The Danleers - You're Everything 1958

Details
Title | The Danleers - You're Everything 1958 |
Author | Mr.DooWop |
Duration | 2:14 |
File Format | MP3 / MP4 |
Original URL | https://youtube.com/watch?v=aEtfe7NZibc |
Description
Biography
The Danleers (Brooklyn, New York)
Members
• Jimmy Weston – lead vocals (1958–64; 1972–93) Died June, 1993
• Johnny Lee – first tenor (1958–59; 1988)
• Willie Ephraim – second tenor (1958–59; 1988)
• Nat McCune – baritone (1958–59; 1972–93)
• Roosevelt Mays – bass (1958–59; 1988)
• Louis Williams – first tenor (1960–64)
• Doug Ebron – second tenor (1960–64; 1972)
• Terry Wilson – baritone (1960–64)
• Frankie Clemens – bass (1960–64)
• Bill Carey – baritone (1972–93)
• Robert Mirra - Lead vocals (2012-)
Background:
The Danleers formed in Brooklyn, New York in early 1958, joining the ranks of the many street-corner doo-wop groups existing at the time. Danny Webb became the group’s manager and principal songwriter, naming them after himself. The group recorded their debut single, "One Summer Night", for the AMP 3 label, owned by Bill Lasley, who signed the group in the spring of 1958. The song began gaining traction regionally and, unable to handle distribution, the label leased the single to Mercury Records. Mercury helped push the record to become one of that year’s biggest summer songs, selling over one million copies "One Summer Night" reached number four on the Billboard Black Singles chart, and number seven on the Best-Selling Pop Singles in Stores chart in 1958.
The group joined Frankie Avalon, Bobby Darin, and others on a nationally touring road show in the late 1950s. Their efforts with subsequent singles were not successes. They released two more singles on Mercury before the label dropped them, and they dissolved as the decade closed. Weston and Webb were determined to have another hit single, and signed with Epic in 1960 with a new lineup. Their first release for Epic, "If You Don’t Care", did not attract attention, nor did any other releases from the group. The group continued to tour in support of their one hit for several decades, with various members. The original group reformed for one show at the Westbury Music Fair on Long Island in 1988. In 1996, The Best of the Danleers: The Mercury Years, was released; the compilation includes all the group’s singles for Mercury, in addition to unreleased recordings.