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Beach music, also known as Carolina beach music, and to a lesser extent, beach pop, is a regional genre of music in the United States which developed from rock/R&B and pop music of the 1950s and 1960s.
The Catalinas are an American beach music band from the late 1950s. Since the Catalinas formed in Charlotte, North Carolina, in late 1957, over 60 guitarists, keyboardists, trumpet players, drummers, bass players and singers have been a part of the band. [1] Most have come from communities along the Interstate 77 corridor from Statesville to ...
In 1996, Brown was the first DJ named to the Carolina Beach Music Hall of Fame. [1] [4] On the Beach is a three-hour show heard on about 40 stations as of 2015, with about 50 songs from a playlist totalling 650. Artists include Chairmen of the Board, The Embers and The Temptations. [1] In 2010, On the Beach won the Syndicated Radio Show award ...
The festival believes to be the "longest running beach music festival in the United States that is still held on the North Carolina coast." It will be held Saturday, June 1 on the Carolina Beach ...
As Beach music spread, it popularized “shag dancing”— essentially a slowed-down version of the jitterbug — which is now the official popular dance of North Carolina. Weiss was inducted ...
The Band of Oz is a prominent band of the United States beach music genre. Starting in the mid-1960s with high school students, the band turned professional in the early-1970s with a core group mostly from the Greenville, North Carolina Rose High School Stage Band, that featured Chuck French on trumpet, Gary Warren saxophone, Randy Hignite keyboards, Jim Heidenreich drums, Johnnie Byrd bass ...
The band, which plays beach music, as well as ‘80s, variety and Sugarcreek songs, performs in North Myrtle Beach for the shag dancing group Society of Stranders, Fat’ Harold’s Beach Club and ...
The group was formed by brothers Harry and Jimmy Deal in the small southern town of Taylorsville, NC, where the band continues to perform over 50 years later.The band is synonymous with the term beach music, a style of rock and roll that started in the late 1940s in the dance clubs in the vicinity of Myrtle Beach on the coast of South Carolina.