Home / Tag Archives: Don & Dewey

Tag Archives: Don & Dewey

Lloyd Price

Not entirely quite happy with being truly a 1950s R&B celebrity on the effectiveness of his immortal Fresh Orleans vintage “Lawdy Miss Clawdy,” singer Lloyd Price yearned for massive pop approval. He discovered it, too, having a storming rock and roll & move reading from the historic blues “Stagger Lee” …

Read More »

Don “Sugarcane” Harris

Beginning his job as your guitar playing half from the 1950s rock and roll duo, Don & Dewey, Don “Sugarcane” Harris, deposit your guitar and found the violin following the insufficient success for Don & Dewey (strangely enough the group’s songs became strikes for other artists like the Righteous Brothers …

Read More »

Bobby King

The duo of soul singers Bobby Ruler and Terry Evans 1st teamed for the LA club circuit of the first ’70s; both also liked prolific session professions, and in 1974 lent their special harmonies to Ry Cooder’s Heaven and Lunch time, the 1st in some collaborations using the acclaimed guitarist. …

Read More »

Don & Juan

Don & Juan, given birth to Claude Johnson and Roland Trone, scored 1 big hit in 1962, entitled “What’s Your Name.” The solitary has turned into a doo wop traditional, but its clean ballad design also hints at the start of the introduction of spirit. Johnson and Trone got their …

Read More »

Don & Dewey

Wailing in tandem like twin Little Richards, Don & Dewey cut many blistering rockers for Specialty from 1957 to 1959 without registering an individual hit, and then see other works revive their music to much better acclaim. Don Harris (b. 1938) and Dewey Terry (b. 1938) had been born and …

Read More »

Larry Williams

A rough, rowdy rock and roll & move singer, Larry Williams had many hits in the later ’50s, many of which — “Bony Maroney,” “Dizzy, Miss Lizzy,” “Brief Body fat Fannie,” “Poor Youngster,” “She Said Yeah” — became genuine rock and roll & move classics and were recorded by Uk …

Read More »

The Halos

Bronx-based doo wop foursome the Halos enjoyed a humble hit in 1961 using the song “Nag,” however they were even more widely heard like a backup group dealing with additional artists from the past due ’50s and early ’60s. Al Cleveland, Arthur Crier, Phil Johnson, and Harold Johnson 1st began …

Read More »

Bob & Earl

Bob & Earl began as you of several aliases under which Bobby Day time (of “Small Bitty Pretty 1” and “Rockin’ Robin” popularity) and Earl Nelson (aka Jackie Lee) (given birth to Sept 8, 1928) recorded collectively for the Los Angeles-based Course Records label. Both harmonized beautifully, having a easy, …

Read More »