martin would later be instrumental in forming Calico Records [Skyliners] and Robbie Records.) The Smoothtones recorded two sides for Jem in June 1955. Interestingly, these were the first black vocal group releases out of Pittsburgh. Early in 1956, Gaitwood was transferred to another air force base. Jud Hunter then brought Sylvester Brooks into the group at lead.

   The Smoothtones (1)

This altered group went back to Jem to record two more sides. Supposedly, they recorded the Gaitwood-penned "It's Too Late Now."  A pressing of this disc has never been seen. Jud Hunter, in an interview by Carl and Nancy Janusek, swore that this was released and that he saw the recording on wax. (This cannot be confirmed — perhaps it was never released.) It was later done by the Cufflinks on Dootone. Gaitwood was with the group at that time. With Gaitwood gone, the cohesiveness that once held the group together disappeared, and they disbanded in September 1956.
http://www.uncamarvy.com/Cufflinks/cufflinks.html



Songs :

  
Bring Back Your Love                         No Doubt About It




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Ronnie Booker & The Boardwalkers

Posted on by dion1

Ronnie Booker & The Boardwalkers
(L to R) Lany Ross, Leon Garrison, Andrew Sims, Billy Foster and Ronald Booker

Ronnie Booker & The Boardwalkers (Atlantic City, New Jersey)

 

Personnel :

Billy Foster (Tenor/Guitar)

Ronald Booker (Lead)

Leon Garrison (Tenor)

Lany Ross (Bass)

Andrew Sims (Baritone)

 

Discography :

Single :
1957- She Won't Go Steady / What'll I Do? (Rex 103)

Unreleased :
1957 - She's the Girl in My Dreams (Rex)

 

Biography :

Ronnie Booker & The Boardwalkers were a Vocal group from Atlantic City, N.J. composed by five singer  Ronnie Booker, William Foster, Andrew Sims, Leon Garrison and Lanny Ross. With their truly "resortish” monicker, and with not one member of the group over 23, the localites have cut a recording acclaimed by professional musicians and critics in March 1957.   The disc, "She Won't Go Steady" and “What Will I Do" demonstrates that talent of the versatile vocalists. "Steady" is a ballad involving trials and tribulations of a youth whose best girl won't go steady with him, and "What Will I Do," an up-tempo with a hard driving beat.

Ronnie Booker & The Boardwalkers

Booker is the lyricist and Foster writes the music, Garrison has also penned one of his own, "She's the Girl in My Dreams.” Booker sings lead, and Foster croons tenor and plays guitar. Though voung in years, "The Boardwalkers" have all had ample previous experience in the singing profession, Each boy got his start vocalizing in church choirs.

 

Songs :

  
She Won't Go Steady                                What'll I Do?     

...

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The Melodears

Posted on by dion1

The Melodears
(L to R) Millicent "Millie" Fitzgerald, Annette Chimento & Madeline "Maddy" Stone

The Melodears (Belmore, New York)

 

Personnel :

Annette Chimento

Madeline "Maddy" Stone

Millicent "Millie" Fitzgerald

 

Discography :

1958 - Charock  / Summer Romance  (Gone 5033)
1958 - It's Love Because / They Don't Say (Gone 5040)

 

Biography :

In 1958, Ed Portnoy and Stan Feldman, Ivy records, just overhead in love with their newest group, The Melodears. The Trio consists of Millicent "Millie" Fitzgerald, Annette Chimento  and Madeline "Maddy" Stone , Seniors at Wellington C. Mephan High school in Belmore. Though busy with school work and extra curricular activities, they still find time to practise every day and stay on the top of their class scholastically.

The Melodears   The Melodears

Their first on Gone, "Chamrock" was written and a & r’d by writer of "Wheel Of Fortune" and many other hits, George Weiss and produced by Portnoy and Feldman. Ivy Records was set up in Sept 57 by Stan Feldman & Ed Portnoy. It was based out of 1697 Broadway, New York. The label's 1st release was "it's Only You Dear" by the Deltairs.

The Melodears  The Melodears  The Melodears
The Melodears : Millie, Annette and Maddy

The pair didn't have too much success distributing their product so signed lease deals for it to come out on APT, Gone & Felsted . A second single was released by Gone in 1958 with "It's Love Because" b/w "They Don't Say".

 

Songs :

  
Charock                                          Summer Romance

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The Chandeliers (1) aka The Chandeliers Quintet

Posted on by dion1

The Chandeliers (1) (Midtown Kansas City, Missouri)
 aka The Chandeliers Quintet

 

Personnel :

Luther Rice (Tenor Lead)

William Watson (First & Second Tenor, Second Lead)

Reginald "Sandy" Johnson (First Tenor)

George Chambers (Second Tenor)

Jesse Watson (Bass)



Discography :

The Chandeliers Quintet
1958 - Blueberry Sweet / One More Step (Angle Tone 521)

The Chandeliers (1)
1958 - Blueberry Sweet / One More Step (Angle Tone 521)
1958 - Dolly / Dancin' In The Congo (Angle Tone 529)
1973 - Wild Cherry / Tender Love (Angle Tone 520)
 

Biography :

Doo wop quintet the Chandeliers formed in Kansas City in 1954. According to Marv Goldberg's profile in the April 1998 issue of Discoveries, first tenor/second lead William Watson and his bass brother Jesse co-founded the group with tenor/lead Luther Rice, first tenor Reginald "Sandy" Johnson, and second tenor George Chambers. Deriving their name simply by looking up at the ceiling during rehearsal, the Chandeliers honed their harmonies playing one-nighters and cabarets across the Kansas City region.

 The Chandeliers (1) aka The Chandeliers Quintet
(L to R) William Watson, George Chambers, Reginald "Sandy" Johnson, Jesse Watson and Luther Rice

In mid-1957, manager Saul Davis arranged an audition with Atlas label exec Bobby Robinson, and weeks later the group recorded the Davis-penned "Blueberry Sweet," issued on Atlas in early 1958. The single emerged as a hit at home and in St. Louis and New York, and the Chandeliers mounted a brief Midwest tour highlighted by a Kansas City date on the same bill with the fledgling James Brown. "Dolly" followed in the summer, but fared poorly and Atlas chose to shelve a proposed third single, "Wild Cherry." In mid-1959 William Watson enlisted in the Navy, effectively spelling the Chandeliers' demise.

   

Jesse Watson and Luther Rice soon joined him in the service, and together they continued harmonizing on an informal basis, but only Rice returned to music full-time, working for a series of radio stations.
Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide


Songs :

  
Blueberry Sweet                                One More Step

  
           Dolly                                 Dancin' In The Congo 


  
Wild Cherry                                         Tender Love 
 

 

...

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The Embers (9) aka The Twilights (2) aka The Four Embers

Posted on by dion1

The Four Embers aka The Twilights (2) aka The  Embers (9)

The Embers (9) (Bronx, New York)
aka The Twilights (2) aka The Four Embers
ref : The Juveniles

 

Personnel :

Robert "Bobby" Perryman (Lead)

Claude "Indio" Chenet (Second Tenor)

Joseph Durant (Baritone)

Cal Washington (First Tenor)

Peter Reyes (Bass)

 

Discography :

The Twilights (2)
Single :
1959 - My Heart Belongs To Only You / Oh Baby Love (Finesse 1717)
Demo :
1958 - Soda Pop  (acapella)
1958 - My Heart Belongs To Only You (acapella)

Maria Elena & The Twilights (2)
1962 - I Was Too Careful / Temptation (Countess 113)

The Embers (9)
Singles :
1961 - Solitaire / I’m Feeling All Right Again (Empress 101)
1961 - I Won’t Cry Anymore / I Was Too Careful (Empress 104)
1962 - Abigail / I Was Too Careful (Empress 107)
Unreleased :
1961 - What A Surprise  (Empress)
1961 - I Wish I Didn’t Love You So (Empress)

The Four Embers
1963 - But Beautiful / You’ve Been Away Too Long (Smash 1846)

 

Biography :

In 1957, Marilyn Bishop Marilyn gave birth to a baby girl, Michelle, and left The Juveniles.  Larry Peters will make even some time after.  At this time, the group has only three members. Robert Perryman  stepped up to become the new lead singer and Cal Washington was recruited by Claude  Chenet to become the new first tenor.  Cal had sung with a local street group, had a background in gospel and blues and also hung out with the Chords.  Pete Reyes was recruited by Bobby to replace Larry Peters as the bass singer. The Twilights now consisted of Robert Perryman (lead) Cal Washington (first tenor) Claude “Indio” Chenet (second tenor) Joseph Durant (baritone) and Peter Reyes (bass).

The Embers (9) aka The Twilights (2) aka The Four Embers
The Juveniles "Bobby" Perryman , Claude "Indio" Chenet, Marilyn Durant, Larry Peters and Joe Durant

The Twilights recorded “My Heart Belongs To Only You” and “Oh Baby Love,” with Bobby Perryman singing both leads, which came out on Finesse Records in November of 1959. The Twilights also backed up Maria Elena on “I Was Too Careful” and “Temptation,” both of which weren’t released until 1962 on Countess Records. They appeared at one of Clay Cole’s shows in Palisades Park, New Jersey also starring the Drifters, Moonglows, Skyliners, Belmonts, Bobby Rydell and Neil Sedaka.

The Embers (9) aka The Twilights (2) aka The Four Embers
The Embers : Pete Reyes, Joe Durant, Claude "Indio" Chenet, Robert Perryman and Cal Washington

 

The Twilights sang “My Heart Belongs To Only You” as well as “Oh Baby Love” and this performance was broadcast live on television. The Twilights also appeared at the RKO Franklin Theatre on Prospect Avenue in the Bronx where they also backed up Maria Elena. The Twilights changed their name to the Embers and signed with Empress Records, owned by Gene and Jody Malis, which was a subsidiary label (as was Valmor) under Countess International.

The Embers (9) aka The Twilights (2) aka The Four Embers     The Embers (9) aka The Twilights (2) aka The Four Embers  

The Twilights Pete Reyes, Joe Durant, Claude "Indio" Chenet, Cal Washington and Robert Perryman

The Embers had been rehearsing an old standard ballad that Tony Bennett recorded named “Solitaire,” a song that Jody wanted them to record because she felt it had hit potential. The Embers recorded “Solitaire”  with Bobby Perryman singing lead. On the week of August 22, 1961, “Solitaire” reached number 9 on WABC’s radio survey. It was also doing extremely well on Billboard’s charts.  By mid 1963, the Embers were down to four members as Pete Reyes had left the group. The Embers were still under contract with Empress, which wasn’t doing well at the time so Gene and Jody Malis sent them to writer and record producer Wally Zober in order to see what he could do for them.

The Embers (9) aka The Twilights (2) aka The Four Embers    The Embers (9) aka The Twilights (2) aka The Four Embers

Wally took them down to Odo Recording Studios on West 54th Street in Manhattan on August 1, 1963 where they recorded “But Beautiful” and “You’ve Been Away Too Long.” A bass player, George Butcher, arranged the orchestra and the group arranged the vocals. “But Beautiful” was recorded first, with Robert Perryman singing lead. “You’ve Been Away Too Long” was a fast number that Jody had given to them but they did not care for. They recorded it with Cal singing lead. The session lasted for most of the day and the songs were released on Smash Records, a subsidiary of Mercury Records, in December of 1963 as by the “Four Embers.” By 1964, with the British Invasion underway, the Embers (without a hit record since 1961) broke up and decided to get on with their personal lives.

 

Songs :

The Twilights (2)

  
My Heart Belongs To Only You                     Oh Baby Love

Maria Elena & The Twilights (2)

  
Temptation                                      I Was Too Careful  

The Embers (9)

     
Solitaire                      I’m Feeling All Right Again           I Won’t Cry Anymore

     
I Was Too Careful                    Abigail                 What A Surprise  


I Wish I Didn't Love You So 

 

The Four Embers


But Beautiful / You’ve Been Away Too Long

...

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The Arrogants (1)

Posted on by dion1

 The Arrogants (1)

The Arrogants (1) (Kansas City)

 

Personnel :

Ray Charles Morrow (Lead)

Sharon Cecilia Morrow

Minnie Lee Morrow

Annetta Walker

 

Discography :

1960 - Make Up Your Mind / Tom Boy (Big A 12184/85)
1961 - Life Easy / Stone Broke (Vanessa 200)

 

Biography :

According to a press magazine, this vocal group is from Kansas City and consists of Ray Charles Morrow, Wife's Sharon Cecilia Morrow, Sister's Minnie Lee Morrow and Annetta Walker. They recorded "Make Up Your Mind" and "Tom Boy" released in March 1960 on the "Big A label" from Los Angeles. The Arrogants will have another single with "Life Easy" b/w "Stone Broke" on the Vanessa label, also from Los Angeles.

 

Songs :

  
  Tom Boy                                          Take Life Easy

...

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The Spades (2)

Posted on by dion1

The Spades (2)

The Spades (2) (Texas)

Personnel :

?

 

Discography :

1958 - Close To You / I'm On Fire (Major 1007)

 

Biography :

Other than the fact that this East Texas group had a regional hit with their release “Close to You” and that the record was released on the Major label in 1958 owned by Bennie Wess, it is difficult to find more information.

 

Songs :

  
Close To You                                           I'm On Fire

...

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The Debs (6)

Posted on by dion1

The Debs (6)
L to R : The Debs with Ralph Green (center) Monique Forbes, Charlottia Gilbert, Johnnie Lee Manning and Lynn Fields

The Debs (6) (Atlantic City)

 

Personnel :

Charlottia Gilbert (Lead)

Monique Forbes

Johnnie Lee Manning

Lynn Fields

 

Discography :

The Debs (6)
1963 - Danger Ahead / Just Another Fool (Double L 727)

Charlottia Gilbert
1967 - Chances Go Round / Falling In Love With Him (VEEP 1267)

 

Biography :

The Debs were a Vocal group from Atlantic City who attended Atlantic City High school. Charlottia Gilbert was lead singer of This girl group (Charlottia Gilbert, Monique Forbes, Johnnie Lee Manning and Lynn Fields) who cut this excellent girl group sound "Danger Ahead" b/w "Just Another Fool" for Double L in 1963. The group would only stay together for a short time, in 1967, Charlottia Gilbert would record a single in her name with "Chances Go Round " and "Falling In Love With Him".

 

Songs :

(updated by Hans-Joachim) 

The Debs (6)

  
Danger Ahead                                      Just Another Fool

Charlottia Gilbert

  
Chances Go Round                          Falling In Love With Him


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Mario & The Flips (2)

Posted on by dion1

 Mario & The Flips (2)

Mario & The Flips (2) (Scranton, Pa.)

 

Personnel :

Mario Pizuto "Madison"

Samson Horton

Benny Borowiec

Steve Salvaggio

Alice  Soares

 

Discography :

Mario Madison & The Flips (2)   
1957 - Oh Baby See How You Are / I Laughed At Love (Ken 21/22)   

Mario & The Flips (2)
1959 - Once In Awhile / Nobody's Sweetheart Now (Cross Country 58-100)
1961 - Twistin' Train / You Made Me Love You (I Didn't Wanna Do It) (Decca 31252)   

 

Biography :

Mario Madison (aka Mario Pizzuto) was a saxophonist and band leader from Scranton, Pennsylvania.  Vocal & instrumental group, Mario & the Flips performed for several years in clubs. He began performing in Pennsylvania in 1955 as Mario & The Five Flips. In 1957, with his group now a septet, he landed contracts in Florida and recorded a single for Ken Records based in Rochester, New York: "Oh Baby See How You Are" b/w "I Laughed At Love" as Mario Madison & The Flips.

 Mario & The Flips (2)     Mario & The Flips (2)

The group would record two new singles, in 1959, first for "Cross Country" with "Once In Awhile" and "Nobody's Sweetheart Now"  and in 1961 for Decca "Twistin' Train" b/w "You Made Me Love You". From 1958 the group performed almost exclusively in New Jersey clubs until the mid-1970s. The group had several personnel changes over the years, going from trio, quartet to a septet.

 

Songs :

  
   Once In Awhile                          Nobody's Sweetheart Now

You Made Me Love You / Twistin' Train


...

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