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The Melo Gents

Posted on by dion1

The Melo Gents
(L to R) : Steve Barnhart, Junie Green, Bobby Kline, Sandy Holly and Larry Holly  

The Melo Gents (Newark NJ.)

 

Personnel :

Bobby Kline (Lead)

Sandy Holly (Tenor)

Larry Holly (Second Tenor)

Steve Barnhart (Bass)

Junie Green (Baritone)

 

Discography :

1959 - Baby Be Mine / Git Off My Back (Warner Bros. 5056)

 

Biography :

The Melo Gents all hailed from Orange and East Orange, New Jersey. Larry and Sandy lived on State Street East Orange, Steve Barnhart lived on Snyder St., Orange, NJ Junnie green lived on Park St., Orange, NJ and Bobby Kleine lived on Park Street as well just off of Springdale Avenue. The Group recorded "Git Off My Back" and "Baby Be Mine" written by group members Bobby Kline and Steve Barnhardt. The single was recorded by Warner Bros). The Melo Gents also recorded many other songs but they were unreleased. Their manager's name was Joe Seneca, he was in the music industry pretty much at that time but he never paid is $.10. The Melo Gents travel to Canada all over the New York in the New England states different provinces around Canada with the 5 Satins and the late Bill Baker.
Thanks to Marv Goldberg

 

Songs :
(updated by Hans-Joachim) 


  
Baby Be Mine                            Git Off My Back

...

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The Master-Tones

Posted on by dion1

The Master-Tones (
Clarence "Pop" Gray , Charlie "Stoney" Dimbo, Emmanuel "Doc" Robinson, Frank McRae & George "Bronx" Rivers

The Master-Tones (White Plains, New York)


Personnel :

Clarence "Pop" Gray (Tenor Lead & Guitar)

George "Bronx" Rivers (First Tenor)

Emmanuel "Doc" Robinson (Second Tenor)

Frank McRae (Baritone)

Charlie "Stoney" Dimbo (Bass)


Discography :

1954 - Tell Me / What'll You Do (Bruce 111)


Songs :

The Master-Tones formed around 1951 while attending Battle Hill Junior High School in White Plains, New York.  They were neighborhood pals who lived on Russell and Fulton Streets.The group lineup consisted of Clarence "Pop" Gray (lead), Charlie "Stoney" Dimbo (bass), Emmanuel "Doc" Robinson (2nd tenor), Frank McCray (baritone) and George "Bronx" Rivers (1st tenor). " They first started singing at school. Once the guys became serious about their singing, they needed a name for the group and chose The Hearts. Billy Barrels, became their manager and had the guys rehearsing at his house in Greenburgh, New York, almost every night.

The Master-Tones (    The Master-Tones (
Emmanuel "Doc" Robinson                                                                                                                           

By 1954, they were performing at local clubs. One of those clubs was the Red Rose located in New Rochelle, New York on North Avenue. Like dozens of other young vocal groups at the time, they knew that their path to fame and fortune started at the legendary Apollo Theatre. Record company executives and scouts looking for new talent attended the weekly amateur night shows and were ready to offer contracts on the spot to promising groups. Another friend of the group helped them secure them a contract at Bruce Records in New York City.The Hearts auditioned with four original songs but only two were to be recorded. However, a quick name change was in order due to the fact that there already was a  "Hearts " group in existence. The guys talked it over and because they were making a Master Record … they became the Master-Tones .
http://www.uncamarvy.com/MasterTones/mastertones.html


Songs :

  
   Tell Me                                             What'll You Do


...

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The Swinging Hearts

Posted on by dion1

 The Swinging Hearts
Jerry Williams, Morris Spearmon, Roscoe Brown and Ernest Lemon 

The Swinging Hearts (Chicago)
 

Personnel :

Morris Spearmon (Lead)

Ernest Lemon

Jerry Williams

Lee Brown

Roscoe Brown (Bass)



Discography :

1961 - Please Say It Isn't So / Something Made Me Stop (Stop Shopping Around) (Lucky Four 1011 / Diamond 162)
1963 - How Can I Love You / Spanish Love (620 1002 / NRM 1002)
1963 - Something Made Me Stop (Stop Shopping Around) / Pony Rock (620 1005)
1964 - You Speak Of Love / I've Got It (Magic touch 2001/620 1009)

 

Biography :

The Swinging Hearts were a five-man group from Robbins, in the south Chicago suburbs, featuring the excellent lead of Morris Spearmon and the outstanding bass of Roscoe Brown. Other members were Ernest Lemon, Jerry Williams, and Lee Brown (A cousin or Brother of Roscoe). The four, minus Lee Brown, had attended Blue Island High and had sung in the Passions, a group with female lead Addie Bradley. Record entrepreneur Don Talty discovered the group but wanted only Bradley.

  
Jan Bradley & Don Talty                                                                                                          

He rechristened her Jan Bradley and she went on to fame with "Mama Didn't Lie." The remaining Passions added Lee Brown and refocused their career with Spearmon as lead under the name Swinging Hearts. Their first release, "Please Say It Isn't So, was first released later that year. The master was purchased in 1965 and was released again that year on Diamond Records for national distribution.


The Passions. (Lef to right) Ernest Lemon, Morris Spearmon, Jan Bradley , Jerry Williams and Roscoe Brown

The Swinging Hearts recorded doowops in a more traditional vein with their next release from 1963, on Six-Twenty, the Spearmon-composed "Spanish Love," a Latin-style song with a perky beat, backed with a droopy ballad, "How Can I Love You". The group's last release with the company was "You Speak of Love" backed with "I've Got It" . It is felt that if the members of this group had been single and free of other responsibilities and obligations, they might have become quite popular. As it was, family responsibilities kept them from traveling to promote their excellent discs.


Songs :

     
Please Say It Isn't So             Something Made Me......            How Can I Love You

      
Spanish Love                        I've Got It                       You Speak Of Love


...

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The Siberians

Posted on by dion1

The Siberians  

The Siberians (Detroit, Michigan)


Personnel :

Otis Williams

Elbridge "Al" Bryant

James Crawford

Arthur Walton

Vernard Plain


Discography :

1958 - Pecos Kid / All of My Life (?)

Biography :

Four of the Distants became members of the world-renowned Temptations, the most popular male recording group ever. They began as Otis & the Siberians with a lineup of Otis Williams, Elbridge "Al" Bryant, James Crawford, Arthur Walton, and Vernard Plain. Detroit DJ Bill Williams discovered them singing at a hop and became their manager, and helped get them their first recording opportunity "Pecos Kid" b/w "All of My Life" for another DJ, Senator Bristol Bryant's label. Williams had little time and no managerial skills, and Bryant had no inclination to promote the record outside of Detroit; so they switched to Johnnie Mae Matthews' Northern Records. Like most groups seeking fame and fortune, the Distants endured many personnel changes, Melvin Franklin nee David English replaced bass singer Arthur Walton. Franklin had recorded with the Voice Masters on "Need It." Then Plain left, which gave Franklin's cousin Richard Street, an opening; he stepped in as the groups' lead singer. And if that wasn't enough change, the Siberians became the Distants.



...

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The No-Names

Posted on by dion1

The No-Names 

The No-Names (New Jersey)

 

Peronnel:

Doug Gordon (Lead)

Al Morrison

Ed Sattile

Emiry Rowand

Bob Danzie


Discography :

1964 - Love / Jam (Guyden 2114)


Biography :

The No Names were a South Jersey-based doo-wop group that signed with Guyden Records in July, 1964, to put out “Love,” a composition of two of its members, Al Morrison and Doug Gordon. The other members of the No Names were Ed Sattile, Emiry Rowand and Bob Danzie. They got their name when they took the record they recorded themselves at the Baker studio above the notorious Oasis Motel in Camden, New Jersey, to Jerry Blavat to play on his program on WCAM, the city-owned station in Camden, New Jersey. The studio was in the City Hall. Jerry liked the record, played it, and when he asked the group their name, they admitted they had no name. Hence, "The No Names."


Songs :


Love

...

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The Chaunteurs aka The Chanteurs (1)

Posted on by dion1

The Chaunteurs aka The Chanteurs (1)
The Chanteurs (1963)

The Chaunteurs (Chicago)
aka The Chanteurs (1)


Personnel :

Sollie McElroy (Lead Tenor)

Eugene Record (First Tenor)

Robert "Squirrel" Lester  (Second Tenor)

Clarence Johnson (Baritone)

Eddie Reed (Bass)


Discography :

The Chaunteurs
Singles :
1961 - Wishin' Well / New Rockin' Baby (La Salle 501)
Unreleased :
1961 - I'll Do What You Want Me to Do (La Salle)

The Chanteurs (1)
1963 - You've Got A Great Love / The Grizzly Bear (Vee Jay 519)

 

Biography :

Eugene Booker Record was born in Chicago on the 23 December 1940. As a young boy his interest in music first took hold with song writing and guitar lessons. When he was thirteen at Englewood high school he participated in musical programs and had visions of getting into the music business. At high school he became a member of the vocal group the Wrens.  He next formed the Chanteurs in the late fifties with future Chi-Lites Robert Lester and Clarence Johnson and Sollie McElroy from The Moroccos.

The Chanteurs (1) aka The Chaunteurs
The Wrens with  Eugene Record (Middle)

In 1954, After the first two years of the Flamingos, Lead singer Sollie McElroy sang with the Moroccos for about three years. After scoring several regional hits, The Moroccos disbanded in 1957. In 1961, Sollie McElroy joined The Chaunteurs which included Clarence Johnson (Baritone), Robert "Squirrel" Lester  (Second Tenor), Eddie Reed (Bass) and Eugene Record (First Tenor). Sollie McElroy and Eugene Record shared Lead on the La Salle Label release, which sounds more like a 1957 recording. Burt Bowen (Baritone) replaced Sollie  and in 1963 the group cut "You've Got A Great Love" b/w "The Grizzly Bear" on Vee Jay records in 1963 as The Chanteurs. 


The Chaunteurs (1961) : Clarence Johnson, Robert Lester, Eddie Reed, Sollie McElroy and Eugene Record

The Next Year, Eugene Record, Robert "Squirrel" Lester, and Clarence Johnson) teamed up with Marshall Thompson and Creadel "Red" Jones of the Desidero's to form the Hi-lites. Noting that the name Hi-lites was already in use, and wishing to add a tribute to their home town of Chicago, they changed their name to "Marshall and the Chi-Lites" in 1964. Johnson left later that year, and their name was subsequently shortened to The Chi-Lites.


Songs :

The Chaunteurs

    
Wishin' Well                                   New Rockin' Baby

The Chanteurs (1)

  
You've Got A Great Love                       The Grizzly Bear


...

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The Dee-Vines (1) aka The Quentins

Posted on by dion1

The Quentins aka The Dee-Vines (1)
Chuck Smith (seated) - top : Gary Stem, Richard Elter and Don Nicita

The Dee-Vines (1)  (Westchester County, N.Y)
aka The Quentins

 
Personnel :

Don Nicita (Lead)

Chuck Smith

Richard Elter

Gary Stem
 


Discography :

Neil Stevens & The Dee-Vines (1)
1958 - More And More / What Could Be Better (Brunswick 55095)

The Quentins
1959 - You'll Never Know / Mi Amore (Andie 5014)

The Dee-Vines (1)
1960 - I Believe / Worlds Greatest Lover (Lano 2001/relic 514))


Biography :

in 1959, Laurie Records has launched a new subsidiary label, Andie Records. It will release the same kind of records that Laurie has issued in the pop and jazz fields. But the new label will be serviced by other distributors, according to a.&r. chief Gene Schwartz. First recordings are by the Chippendales, whose disking is "What a Night," and the other is by the Quentins. The group recorded in 1959 the single "You'll Never Know" b/w "Mi Amore". The Quentins come from Westchester County, N.Y. and consisted of Don Nicita (Lead), Richard Elter, Chuck Smith and Gary Stem .

The Quentins aka The Dee-Vines (1)    The Quentins aka The Dee-Vines (1)
Neil Stevens & The Dee-Vines (1)                                                                                                 

However before being called the "Quentins" the group had already recorded a first record where they accompanied the singer Neil Stevens in October 1958 on "More And More" and "What Could Be Better". The single will be released by Brunswick Records as Neil Stevens & The Dee-Vines.  In 1960, Neil Stevens joined the Temptations as Lead singer with Larry Curtis, Artie Sands, and Artie Marin, not to be confused with the famous Motown group by the same name. This lesser-known group from New York released one Top 40 hit, "Barbara," in 1960, about one year before the more famous Temptations were founded. Neil Stevens went solo shortly after the release of "Barbara."

The Quentins aka The Dee-Vines (1)    The Quentins aka The Dee-Vines (1)

In October,1960 Don Nicita & his fellows recorded "I Believe" and "Worlds Greatest Lover" released by the Rocco Catalano's Lano label from Port Chester,N.Y.. This time they take back their original name The Dee-Vines . The group appeared on Ted Mack's Original Amateur Hour on May 23, 1960 and perform "Lonesome Road" .

 

 
Videos :


Lonesome Road

 

Songs :
 (Update By Hans-Joachim)

Neil Stevens & The Dee-Vines (1)
 
  
More And More                           What Could Be Better

The Dee-Vines (1)

     
     I Believe                                   World's Greatest Lover

The Quentins

   
    Mi Amore                                      You'll Never Know

 ...

 

 

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The Nitecaps (1)

Posted on by dion1

The Nitecaps (1)
Back row. l to r. Bob Hamilton, Eugene Hamilton, Billy Copeland. Front. Freddy Pride.

The Nitecaps (1) (Detroit, MI)


Personnel :

Al Hamilton (Al Kent) (Lead)

Eugene Ronald Hamilton (Ronnie Savoy)

Robert Hamilton (Rob Reeco)

Freddie Pride


Discography :

Singles :
1955 - A Kiss And A Vow / Be My Girl (Groove 0134)
1955 - Sweet Thing / Tough Mama (Groove 0147)
1956 - You May Not Know / Bamboo Rock And Roll (Groove 0158)
1956 - In Each Corner Of My Heart / Let Me Know Tonight (Groove 0176)

Unreleased :
1956 - Snap Crackle And Pop (Groove)
1956 - You're Gonna Be Sorry  (Groove)
1956 - Oh, You Sweet Girl (Groove)


Biography :

Ronnie Savoy had been living in New York since `57', singing lead with a group called the Nitecaps, Freddy Pride, Billy Kopeland, Thomas Davis, and Ronnie Savoy. The group had pretty much dissolved by 1960. After the group broke up due to personality differences. The Nitecaps was one of the three groups that metamorphosed from the original group the Comets, that started on the unabashed streets of Detroit's North End side at 2128 Meade Street, not far from the 6 Mile Projects, north, and Hamtramck to the south slightly infringing borders of Highland Park, where Bobby Reeco Hamilton, Eugene G.G. Capers, Johnny Braxton, Billy Kopeland, and Ronnie Savoy started a group called the Comets with Bobby as their Maestro.

   The Nitecaps (1)
The Versatiles : Tom Davis, Bobby Hamilton, Freddy Pride & Ronnie Savoy (Lead)

The Comets had three lead tenors with very different and original styles. A group primed for cross-over music where any and all rhythm and blues forms had to go in order to reach the Pop Charts. The Promise land. Ronnie Savoy's mint tone clear tenor voice was his strong point, but the postscript to his singing style was illuminated in his enunciation, every word noteworthy of the emphasis he bestowed on each particular syllable and phrase. For example, the execution of “Just a Kiss And A Vow” by the Nitecaps, every line so distinctly understood, his influence clearly a throw-back to the days of Nat King Cole and Bill Kenny of the Ink Spot's.  But the ambiguities of the music business took its toll, and soon Eugene G.G. Capers along with Johnny Braxton departed for jobs in the automotive factories, replacing them with Freddy Pride [baretone] and Thomas Davis [bass], then to form the Versatiles.

The Nitecaps (1)
The Nitecaps at The Fox Theater : Freddie Pride , Billy Kope, Ronnie Savoy & Tom Davis

Bobby Hamilton had dropped the named the Versatiles along with guitarist Arnold Christian, added Billy Kopeland and called the new group, the Nitecaps. The Nitecaps group were in the limelights for years. There parvenu excursions took them throughout the country performing nightly where they were a stable diet of entertainment at the fabulous Cotton Club in New York appearing with the one and only master Cab Callaway and sharing the top billing at the Baby Grand Night Club in Harlem with the combustible Nipsy Russell. The Nitecaps music proceeded doo-wop, ran concurrent with blues ballads for awhile and found a comfortable and esteemed place on the popular music scene , churning out record after record until they rubbed shoulders of high accolades with the Mills Brothers, and the Ink Spots, the Trinaire Brothers and the likes. But it was bass singer Thomas `Bull Yellar' Davis that evolved the group with special renditions from r&b to different popular music styles comprised under the umbrella of old standards. 

The Nitecaps (1)   
Ronnie Savoy, Tom Davis, Freddie Pride & Billy Kope                                                          

Two months after signing on the dotted line with Al Green as their personal manager  the Nitecaps recorded their very first song “A Kiss And A Vow ” with Groove Records, a subsidiary of RCA Records introduced in 1954.  The Nitecaps were the first rhythm and blues group in the country to appear on national syndicated television for the Robert Montgomery variety show in New York City`55'.  They tried to sound more pop-orientated and 'modern' especially with the jump tunes from their first November 1955 session for Groove. “A Kiss And A Vow“ resembles The Orioles' ballad style, most likely because of Ronnie’s tenor voice that had the same high soulful feeling as Clyde MacPhatter’s.

"With Snap, Crackle And Pop“ and “Your’re Gonna Be Sorry“ from their second session, they gave us two distinctive jump tunes of the same musical quality. The vocal background on “Snap, Crackle And Pop“ can hear the group singing the sort of nonsense syllables 'doo-Wop', which later gave this music it's name. “Bamboo Rock And Roll“  from their third single fits exactly into the Ling Ting Tong theme popular two years before, “while You May Not Know“ is a ballad par excellence.

The Nitecaps (1)
Ralph "Crow Peterson", Ronnie Savoy, Freddie Pride ,  Tom Davis & Billy Kope

The sound of the third and last session did not change much towards songs popular at the fall of 1956,  “In Each Corner Of My Heart“ delights much the same way as some Dominoes’ releases, with a heavy bass break and a high tenor. On the fourth song from this session they backed Varetta Dillard. From all the four fantastic releases on Groove, only two “A Kiss And A Vow“ and “Bamboo Rock And Roll“ entered a fen local charts. Nevertheless, the Nitecaps must have been popular for some time, because Otis Williams (of Detroit’s Temptations) remembered having seen them live.

   

Of the Hamilton brothers, Al is well known to soul music fans as Al kent, a name under that he entered both the R&B and pop charts with You Gotta Pay The Price on Ric Tic in 1967. When The Nitecaps broke up, he went to New York with his brother Ronnie to study music. He returned to Detroit in 1961, and then started working for Golden World Records. Later he dealt with a lot of artists on the Ric Tic and Westbound labels and also wrote for Edwin Starr and Jackie Wilson. Ronnie, who sometimes appeared under the pseudonym of Ronnie Savoy, had later success with MGM Records, before he produced Ben E. King.



 

Songs :

     
A Kiss And A Vow              Be My Girl                  You May Not Know

     
Bamboo Rock And Roll                   Sweet Thing                         Tough Mama           

     
In Each Corner Of My Heart          Let Me Know Tonight              Snap Crackle And Pop    

  
You're Gonna Be Sorry             Oh, You Sweet Girl   

 

...

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The Minor-Tones aka The Classics (1) ref : The Viceroys (2) - ref : The Penguins

Posted on by dion1

The Minor-Tones aka The Classics (1)   ref : The Viceroys (2) - ref : The Penguins

The Minor-Tones (Los Angeles)
aka The Classics (1)
ref : The Viceroys (2) - ref : The Penguins

 

Personnel :

James/Jimmy Conwell (Lead)

Oliver Williams

Jack

Steve


Discography :

The Minor-Tones
1956 - Burning Desire / Gonna Tell The World (Cholly 7094)

The Classics (1)
1959 - Je Vous Aime / Burning Desire (Ro-Ann 1002)

------------------------------------------

The Viceroys (2)
1961 - Uncle Sam Needs You / I'm So Sorry (It's Ending With You) (Little Star 107/ Smash 1716)
1961 - Dreamy Eyes / Ball N' Chain (Original Sound 15)

The Penguins
1963 - Memories Of El Monte / Be Mine (Original Sound 27)



Biography :

James/Jimmy Conwell had been doo-wopping since 1953, when with Oliver Williams, Jack and Steve, he formed the Minor Tones at Carver Junior High School in L.A. (Jesse Belvin was an early mentor). The group debuted on the Cholly label with the street corner ballad “Burning Desire,” then recut it in 1959 as the Classics for producer H.B. Barnum and Ro-Ann Records.

The Minor-Tones aka The Classics (1)   ref : The Viceroys (2) - ref : The Penguins

The Group broke up some time later, but Jimmy Conwell and Oliver Williams along with three friends, Andrew Jack White, Charles Jones and Herbert White formed a new group, The Viceroys. They cut a Coasters-influenced “Uncle Sam Needs You” for Barnum in ‘61. First out on the Little Star logo, it was picked up by Mercury’s Smash imprint for national consumption.

The Minor-Tones aka The Classics (1)   ref : The Viceroys (2) - ref : The Penguins    The Minor-Tones aka The Classics (1)   ref : The Viceroys (2) - ref : The Penguins
    Cleve Duncan                                                                         The Exits with James Conwell                            

The group also waxed “Dreamy Eyes” for local deejay Art Laboe’s Original Sound logo the same year and subbed as the Penguins just long enough to back Cleve Duncan on “Memories Of El Monte” in ’63 for Laboe’s logo. Later, Jimmy Conwell went onto to record throughout the late 1960's as a solo artist and with The Exits, The New Group, The Trips and The Light Drivers.



Songs :
(updated by Hans-Joachim) 

The Minor-Tones


Burning Desire / Gonna Tell The World

The Classics (1)


Je Vous Aime / Burning Desire

------------------------------------------------

The Viceroys (2)


I'm So Sorry / Uncle Sam Needs You

  
Dreamy Eyes                                        Ball N' Chain

The Penguins

  
Memories Of El Monte                                  Be Mine            

 

...

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The Bow Ribbons ref : The Shadows (4)

Posted on by dion1

The Bow Ribbons   ref : The Shadows (3)
Beverly, Victoria & Debra

The Bow Ribbons (Los Angeles)
ref : The Shadows (4)

 

Personnel :

Victoria Peace

Beverly ?

Debra ?


Discography :

The Bow Ribbons
1959 - Hey Diddle Diddle / Quick Like (Elroy Peace & Bow Ribbons) (Trans-Continental 3001)
1959 - Mr. Spoon / Our Father (Motif ZM-018)

The Shadows (4) (Elroy Peace and Paul White)
1958 - You Make My Heart Sing Ah! / Pretty Window (Dick Garrett & The Shadows ) (Fraternity 795)


Biography :

Vocal group The Bow Ribbons, comprised of three young lasses : Beverly, Victoria & Debra between 6 and 8 years old. The Bow Ribbons were Elroy Peace's little daughter Victoria, age 6, and two nieces, Beverly and Debra age 7 and 8. The Young Trio recorded for Transcontinental Records owned by Brad Atwood the sides "Hey Diddle Diddle" and "Quick Like" where the girls backed  Elroy  with Eddie Cochran on guitar. Some months later, they recorded two new songs "Mr. Spoon" and "Our Father" released by Milton Vedder's label Motif. the four songs recorded by the trio were all composed by Ray Stanley.

The Bow Ribbons   ref : The Shadows (3)    The Bow Ribbons   ref : The Shadows (3)
Elroy Peace                                                                                                                               

Ray Stanley was born Stanley Nussbaum in Dermott, Arkansas in 1924. Songwriter and vocalist Stanley teamed up with Jack Lewis at American Music and were responsible for the Crest label's first four releases. In May 1956, 'Glendora' a Ray Stanley song was covered by Perry Como whose version made the top ten on RCA. Lewis then left American and founded Sherman Music with Billy Sherman. Ray played piano on Eddie Cochran's early sessions in Gold Star Studio in mid 1956 including 'Skinny Jim', 'Half Loved' and 'My Love To Remember'.

The Bow Ribbons   ref : The Shadows (3)

In late 1956 Ray made a couple of demos of songs he composed. These demos are now mostly famous as Eddie Cochran sat in on guitar and provided some of his best recorded guitar licks. Songs include: 'Market Place', 'Pushin', 'Love Charms', My Lovin' Baby' and 'Kiss & Make Up'.  In 1958, Elroy Peace and Paul White are The Shadows. One of the most memorable songs of bandleader Ted Lewis  was "Me and My Shadow" with which he frequently closed his act.  Around 1928, he started to use a shadow mimicking his movements during his act.   Several Afro-American played the Shadow.  Elroy Peace and Paul White were two of them in the forties.

The Bow Ribbons   ref : The Shadows (3)
Young Elroy Peace and Paul White (The Shadows)

Elroy Peace's first record was probably "Onion Breath Baby" for the Swing Time label in 1953. Followed a duet with Willie Mae Thornton on Peacock. After the Fraternity single as the Shadows, he was heard on West Coast labels such as Keen, Romeo, or Helga. In the early sixties, during a tour in Australia & New-Zealand, Elroy recorded at least two singles which were issued on local labels.




Songs :

The Bow Ribbons

  
Our Father                                                 Mr. Spoon

Elroy Peace & The Bow Ribbons


Quick Like


The Shadows (4)


You Make My Heart Sing Ah!


...


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