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Tommy James and the Shondells

 
Artist: Tommy James & the Shondells
Tommy James & the Shondells

Group Members:

Tommy James, Craig Villeneuve, Larry Coverdale, Jimmy Payne, Larry Wright, Peter Lucia, Eddie Gray, Vincent Pietropaoli, George Magura, Mike Vale, Ron Rosman, Joseph Kessler

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

Performed Songs By:

Bo Gentry, Robert L. King, Tommy James, Mike Vale, Paul Naumann, Peter Lucia, Bob King, Bobbie Gentry, Ritchie Cordell, Jeff Barry, Bobby Bloom, Jerry Vale, Ellie Greenwich

Formal Connection With:

Hog Heaven
See Tommy James & the Shondells Lyrics
  • Formed: 1960, Dayton, OH
  • Disbanded: 1970
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Anthology," "Crystal Blue Persuasion & Other Hits," "Mony Mony & Other Great Hits"
  • Representative Songs: "Mony Mony," "Hanky Panky," "Crystal Blue Persuasion"

Biography

Tommy James & the Shondells -- the very mention of their name, even to someone who doesn't really know their music, evokes images of dances and the kind of fun that rock & roll represented before it redefined itself on more serious terms. And between 1966 and 1969, the group enjoyed 14 Top 40 hits, most of which remain among the most eminently listenable (if not always respected) examples of pop/rock. The group was almost as much of a Top 40 radio institution of the time as Creedence Clearwater Revival, but because they weren't completely self-contained (they wrote some, but not all, or their own hits) and were more rooted in pop/rock than basic rock & roll, it took decades for writers and pop historians to look with favor on Tommy James & the Shondells.

Tommy James was born Thomas Jackson on April 20, 1947, in Dayton, OH. He was introduced to music at age three, when he was given a ukulele by his grandfather. He was an attractive child and was working as a model at age four, which gave him something of a taste for performing. By age nine he'd moved to the next step in music, taking up the guitar, and by 1958, when he was 11, James began playing the electric guitar. In 1960, with his family now living in Niles, MI, 13-year-old James and a group of four friends from junior high school -- Larry Coverdale on guitar, Larry Wright on bass, Craig Villeneuve on piano, and Jim Payne on drums -- got together to play dances and parties. This was the original lineup of the Shondells, and they became good enough to earn decent money locally, and even got noticed by an outfit called Northway Sound Records, who recorded the quintet in a Tommy James original entitled "Judy" in 1962. That single didn't make much noise beyond their immediate locale, but in late 1963, the group came to the notice of a local disc jockey starting up a new label called Snap Records. They cut four sides, two of which were issued and disappeared without a trace on their first Snap single.

The second Snap label release, "Hanky Panky," was golden, at least in the area around Niles. A Jeff Barry/Ellie Greenwich song that the couple had already recorded under their nom de plume, the Raindrops, as a B-side that James and company had heard done by a rival band, "Hanky Panky," had become part of James' group's stage act. It was enormously popular on-stage, and the Snap single took off locally in Niles and the surrounding area, but it never got heard any further away. James and company picked up their marbles and went home, abandoning aspirations for a recording career in favor of pursuing music part time -- the singer/guitarist took a day job at a record store and confined his music efforts to the nighttime hours. The two years that ensued, from early 1964 until 1966, saw the original Shondells break up, as members left music or were drafted. This didn't seem to make much difference until a day came when James got an urgent request from a promoter to do a concert in Pittsburgh, PA.

Considering that the group had never even played there, he was puzzled. He soon found that the Snap Records single "Hanky Panky," recorded back in 1963 and overlooked in Chicago and Detroit at the time, had suddenly broken out in Pittsburgh. A promoter, having found a copy of the Snap single in a used-record bin, had liked what he heard and gotten the record played locally at dances. In one of those fluky instances that made the record business in those days a complete marvel, people suddenly started requesting "Hanky Panky," and in response to the demand, bootleggers began producing it, attributed to various labels -- some sources estimate that as many as 80,000 copies were sold in Pittsburgh before the smoke cleared.

James saw what he had to do, but he no longer had a band and was forced to recruit a new group of Shondells. The lucky winners were the Raconteurs, a local Pittsburgh quintet. They became the Shondells, with Joe Kessler on guitar, Ron Rosman on keyboards, George Magura on sax, Mike Vale on bass, and Vinnie Pietropaoli on drums; eter Lucia and Eddie Gray, respectively, replaced Pietropaoli and Kessler, and Magura and his saxophone didn't last long in the lineup.

From near-total obscurity, this version of Tommy James & the Shondells went to playing to audiences numbering in the thousands, and were being courted by Columbia Records and RCA-Victor. It was Morris Levy and Roulette Records, however, who outbid everybody and won the group's contract, and got a number one national hit with "Hanky Panky," in the version cut by the original group nearly three years earlier.

Tommy James & the Shondells, revamped, revised, and reactivated, spent the next three and a half years trying to keep up with their own success. "Say Am I," their second Roulette single and the first by the extant group, only got to number 21, but it was accompanied by a pretty fair Hanky Panky LP, showing off the group's prowess at covering current soul hits by the likes of the Impressions, James Brown, and Junior Walker & the All-Stars. A third single, "It's Only Love," reached number 31, but the fourth, "I Think We're Alone Now," issued in early 1967, got to number four, and the fifth, "Mirage," was another Top Ten release. The latter record was truly a spin-off of the previous hit in the most bizarre way -- according to James, "Mirage" was initially devised by playing the master of "I Think We're Alone Now" backwards. Those recordings were the work of songwriter and producer Ritchie Cordell, who became a rich source of material for the group for the remainder of their history.

Tommy James & the Shondells were lucky enough to be making pop-oriented rock & roll in an era when most of the rest of the rock music world was trying to make more serious records and even create art (often even when the act in question had no capacity for that kind of activity). They were at a label who recognized the need to spend money in order to make money, and didn't mind the expense of issuing a new LP with each major single, despite the fact that Roulette was mostly a singles label where everything but jazz was concerned. The group members themselves were having the time of their lives playing concerts, making personal appearances, and experimenting with advancing their sound in the studio. Audiences loved their work and their records, and it only seemed to get better.

Their songs ran almost counter to the trend among serious rock artists. "Mony Mony," a number three hit coming out in the midst of Vietnam, the psychedelic boom, and just as rock music was supposed to be turning toward higher, more serious forms, was a result of the group looking for a perfect party record and dance tune; even the name was sheer, dumb luck, a result of James spotting the Mutual of New York (MONY) illuminated sign atop their building in mid-town Manhattan at a key moment in the creative process. The group did grab a piece of the prevailing style in late 1968 with "Crimson and Clover," an original by James and drummer Peter Lucia that utilized some creative sound distortion techniques. A number one hit that sold five million copies, it was the biggest single of the group's history and yielded a highly successful follow-up LP as well -- ironically, the latter album included liner notes by Vice President Hubert Humphrey, who had gotten to know the band in the course of their performing at some of his campaign events during his 1968 run for the presidency.

James and company were among the top pop/rock performers in the world during 1969, with two more major hits, "Sweet Cherry Wine" and "Crystal Blue Persuasion," to their credit. Indeed, their presence on the Crimson and Clover album, in addition to the title cut, helped loft that record to a 35-week run on the charts, an extraordinary achievement not only in the history of the band but also -- for a non-greatest hits album -- for Roulette Records, who weren't known as a strong album label. They also began experimenting more with new sounds during this period, most notably on their next album, Cellophane Symphony. The latter record, whose release was delayed for four months because of the extraordinary sales of Crimson and Clover, had its share of basic rock & roll sounds but also plunged into progressive/psychedelic music with a vengeance, most notably on "Cellophane Symphony," a Moog-dominated track that sounds closer to Pink Floyd than anyone ever imagined possible. Cellophane Symphony sold well without breaking any records by its predecessor, and proved in the process that Tommy James & the Shondells could compete in virtually any rock genre. The only miscalculation made by the band was their declining an invitation to perform at Woodstock; the mere credit, coupled with perhaps an appearance in the movie or on the album, might have enhanced their credibility with the counterculture audience.

The end of the Shondells' history came not from any real decision, but simply their desire to take a break in 1970, after four years of hard work and a lot of great times. The moment also seemed right -- James was getting involved in other projects and moving in other directions, including writing and producing records for acts like the Brooklyn-based band Alive and Kicking, whose "Tighter and Tighter" got to number seven, and his own solo recordings. The Shondells continued working together for a time as well, under the name Hog Heaven, cutting one album for Roulette before withdrawing back to the Pittsburgh area where they'd started.

James went through a lot of different sounds on his own records, including country (My Head, My Bed, & My Red Guitar) and Christian music (Christian of the World), and charted in the Top Ten one last time in 1971 with "Draggin' the Line," although he also saw more limited success for another two years with records such as "I'm Comin' Home" and "Celebration."

In the mid-'70s, he made a jump from Roulette Records, where he'd based his career for nearly a decade, to Fantasy Records, and he later recorded for Millennium Records. Following his 1980 Top 20 hit, "Three Times in Love," he resurfaced as a concert artist playing his old hits as well as new songs, although some of these shows were marred by reports of late arrivals and less-than-ideal performances; he has since reestablished a record as a serious crowd-pleasing act, cutting records anew with Cordell and even releasing a live hits collection in 1998.

Tommy James & the Shondells have even achieved something that they saw relatively little of in their own time -- respect. In the years 1966-1970, they were regarded as a bubblegum act and part of the scenery by the few discerning critical voices around, but in the '80s, their music revealed its staying power in fresh recordings (and hits) by Joan Jett, Billy Idol, and Tiffany, with "Crimson and Clover," "Mony Mony," and "I Think We're Alone Now," respectively; indeed, in one of those odd chart events that would have seemed more likely in the '60s, in 1987, Tiffany's version of "I Think We're Alone Now" was replaced at the number one spot after two weeks by Billy Idol's rendition of "Mony Mony." Rhino Records' reissue of the Crimson and Clover and Cellophane Symphony albums, in addition to greatest hits collections and a survey of James' solo recordings from the decade 1970-1980, also seemed to speak for the group's credibility, and a 1997 Westside Records double CD, It's a New Vibration, offering unreleased songs from the '60s as well as all of the key single tracks, confirmed the level of seriousness with which the group was perceived.

Tommy James was no Mick Jagger or Jim Morrison, to be sure, and his songwriting -- which was usually not solo, in any case -- lacked the downbeat, serious tone or the little mystical touches of John Fogerty. He's usually put more comfortably in the company of such figures as Paul Revere & the Raiders' Mark Lindsay, or with Johnny Rivers or Tommy Roe, in the middle or early part of the '60s. But from 1968 through 1970, when artists like Jagger, Fogerty, and Morrison were in their heyday, Tommy James & the Shondells sold more singles than any other pop act in the world, many of them written, co-written, or at least chosen by James. The mere fact that he released a concert DVD in the fall of 2000 is loud testament to the power and impact of his work four decades into his career. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Discography: Tommy James & the Shondells
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40 Years: The Complete Singles Collection (1966-2006)

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Wikipedia: Tommy James and the Shondells
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Tommy James and the Shondells
Origin Niles, Michigan
Genres Pop rock
Psychedelic music
Years active 1963—1970, 2007-present?
Labels Snap, Roulette, Aura
Members
Tommy James
John Golden
Bobby Guy
Glenn Wyka
Former members
Mike Vale
Ronnie Rosman
Eddie Gray
Peter Lucia, Jr.
Joseph "Joe" Kessler
Larry Wright
Larry Coverdale
Vincent Pietropaoli
James Payne
Mike Baird
Craig Villeneuve
George D. Magura
John E. Van Dyke
Kenneth "Fung Porter" King
David Santos
Owen Yost
Kasim Sulton

Tommy James and the Shondells are an American rock and roll group whose period of greatest success came in the late 1960s. They had two number one singles in the U.S. — "Hanky Panky" (1966) and "Crimson and Clover" (1969) — and also released five other top ten hits; "I Think We're Alone Now," "Mony Mony," "Crystal Blue Persuasion", "Mirage", and "Sweet Cherry Wine".

Contents

History

The band initially formed in 1959 as Tom and the Tornadoes, with the then only 12-year-old Tommy James as lead singer. In 1963, James re-named the band The Shondells after one of his idols, guitarist Troy Shondell. The next year, they recorded the Jeff Barry/Ellie Greenwich song, "Hanky Panky" (originally a B-side by The Raindrops[1]). James' version sold respectably in Michigan, Indiana and Illinois, but the record label, Snap Records, had no national distribution. The single failed to chart, and the Shondells disbanded.

Two years later, a Pittsburgh radio station unearthed the forgotten single and touted it as an "exclusive." Listener response encouraged the station to play it regularly. Another Pittsburgh disc jockey played his copy of the single at various dance parties, and demand soared. Bootleggers responded by printing up 80,000 black market copies of the recording, which were sold in Pennsylvania stores.

James first learned of all this activity after getting a telephone call in December 1965 from Pittsburgh disc jockey "Mad Mike" Metro, to come and perform the song. James contacted his fellow Shondells, but they had moved past their musical ambitions and did not want to travel to Pittsburgh.

In 1966, James went by himself and made promotional appearances at the Pittsburgh radio station, in nightclubs and on local television. "I had no group, and I had to put one together really fast," recalled James. "I was in a Pittsburgh club one night, and I walked up to a group that was playing that I thought was pretty good, and asked them if they wanted to be the Shondells. They said yes, and off we went."[citation needed]

With Vale, Rosman, Kessler, Pietropaoli, and Magura as his new Shondells, James now had a touring group to promote the single. James went to New York, and sold the master of "Hanky Panky" to Roulette Records. With national promotion behind it, the single became a national #1 hit in July 1966. Before long, Kessler, Pietropaoli, and Magura were replaced by Gray and Lucia.

At first, Tommy James and his Shondells played straightforward shambolic rock and roll, but soon became involved in the budding bubblegum music movement. Songwriter Ritchie Cordell gave them the #4 hit "I Think We're Alone Now." They also had a #10 hit with "Mirage" in 1967. In 1968, James had a #3 hit with "Mony Mony", written by James (together with Vale) and allegedly inspired by the sign for Mutual of N York that hung outside his apartment window. He followed it with the song "Do Something to Me".

However, James was labeled as a bubble gum rock artist, which he hated. Therefore, he changed his style to psychedelic rock.

From 1968, the group members tried themselves as songwriters, with James and Lucia penning the psychedelic classic "Crimson and Clover." The song was also completely recorded and mixed by Bruce Staple, with James taking over vocal duties and playing all instruments, and featured the then unusual use of electronic gadgetry such as vocoders and phasers. Later in 1968, the group toured with Vice President Hubert Humphrey during his presidential campaign. Humphrey graciously expressed his appreciation by writing the liner notes for the Crimson and Clover album.[2]

Further hits included "Crystal Blue Persuasion", "Sweet Cherry Wine", and "Ball of Fire," all from 1969. They also produced "Sugar on Sunday," later covered by The Clique. As the band embraced the sounds of psychedelia, they were invited to perform at the Woodstock concert, but declined.

The group continued until early 1970. At a concert, James collapsed onstage from a reaction to drugs, and was actually pronounced "dead." However, he recovered, hated the recording studio, and decided to move to the country to recuperate.[3] His four bandmates carried on for a short while under the name of Hog Heaven, but disbanded soon afterwards.

In a 1970 side project, James wrote and produced the #7 hit single "Tighter, Tighter" for the group Alive N Kickin'.[4] James launched a solo career in 1971, which yielded two notable hits over a 10-year span; "Draggin' the Line" (1971) and "Three Times In Love" (1980).

During the 1980s, the group's songbook resulted in major hits for three other artists: Joan Jett & The Blackhearts' version of "Crimson And Clover" (a #7 hit in 1982), and Tiffany's "I Think We're Alone Now" and Billy Idol's "Mony Mony" (back-to-back #1 hits in November 1987). Other Shondells covers have been performed by acts as disparate as psychobilly ravers The Cramps, new wave singer Lene Lovich, country music veteran Dolly Parton and the Boston Pops orchestra.

In 2000, a Greenwich Village nightclub appearance by the reformed band was filmed and released as Tommy James & the Shondells: Live! At The Bitter End.[5]

Discography

Singles

  • 1966: "Hanky Panky" (#1 U.S.) (#38 UK) (#1 CAN)
  • 1966: "Say I Am (What I Am)" (#21) (#12 CAN)
  • 1966: "It's Only Love" (#31) (#10 CAN)
  • 1967: "I Think We're Alone Now" (#4) (#6 CAN)
  • 1967: "Mirage" (#10) (#2 CAN)
  • 1967: "I Like the Way" (#25) (#21 CAN)
  • 1967: "Gettin' Together" (#18) (#24 CAN)
  • 1967: "Out of the Blue" (#43) (#35 CAN)
  • 1968: "Get Out Now" (#48) (#37 CAN)
  • 1968: "Mony Mony" (#3) (#1 UK, 3 weeks) (#3 CAN)
  • 1968: "Somebody Cares" (#53) (#40 CAN)
  • 1968: "Do Something to Me" (#38) (#16 CAN)
  • 1968: "Crimson and Clover" (#1) (#1 CAN)
  • 1969: "Sweet Cherry Wine" (#7) (#6 CAN)
  • 1969: "Crystal Blue Persuasion" (#2) (#1 CAN)
  • 1969: "Ball of Fire" (#19) (#8 CAN)
  • 1969: "She" (#23) (#15 CAN)
  • 1970: "Gotta Get Back to You" (#45) (#16 CAN)
  • 1970: "Come to Me" (#47) (#46 CAN)
  • 2004: "I Love Christmas" (CD single)

Albums

  • 1966 Hanky Panky
  • 1966 It's Only Love
  • 1967 I Think We're Alone Now
  • 1967 Gettin' Together
  • 1967 Something Special
  • 1968 Mony Mony
  • 1968 Crimson & Clover
  • 1969 Cellophane Symphony
  • 1969 The Best of Tommy James and the Shondells
  • 1970 Travelin'
  • 1983 Short Sharp Shots (10" PRT Records)

References

External links


 
 

 

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