I'll bet this one, which reached Number 3 in 1962, brings back a few memories.
Brian Hyland is a cousin (by marriage) of the late Louis Feinberg, aka "Larry Fine" of the Three Stooges.
Bet you never knew that!
Vintage Video Clips mainly of original Artistes - Page may take a while to load
I'll bet this one, which reached Number 3 in 1962, brings back a few memories.
Brian Hyland is a cousin (by marriage) of the late Louis Feinberg, aka "Larry Fine" of the Three Stooges.
Bet you never knew that!
Happy Birthday Booker T - and thanks for the music.
I remember appearing with the Chants many years ago at Haltwhistle Club - they were an excellent male vocal-harmony act backed at various times by several Merseyside groups (including reputedly The Beatles). They made quite an impact as the first local group to sing songs by black acts like the Drifters and the Coasters in the way they were meant to be sung.
The Chants were championed by Merseyside MP, Bessie Braddock after their first single, I Don't Care, came to her attention. Her interest was primarily because they were a black group from a depressed area of Liverpool.
The band broke up, but Joey and Edmund Ankrah later had success on ITV's New Faces as part of Ashanti. Eddie Amoo went on to have chart success as part of the Liverpool soul group, The Real Thing.
This seems to be taken from one of those "Look at Life" shorts which were shown at the Cinema in the days when you got two films, the Movietone News, a load of adverts and maybe even a cartoon for your money.
Now you have to get a bank loan just to get in, then all you get is one film full of unadulterated sex and bad language ..... and I don't like the bad language.
Brenda Lee (born December 11, 1944) is an American pop singer, who was immensely popular during the 1950s and 1960s. In the 1960s she had more charted hits than any other woman, and only three male singers/groups (Elvis Presley, Ray Charles and The Beatles) outpaced her. She was one of the earliest pop stars to have a major contemporary international following.
She was given the nickname Little Miss Dynamite after recording Dynamite in 1957; the explosive strength of the sound pouring out of her small frame amazed audiences and promoters. Her general popularity faded as her voice suffered damage and matured in the late 1960s, but she successfully continued her recording career by returning to her roots as a country singer. She was able to chart in Billboard's CW top ten twice in 1980.
She enjoys one distinction unique among successful American singers: her opening act on a UK tour in 1960 was a struggling foursome from Liverpool, England - The Beatles.
Wonder what happened to them?
Another classic instrumental by one-hit wonders The Cougars.
I wonder where they are now?
....... performed by Gene Vincent, Eddie Cochran, Billy Fury & Joe Brown - Together!!
King was born Benjamin Earl Nelson in Henderson, NC, in 1938, and sang with his church choir before the family moved to Harlem in 1947. In junior high, he began performing with a street corner doo wop group called the Four B's, which won second place in an Apollo Theater talent contest. While still in high school, he was offered a chance to join the Moonglows, but was simply too young and inexperienced to stick. He subsequently worked at his father's restaurant as a singing waiter, which led to an invitation to become the baritone singer in a doo wop outfit called the Five Crowns in 1958. The Five Crowns performed several gigs at the Apollo Theater along with the Drifters, whose career had begun to flounder in the years since original lead singer Clyde McPhatter departed. Drifters manager George Treadwell, dissatisfied with the group members' unreliability and lack of success, fired them all in the summer of 1958 and hired the Five Crowns to assume the name of the Drifters (which he owned).
The new Drifters toured for about a year, playing to often hostile audiences who knew they were a completely different group. In early 1959, they went into the studio with producers Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller to cut their first records. A song Nelson (still performing under his given name) co-wrote called "There Goes My Baby" became his first lead vocal and the lush backing arrangement made highly unorthodox (in fact, virtually unheard-of) use of a string section. "There Goes My Baby" became a massive hit, laying the groundwork for virtually every smooth/uptown soul production that followed. Over the next two years, Nelson sang lead on several other Drifters classics, including "Dance With Me," "This Magic Moment," "Save the Last Dance for Me," and "I Count the Tears."
Marie McDonald McLaughlin Lawrie, OBE - the first British female singer to appear behind the iron Curtain.
She toured Poland with the Hollies in 1966.
You can't go much further back than this!
Although the group are not Sixties - the song certainly is - and they started life in Whitley Bay UK which is our part of the world.