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  2. The Drifters' Golden Hits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Drifters'_Golden_Hits

    The Drifters' Golden Hits is a 1968 compilation album by American doo wop/R&B vocal group The Drifters.The collection of the bands' later hits charted at #22 on Billboard's "Black Albums" chart and at #122 on the "Pop Albums" chart.

  3. The Casinos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Casinos

    They are best known for their John D. Loudermilk-penned song "Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye", which hit No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1967, well after the end of the doo-wop era. [2] The Casinos were playing in a Cincinnati club where WSAI disc jockey Tom Dooley liked to visit. Dooley had a song he wanted to record but needed a band to ...

  4. Doo-wop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doo-wop

    Such composers as Rodgers and Hart (in their 1934 song "Blue Moon"), and Hoagy Carmichael and Frank Loesser (in their 1938 "Heart and Soul") used a I–vi–ii–V-loop chord progression in those hit songs; composers of doo-wop songs varied this slightly but significantly to the chord progression I–vi–IV–V, so influential that it is sometimes referred to as the '50s progression.

  5. The El Dorados - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_El_Dorados

    The El Dorados were an American doo-wop group, who achieved their greatest success with the song "At My Front Door", a no. 1 hit on the US Billboard R&B chart in 1955.

  6. The Silhouettes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Silhouettes

    The Silhouettes were formed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, in 1956, at first using the name The Thunderbirds. [1] Their classic hit "Get a Job" – originally the B-side to "I Am Lonely" – was issued by their manager, Kae Williams, on his own Junior Records label [1] before being sold to the nationally distributed Ember label in late 1957. [4]

  7. The Marquees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Marquees

    The group evolved from another doo wop group known as the Rainbows, who had an influential presence on the Washington D.C. music scene and released three singles for Bobby Robinson's Red Robin Records. Although the Rainbows were not very commercially successful on a national level, songs such as "Mary Lee", "Shirley," and "Minnie" have since ...

  8. The Dovells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dovells

    The Dovells in 1962. The Dovells were an American doo-wop group, formed at Overbrook High School in Philadelphia in 1957, under the name 'The Brooktones'. [1] The original members were Arnie Silver, Len Borisoff, Jerry Gross (alias Summers), Mike Freda, and Jim Mealey (alias Danny Brooks).

  9. The Crew-Cuts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Crew-Cuts

    They all had been members of the St. Michael's Choir School in Toronto, [3] which also spawned another famous quartet, The Four Lads.Maugeri, John Perkins, and two others (Bernard Toorish and Connie Codarini) who later were among the Four Lads first formed a group called The Jordonaires (not to be confused with a similarly named group, The Jordanaires, that was known for singing backup vocals ...