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Obit: Jimmy Ellis (The Trammps) 74

Mr. Ellis’s melodious voice overlaid the funky guitar riffs and driving bass and drums of the Trammps’s dance music. He sang lead on most of the group’s songs such as "Disco Inferno" and "That's Where the Happy People Go", backed by the bass singer Earl Young, and later harmonized with Robert Upchurch, who joined the band in the mid-1970s.

The Trammps were formed in the early ’70s, according to their keyboard player and manager, Edward Cermanski. Mr. Cermanski said the second “m” in the group’s name came from the days when Mr. Ellis and his friends sang on street corners. “The police called them tramps,” he said. “So they said they wanted to be high-class tramps, with two ‘m’s in the name.”
 
Saddened to read this, the news had passed me by. Could not help but respect that awesome energy Ellis had.

The Trammps had some lesser known songs after the likes of "Where the Happy People Go" and "Disco Inferno" shot things like "Soul Searchin Time" and "Zing Went the Strings" more in the background. But the one recording they did that always seemed worthy of more appreciation was "Stop and Think."
 
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