Eklablog
Follow this blog Administration + Create my blog

The Four Ekkos

Posted on by dion1

The Four Ekkos
The Four Ekkos in Honolulu, Cassotta, Grock, Scarlata & Mazzeo

The Four Ekkos (Rochester, NY)

 

Personnel :

Carl Scarlata

Pat Cassotta

Leo Grock

Joe Mazzeo

 

Discography :

Jerry Engler & The Four Ekkos
1957 - Sputnik (Satellite Girl) / Unfaithful One (Brunswick 55037)

Bernie Campbell & The Four Ekkos
1957 - Baby, You Belong To Me / Will I Ever Find My Baby? (Fine 26571-2)

The Four Ekkos
1958 - Toodaloo Kangaroo / My Love I Give (RIP 12558)
1959 - Hand In Hand / Think Twice (Label 2022)

 

Biography :

Vocal group from Rochester, composed by Carl Scarlata, Pat Cassotta, Leo Grock and Joe Mazzeo. The Four Ekkos first hit a recording studio when they backed Rochester Rockabilly vocalist Jerry Engler on his 1957 Space Age-themed “Sputnik (Satellite Girl)”, receiving a label credit along the way – ‘Jerry Engler & The Four Ekkos’.

The Four Ekkos    The Four Ekkos  
Jerry Engler                                                                         

This was cut at Rochester’s Fine Recordings and picked up and issued by Brunswick Records. On the same label (Fine) one month later, the group backed young Bernie Campbell (age 14) on  "Baby, You Belong To Me" b/w "Will I Ever Find My Baby?".

The Four Ekkos    The Four Ekkos

In 1958 , the group were under contract with Rip records arrived in Hollywood for a month’s stay. The group under the personal management of Dick Pucio, 23 year old head of Rip, will make several appearances plugging it’s recording of ”Toodaloo Kangaroo”. In 1959 the Four Ekkos cut "Hand in Hand" b/w "Think Twice" released on Buffalo’s Label Records.


Songs :
(updated by Hans-Joachim)   

Jerry Engler & The Four Ekkos

  
Sputnik (Satellite Girl)                       Unfaithful One
 

Bernie Campbell & The Four Ekkos

  
Baby, You Belong To Me                       Will I Ever Find My Baby? 

 

The Four Ekkos

  
Toodaloo Kangaroo                                 My Love I Give     

  
Hand In Hand                                          Think Twice   


See comments

The Hit-Makers

Posted on by dion1

The Hit-Makers
Thanks to Marv Goldberg

The Hit-Makers (Harlem, New York)

 

Personnel :

?

 

Discography :

1959 - I Can't Take It Anymore / Too Cool (Angle Tone 1104)

 

Biography :

Unfortunately, no information on this group from Harlem, New York, except that they had a very good single record on Angletone (1104) : "Too Cool" b/w "I Can't Take It Anymore" in 1959. Tommy Robinson's Atlas Records, originally based on 125th St. in New York's Harlem, was one of the first culturally significant record labels founded and operated by a Black owner. From 1951 until the early 1970s, the company specialized in R&B, evolving from urban blues and jazz in the beginning to doo wop music in the late 1950s -- their first release in December of 1951 was "Rock H-Bomb Rock" by H-Bomb Ferguson.

The Hit-Makers  The Hit-Makers

In 1953, he started recording vocal groups, which heralded his entry into the doo wop field with the Caverliers Quartet. Other harmony groups and a cappella outfits that came aboard included the Revels, the Travelers, the Fi-Tones (the reorganized Caverliers), the Parakeets, the Gypsies (who had more of a jump sound), the Five Dukes, and the Lincolns.   None of Atlas's releases ever charted nationally -- the company was essentially a one-man operation, and lacked the promotional clout and money to push songs that high nationwide -- but their artists were fixtures on local and regional charts. As for the diversity of material here, it runs the gamut from raunchy, heavily R&B-flavored numbers like the Caverliers' "Dynaflow" (a great unheralded car song with a real cool sax solo) and the Gypsies' jumping "Young Girl to Calypso," to smooth near-pop like "Lenora" by the Travelers. This collection also includes a pair of unreleased numbers by the Travelers and the Fi-Tones.

 

Songs :


I Can't Take It Anymore / Too Cool
(updated by Hans-Joachim) 

...

See comments

Buddy Gibson & The Vanguards (3) aka The Jesters (2)

Posted on by dion1

Buddy Gibson & The Vanguards (3) aka The Jesters (2) Themes Pappas (Manager) & Buddy Gibson with the Vanguards behind.

Buddy Gibson & The Vanguards (3) (Ventura, Ca.)
aka The Jesters (2)

 

Personnel :

Leroy (Buddy) Gibson (Lead Singer & Pianist)

Don Johnson (Vocal)

Dave Johnson (Guitar & Vocal)

Ron  Perry (Pianist & vo­cal)

Corky Wilke (Sax­ophone & vo­cal)

Yvonne Gallegos (Vocal)

Joyce Gallegos (Vocal)

 

Discography :

Buddy Gibson & The Jesters (2)
1958 - To Be Or Not To Be / Meet The Beat (inst) (Spry 118)

Buddy Gibson & The Vanguards (3)
1959 - Just A Game / The Session (Swingin’615)

 

Biography :

Vocal group from Ventura, California, The Jesters aka The Vanguards were composed by Buddy Gibson, singer and Piano player and a group of young people from Ventura Colllege, Oxnard High School, Ven­tura High School and Oxnard Air Force Base. They were Ron Perry : Pianist and vo­calist. In the Air Force. He is 19 and come from Washington.D.C., Don Johnson, Vocalist, The oldest member of the group at 22. Also in the Air Force, from Columbus., Dave Johnson, Plays the elec­tric guitar and sings. He is a 17 year old senior at Ventura High, Corky Wilke, 16, Plays sax­ophone and sings. He is a Junior at Ventura High, Drummer Mike Flaherty, a former VC student,  a psy­chiatric technician trainee at Camarillo State Hospital.

Buddy Gibson & The Vanguards (3) aka The Jesters (2)    Buddy Gibson & The Vanguards (3) aka The Jesters (2)
When he was five Buddy made appearances with his sister Betty as a dancing team before numerous lodges and service clubs.

Two Oxnard girls, Yvonne, 19, and Joyce, 17, Gallegos joined the band on their second single as a vocal duet. Yvonne attends VC. Joyce is a senior at Oxnard High. In 1959, Buddy with the Vanguards (aka the Jesters) made two records (Four songs) records of tunes written by Gibson, One "To Be Or Not To Be" made the Top 20. His other recording songs are "Just A Game", "The Session" and "Meet The Beat" an instrumental with the band in which Buddy plays the piano.

 

Songs :

Buddy Gibson & The Jesters (2)


To Be Or Not To Be

Buddy Gibson & The Vanguards (3)


Just A Game


...

See comments

Eulis Mason & The Martells

Posted on by dion1

Eulis Mason & The Martells  

Eulis Mason & The Martells (San Jose, California)

 

Personnel :

Eulis Mason (Lead)

Joseph Robinson

Andrews

Phillips

 

Discography :

Eulis Mason / The Martells
1959 - Carol Lee (Eulis Mason)/ Rockin' Santa Claus (The Martells) (Bella 45-B-20)

Eulis Mason & The Martells
1959 - Va Va Voom / Forgotten Spring (Bella 45-B-21-60)

The Martells
2961 - Va Va Voom / Forgotten Spring (Cessna 45-CE-477)

 

Biography :

The Martells, sometimes spelled The Martels, were a black Bay Area vocal group built around their lead singer Eulis Mason. The other members were Joseph Robinson, plus Andrews and Phillips (their first names are unknown). These Martells not to be confused with a white Martels vocal group from Nashville on the Nasco label. Eulis and his Martells had two releases on Gradie O'Neal and John Pusateri's Cessna and Bella labels.Their first Bella single came in December 1959, and they were right on time for the Christmas season with the groovy up-tempo doo wop number Rockin’ Santa Claus, written by Mason and Robinson and accompanied by The Bella Tones Orchestra.

Eulis Mason & The Martells    Eulis Mason & The Martells
                                                                                                                                 Eulis Mason

Their second Bella single came a year later in December of 1960. That both tracks on Bella 21 were reissued on Cessna 477 in 1961 . Eulis became the lead of Charles Moffitt’s Velours in the mid-1980’s when they became a mainstay at the United in Group Harmony shows.  After Moffitt was murdered in 1986, Eulis continued to keep the Velours going, recording some magnificent songs like “C’est La Vie,” I Wish You Love,” “I Apologize” for labels like Starlight, Clifton and Classic Artists.

 

Songs :

Eulis Mason bb The Martells


Carol Lee

The Martells


Rockin' Santa Claus

Eulis Mason & The Martells

  
Forgotten Spring                              Va Va Voom

 

...

See comments

immy, Sandra & Pam

Posted on by dion1

immy, Sandra & Pam 

Jimmy, Sandra & Pam (Philadelphia, Pa.)

 

Personnel :

James Stanley

Sandra Stanley

Pamala Stanley

 

Discography :

1963 - Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree / The Girl Next Door (SPQR 3308)

 

Biography :

James Stanley  was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania of Italian, German, Cherokee Indian, Scotch/Irish and English heritage. Stanley's uncle taught him to play the ukulele at an early age, and at sixteen, with two of his sisters, Pamala and Sandra, he got his first recording contract with SPQR Records in Norfolk, Virginia. The Trio recorded "Don't Sit Under The Apple Tree" b/w "The Girl Next Door ". "The Girl Next Door" was a Pick Hit on WHYN Springfield MA on May 4 1963. He released three albums for RCA during the '70s: a self-titled debut, James Lee Stanley Too, and Three's a Charm. He also recorded for MCA, Takoma, and Regency before forming his own Beachwood label for Live at McCabe's in the early '80s. He consistently released albums during the 1980s and '90s, and after Tork's Stranger Things Have Happened appeared on Beachwood, the duo began touring together. Two Man Band, released in 1995, was actually recorded live in the studio. Sister Pamala Stanley scored several dance/club hits from the late 1970s to the late 1980s.

 

Songs

?

...

See comments

The Wonders (8) aka The Splendors (3) aka The Symbols (4)

Posted on by dion1

The Wonders (8) aka The Splendors (3) aka The Symbols (4)

The Wonders (8) (Los Angeles, Ca)
aka The Splendors (3) aka The Symbols (4)

 

Personnel :

James Williams

Donnell Thomas

Charles Morrison

Richard Byrd

Leonard Green

 

Discography :

The Wonders (8)
1962 - Please Don't Cry / With These Hands (Bamboo 523)

The Splendors (3)
1962 - Island Called Romance / Puddin'Tain (Jano 004)

The Symbols (4)
1963 - Last Year About This Time / Better Get Your Own One Buddy (Doré 666)

 

Biography :

The Wonders "Please Don't Cry", released in September 1962, was written by Don Thomas (real name Donnell Thomas) but misprinted as Dan Thomas on the label. The song was published by Aee-Cee-Mmm Music and the record was produced by ACM Productions, both of which were Ed Cobb and Lincoln Mayorga's companies. Don Thomas sang with the Splendors, who recorded an also-ran version of "Puddin'Tain", released on Jano concurrently with the Alley Cats' hit version on Philles in December 1962. There was a name switch to the Symbols for "Last Year About This Time" on Dore, released in March 1963, on which Thomas took the lead for his own composition. The Splendors/Symbols were James Williams, Donnell Thomas, Charles Morrison (later of the Larks), Richard Byrd and Leonard Green, and were likely also the Wonders - a group name not to be confused with Tony Allen's Wonders/Wanderers, Don Thomas also composed the Blisters' 1963 vocal group 45 "Shortnin. Bread" / "Cookie Rockin' In Her Stockings" on Liberty. That was another Cobb-Mayorga production; the groups could well be related.

 

Songs :

The Wonders (8)

  
Please Don't Cry                           With These Hands

The Splendors (3)

  
Island Called Romance                         Puddin'Tain           


The Symbols (4)

  
Last Year About This Time          Better Get Your Own One Buddy


...

See comments

The Palisades (2)

Posted on by dion1

The Palisades (2)
1959 - L to R: Jim Fleming, Larry Knechtel, Dick Gabriel, Brian Garfield, John Armstrong.

The Palisades (2) (Tucson, Arizona)

 

Personnel :

Jim Fleming

Larry Knechtel

Dick Gabriel

Brian Garfield

John Armstrong


Personnel :

1960 - I Can't Quit / Close Your Eyes (Calico 113)

 

Biography :

Brian Francis Wynne Garfield grew up in Arizona, earned a Master’s Degree from the University of Arizona. At the University of ArizonaHe he formed a five-man group vocal & instrumental called The Palisades consisted of Brian , Jim Fleming, Larry Knechtel, Dick Gabriel and John Armstrong. The five switched instruments all the time, though Garfield usually wound up playing either bass or lead guitar.

The Palisades (2)    The Palisades (2)

They have a contract with Calico and top-40 hit with "I Can't Quit". They appeared on “American Bandstand” and other programs. Along the way, they spent several months playing in a lounge where the owner had a policy of bringing in guest acts. One time they brought in a singer they just knew was going to make it big, and 10 years later he did. Lou Rawls.

The Palisades (2)

The Palisades, however, reached a plateau about . $1,250 week and came to the collective decision that they'd never get any bigger. One member split for Los Angeles, another became the bassist most in demand for studio work on the West Coast Larry Knechtel. The world later knew Brian Garfield as a multi-million seller famous book author that included Death Wish which was made into a movie starring Charles Bronson with 4 sequels.

 

Songs :

  
I Can't Quit                                      Close Your Eyes


...

See comments

The Five Lords

Posted on by dion1



The Five Lords (Boothwyn, PA)

 

Personnel :

Sylvanius "Slip" Franklin (Lead Tenor, Tenor)

Harold Comegys (Scond Tenor)

Joseph "Joe" Pryor (First Tenor)

Elwood "Bunky" Robinson (Baritone) 

John Walker (Bass)

 

Discography :

Single:
1956 - Oo-La-La / Falling Tears (D&S 2078)
Unreleased :
1956 - My Darling Caroline (D&S)

 

Biography :

When Sylvanus "Syl" Franklin was a boy growing up in Lower Chichester, he wanted to be a famous vocalist with a big band. His dream sort of came true. In the mid-1950s, he and four other students at Chichester High School made up a singing group called The Five Lords. The others members were Elwood "Bunky" Robinson, Joe Pryor, Harold Comegys and John Walker.

The Five Lords  The Five Lords

The Five Lords cut three songs "Oo-La-La", "Falling Tears" and "My Darling Caroline" . "Oo-La-La" b/w "Falling Tears" was released on the tiny label D&S. They also could be heard on a local Chester radio station every week or so. The group broke up, but Sylvanius "Slip" Franklin  & Elwood "Bunky" Robinson would later become members of Jim Jacono & The J's. Franklin continued with his music - this time as a pianist, and sometimes vocalist.

 

Songs :

    
Oo-La-La                                               Falling Tears


See comments

Jack Wallace & The Hi-Tones (1)

Posted on by dion1


The "Hi-Tones" LeRoy Meadows and Dave First

Jack Wallace & The Hi-Tones (1)    (Tucson, Arizona)

 

Personnel :

Jack Wallace (Lead)

Dave First (Tenor)

LeRoy Meadows (Bass)

 

Discography :

1959 - I Think Of You / You Are The One    (Zoom 001)

 

Biography :

Jack Wallace, whose performance at a Catalina High School dance in early 1959 inspired Burt Schneider and Ray Lindstrom to create Zoom Records. A mere eight days later, they were in the studio with Jack Wallace and the Hi-Tones!. Jack Wallace was Tucson's Elvis!  His deep vocals along with the doo-wop harmony of LeRoy Meadows and Dave First of the Hi-Tones are a real treat. This was the first Zoom Record and had the blue and silver label. Zoom Records was Southern Arizona’s first rock and roll record label. It was the creation of two 17 year old Tucson, Arizona, Catalina High School students, Burt Schneider and Ray Lindstrom.

Jack Wallace & The Hi-Tones (1)     Jack Wallace & The Hi-Tones (1)
Jack Wallace                                                                     Burt Schneider and Ray Lindstrom          

All the records were produced during a short 7 month period in 1959, but they capture the independent rock sound of the era.They were all recorded in Phoenix at Audio Recorders of Arizona, where Duane Eddy made all his big hits. Legendary engineer, and Grammy award winner, Jack Miller was at the controls. He was famous later for sessions with many top stars including the Rolling Stones. None of the records were giant chart busters, but they got heavy play and made the hit sheets in Tucson as well as a few other places in the US and Europe. They continue to be included on many US and overseas compilation releases featuring 50's American rock and roll and rockabilly.


Songs :

  
  I Think Of You                                You Are The One


...

See comments

The Playboys (4) ref The Graduates (1) aka The Question Marks (2)

Posted on by dion1

The Graduates (1) aka The Question Marks (2) ref The Playboys (4)
The Playboys (4)

The Playboys (4) (Buffalo N.Y)
ref The Graduates (1) aka The Question Marks (2) 

 

 Personnel :

Jack Scorsone

Ronald Page

Bruce,Hammond

Raymond Baunler

Harold Rogers

Anthony Mancuso

 

Discography:

The Playboys (4)
1957 - Don't Do Me Wrong / Why Do I Love You, Why Do I Care (Mercury 71228)

The Graduates (1)
1959 - Ballad of A Girl And Boy / Care (Shan-Todd 0055)
1959 - What Good Is Graduation / Lonely (Corsican 0058)

 

The Question Marks (2)
1959 - Ballad of A Girl And Boy / Concerto rock (Inst. by The Tune Rockers)  (First 102)

Johnny Holliday & The Graduates (1)
1963 - Goodbye My Love / Ballad Of A Boy And A Girl (Lawn 208)

 

Biography :

In 1956, six guys decided to form a vocal group. They were frat members and high school students (mostly at Lafayette High School and Hutch Tech). Jack Scorsone, Ronald Page, Bruce,Hammond, Raymond Baunler, Harold Rogers and Anthony Mancuso called themselves The Rays.  By 1957,  they went to a Buffalo demo studio and recorded their one original song, Jack’s “Why Do I Love You, Why Do I Care”. Local DJ Frank Ward flipped when he heard it and immediately played it on the air. It got a great response so he called up somebody affiliated with Mercury Records, played it over the phone, and Mercury expressed an interest. A few days later the boys got an offer to come to New York City to record it. Two things happened as they set about recording - they learned of the already-existing Rays (soon to hit with “Silhouettes”) and had to come up with a name change.

The Graduates (1) aka The Question Marks (2) ref The Playboys (4)

A nearby copy of Playboy magazine gave them the inspiration. And they had to come up with a B-side. Jack Scorsone sat down and wrote “Don’t Do Me Wrong” off the top of his head. The group recorded it in two takes, with no chance to correct the couple bad notes that appeared! Back to Buffalo… the group was coming to grips with their whirlwind of success. In just a few short weeks they’d gone from demo to national label. Waiting for news of it they were asked to perform at a school assembly and were introduced as Recording Artists, to great adulation. And a few days later they started hearing “Why Do I Love You, Why Do I Care” on the radio.

Following the release of The Playboys' 45 membership changed and eventually settled into a lineup of Johnny Cappello, Bruce Hammond, Fred Mancuso and Jack Scorsone. They adopted a new name - The Graduates. DJs Tommy Shannon and Phil Todaro decided to issue a record on them, on their new label Shan-Todd (named for Shannon -Todaro). They'd previously hit with their first Shan-Todd release "Rockin' Crickets" by The Hot Toddys. The Graduates 1959 "Ballad of A Girl And Boy" came out as Shan-Todd 0055. Shan-Todd soon underwent a name change to Corsican Records, kept the same numbering sequence, in time for the next Graduates release ("What Good Is Graduation", also 1959).

The Graduates (1) aka The Question Marks (2) ref The Playboys (4)

They recorded this one at Buffalo Recording Service, scene of their first recording when The Playboys made a demo there. This time however it was a different group - John Cappello was now the lead vocalist. "Ballad of A Girl And Boy" made it on to the national Billboard Hot 100, at #74. The followup "What Good Is Graduation" did not make it onto the top charts, though it it hit the Bubbling Under The Hot 100 chart at #110. If there were local charts I'm sure these achieved Top Ten status, especially with the push the DJs behind the labels could give them. They were definitely played often on WKBW, a local station but one that reached far up and down the East Coast.

The Graduates (1) aka The Playboys (4) aka The Question Marks (2)      1959 - (L to R)  John Cappello , Jack Scorsone, Bruce Hammond and Fred Mancuso

Whether they got properly paid for the records is anyone's guess. Standard procedure back then was that artists would recieve little royalties but could expect the make money with live appearances. Some big shows in father cities had to be cancelled when the still-young members couldn't get time off from school to travel! But the group apparently had their largest-paying show close to home, when they received the then-astronomical sum of $1500 for a show at Rochester's War Memorial Auditorium. With no real management, member Bruce Hammond handled the money and they all got paid.

With some shows, some TV appearances, nothing was breaking for them, and the group drifted apart. In 1963 a new single appeared on Lawn Records coupling "Goodbye My Love" with "Ballad Of A Boy And A Girl". Now credited to Johnny Holliday & The Graduates, apparently most of the group was not informed of its release until after the fact. "Goodbye My Love" is actually a retitled version of "What Good Is Graduation" making this single something of a reissue - merely compiling their two former A-sides.



Nothing much happened with this 1963 release, but it's then-dated sound couldn't really compete in the year 1963 with the coming invasion. That same year the Beatles 45 was released on Lawn's parent company Swan Records. An interesting and curious side-note is that many years later the group became aware of a mysterious record using their recordings. In 1959 a record was released on the First Records label, aka Another First, which contained "Ballad Of A Boy And A Girl" but now credited to The Question Marks. This seems to be an out take from the original Graduates sessions.

The Graduates (1) aka The Playboys (4) aka The Question Marks (2)
Johnny Cappello with the Tune Rockers

The flip is also credited to The Question Marks but this is actually an out-take by The Tune Rockers ! Point of interest is that John Capello belonged to both groups, and Dick Lawrence - owner of First - had been involved in managing both groups. More interesting is the fact that the record doesn't seem to have been issued in an attempt to make a hit - the artists involved weren't informed, so there could be no promotion, and it was never distributed at all in their hometown!
https://wnyfm.wordpress.com/tag/the-playboys/

 

Songs :
(updated by Hans-Joachim)

The Playboys (4)

   
          Don't Do Me Wrong                   Why Do I Love You, Why Do I Care

 The Graduates (1)

  
Ballad of A Girl And Boy                               Care                 

  
What Good Is Graduation                                   Lonely                  

 Question Marks (2)


Ballad Of A Girl And A Boy / Concerto Rock

....

See comments