The Moonglows - Most Of All (1955)

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US R&B Charts No. 5 (09.04.1955) 11 Weeks

The Moonglows were an American R&B group in the 1950s. Their song "Sincerely" went to number 1 on the Billboard R&B chart and number 20 on the Billboard Juke Box chart.
They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2000.
Fresh from a stint in the U.S. Army, two friends, Harvey Fuqua and Bobby Lester, formed a duo in 1949 in Louisville, Kentucky, United States. In 1951, Fuqua moved to Cleveland and formed the Crazy Sounds with the singers Danny Coggins and Prentiss Barnes. Lester joined them later.

In 1952, while performing at a Cleveland club, the Crazy Sounds auditioned for the club's management. They soon got in contact with the radio host Alan Freed, who upon hearing them became the group's manager. In 1953, Freed renamed the group the Moonglows, after his own nickname, Moondog. They signed with Freed's Champagne label, but their recordings for the label failed to make the charts. Coggins left the group and was replaced by Alexander Walton, who was sometimes known as Pete Graves or Pete Walton.

In 1953, they recorded for another small label, Chance, but like their Champagne recordings, their records had little success; their cover of Doris Day's "Secret Love" was their most successful for Chance. In September 1953, Freed obtained a contract with the New York radio station WINS. His success as a broadcaster and host of the station led to a contract for the Moonglows with Chess Records.
Their first Chess single, "Sincerely", led by Lester, reached number one on the Billboard R&B chart and the top 20 of the pop chart. The song was later a crossover success in a cover version by the McGuire Sisters. In 1955, the band picked the guitarist Billy Johnson to be their fifth member after Wayne Bennett left the group following their engagement at the Apollo Theater. That same year, the group had another R&B hit with "Most of All", followed by a more modest success with "We Go Together" in 1956.[3] Chess issued some of their recordings with the group credited as the Moonlighters.

For most of the Moonglows' tenure, the lead vocals were split between Lester and Fuqua. Lester preferred doo-wop ballads, whereas Fuqua preferred rock-and-roll songs. The two also recorded vocal duets. Their next hits, in 1956, included "See Saw", which peaked at number five R&B and number 25 on the Billboard Top 100, and "When I'm with You". which reached number 15 on the R&B chart. In August 1956, the band appeared in one of the first rock-and-roll movies, Rock, Rock, Rock, lip-syncing "Over and Over Again" and "I Knew From The Start".

By December 1956, Fuqua had begun to sing most of the vocal leads. In June 1957, the Moonglows had an R&B hit with their cover of Percy Mayfield's "Please Send Me Someone to Love". In late 1958, the Fuqua-led "Ten Commandments of Love" (used in soundtrack of "A Bronx Tale") reached number nine R&B and number 22 pop; the group was billed as Harvey and the Moonglows. Chess released two EPs and an album, Look, It's the Moonglows, during that period. Following that release, the original group broke up at the end of the year, performing together only for contractual reasons.

The Moonglows waren eine Doo-Wop-Band der 1950er Jahre.

Die Band fand sich 1951 in Cleveland als The Crazy Sounds zusammen. Harvey Fuqua tat sich zunächst mit Danny Coggins und Prentiss Barnes zusammen, um mit ihnen ein Gesangs-Trio zu gründen, wenig später holte er auch Bobby Lester, mit dem er schon früher musikalisch zusammengearbeitet hatte, in die Band. Die vier Sänger traten zunächst nur in der Umgebung von Cleveland auf, bis 1952 Alan Freed auf sie aufmerksam wurde. Sie erhielten das Angebot, vorspielen zu dürfen, und bekamen schließlich einen Plattenvertrag bei Freeds eigenem Label Champagne Records. Von nun an nannten sie sich The Moonglows.

Mit der Bobby-Lester-Komposition I Just Can't Tell No Lie hatten sie schon bald einen lokalen Hit. Doch wenig später verließ Coggins die Band, um eine Gasstation zu leiten. Die Band fand Ersatz in Alex Walton und Alexander Graves. 1953 besorgte Freed den Moonglows einen Vertrag bei Chance Records, die mit den Flamingos und den Spaniels bereits zwei weitere Doo Wop-Bands in ihrem Repertoire hatten. Doch da sich auch nach einem Jahr noch keine nennenswerten Erfolge zeigten, wurden sie schließlich vom Label gefeuert.
1958 verließ Harvey Fuqua die Band, um mit anderen Gruppen zusammenzuarbeiten, darunter den The Spinners sowie Marvin Gaye. Er wurde ein erfolgreicher Komponist und Plattenproduzent.

1995 erhielten sie den Pioneer Award der Rhythm and Blues Foundation und 1999 wurden sie in die Vocal Group Hall of Fame aufgenommen; im Jahre 2000 wurden die Moonglows dann in die Rock and Roll Hall of Fame aufgenommen.
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