AlexBrowne said:
The Tokens, whose biggest hit by far was the 1961 million-seller "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" -- from the South African Zulu song "Mbube" which had been adapted previously by the Weavers, in 1952, as "Wimoweh" -- began in 1955 as the Linc-Tones, a vocal quartet of students from Brooklyn's Lincoln High School, and re-formed as The Tokens in 1960 after many personnel changes; one of the Linc-Tones' original members was Neil Sedaka, who left the group in 1958 for a solo career and to continue songwriting with fellow Lincoln alumnus Howard Greenfield.
Oh... and Happy Thanksgiving everyone!!
Following his graduation from Fairfax high school in Los Angeles, California, Phil Spector became obsessed with a song, "
To Know Him Is
to Love Him", he had written for his
group, The Teddy Bears. After a hasty audition at ERA Records who offered to finance a studio session, The Teddy Bears - Spector, Marshall Leib, lead singer Annette Kleinbard, and last minute recruit, drummer Sandy Nelson - recorded the song at Gold Star Studios at a total cost of $75. Released on ERA's Dore label in August
1958, it took a full two months before "
To Know Him Is
to Love Him" began to get airplay.
The record eventually stayed in the Billboard Hot 100 for twenty three weeks, resided in the Top Ten for eleven of those weeks, and commanded the #1 chart position for three weeks. At age seventeen, Spector had written, arranged, played, sung, and produced the best-selling record in the country. within a year of their impressive debut, Spector had disbanded the group. Annette Kleinbard continued to write and record songs, and eventually changed her name to Carol Connors. Among her songwriting credits are the Rip Chords hit "Hey Little Cobra".