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Another great Etta was Etta Jones, a wonderful jazz singer who was with Earl "Fatha" Hines' orchestra in the 1940s and '50s and then broke into the Top 40 in 1960 with her signature song "Don't Go To Strangers"; she died in 2001.
Eydie Gorme and her longtime husband Steve Lawrence had their own charted hits dating back to the pre-rock early 1950s, she with "Fini" in 1954, and he with "Poinciana" in 1952, but their biggest hits came in the early 1960s: hers was "Blame It On The Bossa Nova," and his was the million seller "Go Away Little Girl."
The Dave Clark Five, who peaked in 1965 with their million seller "Over And Over," is considered one of the four biggest British Invasion groups of the 1960s, along with The Rolling Stones, Herman's Hermits, and, of course, The Beatles.
R&B singer/songwriter Isaac Hayes had his only #1 hit, "Theme From Shaft," in 1971; the backing group was the Bar-Kays (of "Soul Finger" fame) who released their own follow-up, "Son Of Shaft," later that year.
Admittedly this one may belong in the "Instrumental" thread, and it may already be there, but one of the great instrumental tunes that you should definitely see about finding is The Ventures' "Theme From Swat."
I once had a young oldies P D at the station I worked for tell me, the only safe instrumental he would ever play is Walk Dont Run by the VENTURES. Sad....
The biggest selling instrumental single of the rock 'n roll era is "Cherry Pink And Apple Blossom White" by Perez Prado And His Orchestra, which was from the 1955 movie "Underwater!" starring Jane Russell (in a bathing suit in SuperScope).
Uh Oh! How about a great surfin' instrumental rock tune called "Underwater" by The Frogmen? Very cool and very hard record to find but a definite must have for collectors of that sound!
Very accurate and intersting. It's also worth noting that The Trashmen recorded other great surfin' rock tunes such as: Hava Nagila, King Of The Surf, and Tube City, just to name a few.
From surfin to cross over country, Roger Miller and KING OF THE Road. By the way, Roger actually built a hotel in Nashville back in the day and called it the King of The Road Motor Inn.
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