Source from: http://www.history-of-rock.com/angels.htm
The Angels were formed in Orange, New Jersey in 1961.
Originally sisters Barbara and Phyliss "Jiggs" Allbut, as a
lark, went to a stret corner record your voice outlet and sang a few songs they had
written. Overheard by another songwriter, they were asked to sing on his demos. Soon they
added friends, Linda Malzone and Bernadette Carroll and called themselves the Starlets.
Originally called the Starlets, Barbara and Phyllis "Jiggs"
Allbut were two sisters that sang together in high school. They recorded "P.S. I Love
You" for Astro Records, a tiny New Jersey jazz label. They received airplay in the
New Jersey-New York area and Canadian-American Records did the distribution. They also did
"Better Tell Him No" for Pam Records. Neither which went anywhere. By mid-1961
Bernadette left for a solo career and was replaced Linda Jansen in doing vocal
back-up work in New York.
The Canadian-American connection led to a deal with Caprice, a small New
York City label, by gerry Granahan. Their first Caprice release in the summer of 1961 the
girls was "Till," a Top 30 hit five years earlier for Roger Williams.
After signing with Caprice Records, Jiggs dropped out of college and Barbara ended her
studies at the Julliard School of Music. Shortly before the release of their first record
"Till," to choose a name, each girl placed a name on a piece of
paper in a hat. The name Blue Angels was drawn with Blue later being dropped.
"Till" hit the charts in October 1961, rising to #14.
It was after their second release "Cry Baby Cry" (#38) that
Linda Jansen left the group and was replaced by Peggy Santiglia, who had sung
commercials and appeared on Broadway in Do Re Mi. Poor material haunted the
Angels for the next year and in the spring of 1963 they found themselves without a
contract. Then two things happened: they signed with Mercury Records and they came up with
a song written by Jerry Goldstein, Rich Gottehrer, and Bobby Feldman. Already familiar
with the Angels having produced producing the B side of their last Caprice single,
Goldstein, Gottehrer, and Feldman convinced Mercury to let them produce the Angels on a
song they had written. By late summer "My Boyfriends Back" was number one
nationally on Mercury's Smash affiliate. It even reached number two on the R&B charts.
Their next release "I Adore Him" went to number twenty-five and
the B side "Thank You and Good Night" became the sign-off theme on the Murray
the K's WINS radio show in New York.
The Angels then went on tour in both America and Europe in 1964,
performing with acts like Gerry and the Pacemakers. They also provided back up vocals for
other singers, including Jackie Wilson and Lou Christie, continued to record, and did
commercials until they signed with RCA in 1967. They broke up in 1969, then reformed in
the early Seventies for rock and roll revival shows. Their last major label single was for
Polydor Records in 1974, "Papa's Side of the Bed." They are still reportedly
doing occasional oldies shows on the East Coast.
I used to sing this on the way to school, when we lived in Japan...only about a mile, mile and a half....but I grooved the whole way! Love love love!
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