NURSING
HOME SITE
- ADULT RETIREMENT COMMUNITIES SITE
Active
Baby Boomers
The
Drifters - Then And Where Are They Now
The
Drifters are the longest running band is pop history still performing
live and enjoying over 50 hits world-wide. Over the years the group
have undergone many line-up changes and the singers currently performing
are directly descended from those early days. Until very recently the
most consistent member, the late, great Johnny Moore (who first joined
the Drifters in 1954) took the stage with three of the current members,
Peter Lamarr, Partick Alan and Rohan Delano Turney.
When
Johnny died in 1998, the Drifters decided to continue in his honour,
bringing Victor Bynoe to complete the line up. Still performing all
there well-known songs, such as, “Save The Last Dance For Me” – “Saturday
Night At The Movies” – “Under The Boardwalk” – “Come On Over To My Place”
– “Kissin’ In The Back Row Of The Movies” – “There Goes My First Love”
– You’re More Than A Number In My Little Red Book” etc., etc.
The
Drifters helped create soul music with gospel style vocals. After Clyde
McPhatter was fired by the Dominoes Ahmet Ertegun of Atlantic Records
encouraged him to form a group. McPhatter discovered the other members
singing at the Mount Lebanon Church in Harlem, New York. The Drifters
were not only a popular for their vocals but, for their choreography.
Within a year McPhatter and the Drifters had recorded "Money Honey,"
"Such A Night," "Honey Love," and "White Christmas."
McPhatter was drafted into the Army in 1954.
After
McPhatter's departure George Treadwell, the Drifter's manager, hire
Johnny Moore to become the groups new lead singer. The first hit with
Moore was "Ruby Baby."
The
group's fortunes flagged, along with complaining about wages, caused
George Treadwell who owned the name to fire them all. in June, 1958.
Jerry
Wexler, Atlantic A&R man, recognizing the value of the Drifter name
and convinced Treadwell to apply the name to a brand new group. Treadwell
heard Benjamin Nelson (later Ben E. King) and hired him and his group
the Crowns and renamed them the New Drifters. The new group with Ben
E. King as lead tenor was even more successful then the original group.
Songwriters Leiber and Stoller wrote the groups first record "There
Goes My Baby" a #2 hit in 1959. Orchestral strings, gentle Latin
rhythm and Kings yearning romantic vocals became the groups trademark.
Other hits were "This Magic Moment", "I Count the Tears",
and "Save the Last Dance for Me". King left the group to pursue
a solo career in October, 1960.
In
the meantime, The Drifters enjoyed their greatest hit making period
with Rudy Lewis on lead vocals. Through 1963, The Drifters had major
pop and rhythm and blues hits provided by Brill Building songwriters.
These included Carole King and Gerry Goffin's "Some Kind of Wonderful,"
"When My Little Girl Is Smiling," and "Up On the Roof,"
Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman's "Sweets For My Sweet," and Barry
Mann and Cynthia Weil's "On Broadway" and "I'll Take
You Home." Lewis died in the summer of 1964 and early Drifter Johnny
Moore took over the lead for the group's final pop hits "Under
the Boardwalk" and "Saturday Night At the Movies." The
Drifters continued to record into the early '70s. Around 1972, Johnny
Moore with a new group of Drifters, moved to England, toured the clubs
and cabarets, and signed with British Bell, for whom they had a series
of British hits through 1975. Several different groupings of Drifters
perform today. Johnny Moore died in London on December 30, 1998 at the
age of sixty-four.
Ben
E. King reemerged in 1974 with the R&B and pop hit "Supernatural
Thing" and later recorded with The Average White Band. His popularity
diminished he rejoined The Drifters for European Tours in the early
'80s. King enjoyed renewed popularity and had a hit again with "Stand
By Me" the title song to the film of the same name in 1986 and
thereafter recorded for EMI, Manhattan, and Ichiban.
The
Drifters were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988.
Learn
more of olden goldies singers and bands at
http://www.history-of-rock.com/