In 1966, this New York group came off very much like a Lovin' Spoonful Jr., scoring a minor hit with a cover of John Sebastian's "Younger Girl" and then chalking up their only Top 20 single with the very Spoonful-esque original "Mr. Dieingly Sad." The group's soft harmonies and pop folk-rock were in a considerably lighter vein than their Kama Sutra labelmates, though. Much of their material was self-penned, though they also benefited from compositions by Jackie DeShannon and Brill Building tunesmiths Pete Anders, Vinnie Poncia, and Doc Pomus. Recording quite a few singles and an LP for Kama Sutra from 1965 to 1967, their gentle pop/rock was rather lightweight, with the exception of their best singles. After a final Top 40 hit in 1967 ("Don't Let the Rain Fall Down on Me"), principal songwriter Don Ciccone was drafted, and the group struggled on with a couple albums for the Project 3 label before splitting. ~ Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide
Bookmark
SAVE
Loading...
Loading...
Feed Readers (RSS/XML)
SUBSCRIBE
Loading...
Average Ratings
| Critics: | |
| Users: | |
| You: | |
| Write a Review | |
Hot Tickets
-
Brandi Carlile
Wed 3/17 7:00p -
Blind Squirrel StandUp Comedy
Mon 12/28 7:00p
Related Performers
add to our listings