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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Yet Another Group Lost In The Shuffle,
By AvidOldiesCollector (Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Who Wrote the Book of Love (Audio CD)
"Well I wonder, wonder whoom de doo doo - who - BOOM ... who wrote the book of love...?"
The Monotones from Newark, New Jersey - lead singer Charles Patrick (b. September 11, 1938), Warren Davis (b. March 1, 1939), George Malone (b. January 5, 1940), Warren Ryanes (b. December 14, 1937), John Ryanes (b. November 16, 1940) and John Smith (b. May 13, 1938) are the quintessential one-hit wonders whenever discussions turn to Fifties and Sixties groups who made one huge initial splash - and then disappeared from view. Like many others in this category, however, their chart performances - or lack thereof - were more often than not attributable to the ability of their small label to compete with the giants supporting groups like The Diamonds and Crew Cuts (Mercury), Four Lads (Columbia) and Drifters (Atlantic). In this instance five young men hit upon a song based loosely on a Pepsodent toothpaste commercial (You'll wonder where the yellow went ...) and, while rehearsing, some children outside were tossing a ball against the wall. At one key point the ball hit the window and, although not breaking it, made a loud boom inside the rehearsal room. Right at the spot it now appears in that legendary song. Everyone agreed it should be incorporated into the final version. When that was released in 1957 on Mascot 124 - b/w You Never Loved Me - it struggled to make a dent in the neighbourhood, never mind the national charts. However, a leasing arrangement with the marginally larger Argo did the trick and by April it had peaked at # 3 R&B and # 5 Billboard Top 100. Working now with a Hull contract - and still using Argo to distribute - the group cut several more sides which, while nowhere near as good as Book Of Love, deserved a better fate on the charts. Among these are Legend Of Sleepy Hollow, Tell It To The Judge, Ride Of Paul Revere, and Fools Will Be Fools. The group folded when some of the boys were drafted into the armed forces, and in 1972 John Ryanes died at age 31. Yes, you can get Book Of Love on any number of multi-artist compilations - in fact it's one of those that seem to be included in EVERY Fifties retrospective - but I would still recommend it as an example of just how good some of these so-called "one hit wonders" really were.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
very good smooth slow jams collection,
This review is from: Soul Classics Volume One (Audio CD)
this is a Cool Classic Collection.the O'jays, Escorts,whatnauts,Linda Jones,George Karr all present nice cuts here.smooth cuts here.
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
ONE OF THE BEST SLOW JAMS,
By "missyregina" (Phila Pa U.S.A) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Soul Classics Volume One (Audio CD)
From the O'JAYS to the WHATNAUT'S every song on this cd is a golden classic.
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