The Tokens | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Brooklyn, New York, US |
Genres | Doo-wop, pop |
Years active | 1955–1978, 1998–2000 |
Labels | Warwick, RCA Victor, Victor Records, RCA Camden, JVC, HMV, B.T. Puppy Records |
Members | Jay Siegel's Tokens: Jay Siegel Gabriel Dassa Kurt Yahjian The Margo's Tokens: Jay Leslie Mike Johnson Noah Margo Ari Margo Damien Margo |
Past members | Neil Sedaka Eddie Rabkin Cynthia Zolotin Joe Venneri Brute Force Hank Medress Richie Grasso Bobby Love Jay Traynor Mitch Margo Bill Reid |
The Tokens were an American doo-wop band and record production company group from Brooklyn, New York City. [1] The group has had four top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100, all in the 1960s, their biggest being the chart-topping 1961 hit single "The Lion Sleeps Tonight", which borrowed heavily from the 1939 song "Mbube" by South African singer Solomon Linda. They are also known for having Neil Sedaka as an original member, before he pursued a solo career.
The band was formed in 1955 at Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn, New York, and was known first as the Linc-Tones, [1] a name inspired by the school's name. [2] The original members were Neil Sedaka, Hank Medress, Eddie Rabkin, and Cynthia Zolotin; however, Rabkin was replaced in 1956 by Jay Siegel. In the same year the band recorded its first single, "While I Dream", with Sedaka on lead vocals; the song was a local hit in New York. Sedaka and Howard Greenfield wrote much of the group's early material. They were unusual among teen vocal groups of the time because they were not a cover band. [3] In 1957, Zolotin left the band.
Briefly recording as the Tokens and the Coins, Sedaka left the group in 1958 to launch his solo career. [4] Siegel and Medress then recorded three singles under a side project for Roulette Records, Darrell & the Oxfords in 1959, with two other musicians who never joined the band. [2] Finally establishing its most famous name and line-up, the group became known as the Tokens in 1960 after recruiting the 13-year-old multi-instrumentalist and first tenor Mitch Margo and his baritone brother Philip "Phil" Margo. [2]
In early 1961, the Tokens released a single for Warwick Records titled "Tonight I Fell In Love", [2] which scored No. 15 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and earned the group an opportunity to perform on the television program American Bandstand . The popularity that the band garnered as a result of this performance brought it new recording opportunities, culminating in its cover of Solomon Linda's "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" for RCA Victor Records. [2] It reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, where it remained for three weeks. [2] The same track peaked at No. 11 in the UK Singles Chart. [5] Both "Tonight I Fell in Love" and "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" sold more than one million copies, and were awarded gold discs. [6]
From 1962 to 1970, the group released nine more songs that made the Hot 100. In the middle of the British Invasion and the height of Beatlemania, they were one of the few American groups still finding success on popular radio. [7] Jay Siegel was the lead vocalist on all the Tokens' hits including "I Hear Trumpets Blow" (1966) and "Portrait of My Love" (1967). [2] Beginning in 1963, the Tokens also began serving as record producers for other artists, such as the Chiffons, Randy & the Rainbows and the Happenings. Their production company was called "Bright Tunes" and they also created their own record company, B.T. (Bright Tunes) Puppy Records. [2] In 1968, The Tokens released the experimental "Animal", intended to serve as lead single for a self-produced album entitled Intercourse. However, the single flopped and Warner Bros. Records rejected the album due to its uncommercial nature and sexual overtones, and so in 1971 the band privately pressed 200 copies of Intercourse themselves through B.T. Puppy. In 1972, Jay Siegel did background vocals for a re-recording of "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" with Robert John as the lead vocalist. This version hit No. 3 on the chart and was awarded a Gold disc. [2]
In 1970, Hank Medress began producing an act for Bell Records, Dawn, which featured the former teen idol Tony Orlando. [2] It was as a favor to Medress that Orlando sang lead on the first record, "Candida", which became a Top 3 hit. In 1973, Medress ended his relationship with the Tokens and Siegel teamed with the Margo Brothers to form the group Cross Country, which had some success with its cover version of "In the Midnight Hour". [2] The Tokens occasionally reunited during 1975 as singing regulars on the Adam Wade-hosted game show Musical Chairs and in 1978 recorded "A Victim of Gravity" for ABC's Schoolhouse Rock . [8]
Brothers Mitch and Philip Margo continued to perform with new members Jay Leslie, Mike Johnson, and Noah Margo (one of Phil Margo's sons) who played drums. Mitch Margo's sons, Damien Margo and Ari Margo, also made occasional guest performances with the band, exemplifying Phil Margo's saying: "If you hang around long enough you can grow your own band". [9]
Siegel continues to perform with his own version of the Tokens. Until 2022 Siegel's Tokens performed featuring bass singer Bill Reid, who had previously sang background with The Halos and had featured on some early '60's top hits including Curtis Lee's "Pretty Little Angel Eyes" as well as Barry Mann's "Who Put the Bomp (in the Bomp, Bomp, Bomp)". Siegel brought in John "Jay" Traynor, the original lead singer (before Jay Black) of Jay & the Americans and the Mystics who sang with Siegel's Tokens until 2014. Siegel's son was also part of the group as keyboardist and occasional vocalist. The current members of Jay Siegel's Tokens are Kurt "Frenchie" Yaghjian and Gabriel Dassa. [10] Yaghjian appeared in the original Broadway cast of Jesus Christ Superstar and the film version of Hair. Dassa is an orthopedic surgeon and sings with the a cappella group Classic Sounds. [11] [12]
Jay Siegel's Tokens and the Margo brothers reunited in 2000 to perform on the PBS special Doo Wop 51. At the time, Siegel's Tokens were Siegel, Reid and Eddy Rezzonico, who had replaced Richie Grasso during the 1990s. [13]
Former band member Hank Medress died of lung cancer on June 18, 2007, at his Manhattan home, aged 68. John "Jay" Traynor died of liver cancer on January 2, 2014, at a hospital in Tampa, Florida, aged 70. Mitch Margo died of natural causes on November 24, 2017, at Studio City, California, also aged 70. [14] Philip Margo died of a stroke on November 13, 2021, at a hospital in Los Angeles, aged 79. [15] Bass singer Bill Reid of Jay Siegel's Tokens suffered a heart attack on April 11, 2022, and died shortly afterwards.
Decades after not receiving any publishing credit for their specific original musical composition part of "The Lion Sleeps Tonight", the band began a lawsuit in order to regain some of these publishing rights. The case was dismissed due to the statute of limitations. To this day, the Tokens claim that some of the original musical composition of the 1961 song was created by them, even though they have not been awarded this status by their record company. [16] [17]
On October 19, 2009, Phil and Mitch Margo filed suit in Manhattan for the rights to the Tokens name. They claim in their filing that Henry Medress suggested the name. In a competing suit filed in California by Siegel, he claims Siegel, Medress and Sedaka released an album named Neil Sedaka and the Tokens previously. [18] On Sedaka's own website, there is a listing in his discography catalog for a 1958 release of Neil Sedaka and the Tokens as well as a second album, also during 1958, named Neil Sedaka and the Tokens and Coins. [19] Sedaka and Siegel have remained close friends since Sedaka left the group. [3] [20]
Year | Album | US [21] | |
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1958 | Neil Sedaka and the Tokens | — | |
Neil Sedaka and the Tokens and Coins | — | ||
1961 | The Lion Sleeps Tonight | 54 | |
1962 | We the Tokens Sing Folk | — | |
1964 | Wheels | — | |
1966 | I Hear Trumpets Blow | 148 | |
The Tokens Again | — | ||
1967 | Back to Back | 134 | |
It's a Happening World | — | ||
1970 | Greatest Moments (In a Girl's Life) | — | |
1971 | Both Sides Now | — | |
December 5 | — | ||
InterCourse | — | ||
1973 | Cross Country [A 1] | — | |
1988 | Re-Doo-Wopp | — | |
1993 | Oldies Are Now | — | |
1996 | Tonight the Lion Dances | — | |
1999 | Unscrewed | — | |
"—" denotes releases that did not chart. |
Year | Titles (A-side, B-side) Both sides from same album except where indicated | Chart positions | Album | |||||
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US [21] | US R&B [21] | CAN | UK [22] | |||||
1956 | "I Love My Baby" b/w "While I Dream" A | — | — | — | — | Non-album tracks | ||
1961 | "Tonight I Fell in Love" b/w "I'll Always Love You" | 15 | — | 12 | — | |||
"When I Go to Sleep at Night" b/w "Dry Your Eyes" (from The Tokens Again) | — | — | — | — | Non-album tracks | |||
"Sincerely" b/w "When Summer Is Through" | — | — | — | — | ||||
"The Lion Sleeps Tonight" b/w "Tina" | 1 | 7 | 1 | 11 | The Lion Sleeps Tonight | |||
1962 | "B'wa Nina (Pretty Girl)" b/w "Weeping River" | 55 | — | — | — | We the Tokens Sing Folk | ||
"Big Boat" b/w "The Riddle" | — | — | 26 | — | The Lion Sleeps Tonight | |||
"La Bamba" b/w "A Token of Love" (Non-album track) | 85 | — | — | — | We the Tokens Sing Folk | |||
"Dream Angel Goodnight" b/w "I'll Do My Crying Tomorrow" | — | — | — | — | Non-album tracks | |||
"A Bird Flies Out of Sight" b/w "Wishing" (Non-album track) | — | — | — | — | We the Tokens Sing Folk | |||
1963 | "Tonight I Met an Angel" b/w "Hindi Lullaby" (from The Lion Sleeps Tonight) | — | — | — | — | Non-album track | ||
"Hear the Bells" b/w "A-B-C 1-2-3" | 94 | — | 39 | — | The Tokens Again | |||
"Please Write" b/w "I'll Always Love You" | — | — | 90 | — | Non-album tracks | |||
1964 | "Let's Go to the Drag Strip" b/w "Two Cars" | — | — | — | — | Wheels | ||
"Swing" b/w "A Girl Named Arlene" (Non-album track) | — | — | — | — | I Hear Trumpets Blow | |||
"Remember Last Summer" b/w "Strange Strange Feeling" Shown as by The Four Winds | — | — | — | — | Non-album tracks | |||
"He's in Town" b/w "Oh Kathy" (from The Greatest Moments with the Tokens) | 43 | — | 20 | — | I Hear Trumpets Blow | |||
"You're My Girl" b/w "Havin' Fun" (Non-album track) | — | — | — | — | The Greatest Moments with the Tokens | |||
1965 | "Nobody But You" b/w "Mr. Cupid (Don't You Call On Me)" (Non-album track) | — | — | 90 | — | |||
"Sylvie Sleepin'" b/w "A Message to the World" (Non-album track) | — | — | — | — | I Hear Trumpets Blow | |||
"Only My Friend" b/w "Cattle Call" | — | — | — | — | Non-album tracks | |||
"The Bells of St. Mary" b/w "Just One Smile" | — | — | 68 | — | ||||
"The Three Bells" b/w "A Message to the World" (Non-album track) | — | — | — | — | I Hear Trumpets Blow | |||
1966 | "I Hear Trumpets Blow" b/w "Don't Cry, Sing Along with the Music" | 30 | — | 86 | — | |||
"Great Moments in a Girl's Life" b/w "Breezy" (Non-album track) | — | — | — | — | The Greatest Moments with the Tokens | |||
1967 | "Green Plant" b/w "Saloogy" (from I Hear Trumpets Blow) | — | — | — | — | Non-album track | ||
"Portrait of My Love" b/w "She Comes and Goes" | 36 | — | 23 | — | Portrait of My Love | |||
"It's a Happening World" b/w "How Nice" | 69 | — | — | — | ||||
"Ain't That Peculiar" b/w "Bye, Bye, Bye" (from It's a Happening World) | — | — | — | — | Non-album tracks | |||
1968 | "Till" b/w "Poor Man" (from It's a Happening World) | — | — | — | — | |||
"Needles of Evergreen" b/w "Mister Snail" | — | — | — | — | ||||
"Animal" b/w "Bathroom Wall" | — | — | — | — | ||||
"The Banana Boat Song" b/w "Grandfather" (from It's a Happening World) | — | — | 48 | — | ||||
"Some People Sleep" b/w "The World Is Full of Wonderful Things" (Non-album track) | — | — | — | — | Both Sides Now | |||
1969 | "Get a Job" b/w "Please Say You Want Me" | — | — | 18 | — | Non-album tracks | ||
"Go Away Little Girl"/"Young Girl" b/w "I Want to Make Love to You" | — | — | — | — | ||||
"End of the World" b/w "I Could Be" | — | — | — | — | ||||
"She Lets Her Hair Down (Early in the Morning)"C b/w "Oh to Get Away" (Non-album track) | 61 | — | 43 | — | Both Sides Now | |||
1970 | "Let It Ride" b/w "One Face in the Crowd" Shown as by The Four Winds | — | — | 12 | — | Non-album tracks | ||
"Don't Worry Baby" b/w "Some People Sleep" | 95 | — | 67 | — | Both Sides Now | |||
"Both Sides Now" b/w "I Could See Me (Dancin' with You)" (from December 5) | — | — | — | — | ||||
"Groovin' on the Sunshine"/"Sesame Street" b/w "Listen to the Words (Listen to the Music)" | — | — | 82 | — | Non-album tracks | |||
1972 | "I Like to Throw My Head Back and Sing (That Good Ole Rock and Roll)" b/w "You and Me" | — | — | — | — | |||
1973 | "Rock and Roll Music" b/w "Just a Thought" (from Cross Country) Shown as by Cross Country | — | — | — | — | |||
"In the Midnight Hour" b/w "A Smile Song" Shown as by Cross Country | 30 | — | 34 | — | Cross Country | |||
"Tastes So Good to Me" b/w "A Ball Song" Shown as by Cross Country | — | — | — | — | ||||
1974 | "Penny Whistle Band" b/w "Lord Can't Sing a Solo" | — | — | — | — | Non-album tracks | ||
1977 | "Dear Judy" b/w "Come Softly to Me" Shown as by The 4 Winds | — | — | — | — | |||
1988 | "Re-Doo-Wopp" b/w "I'm Through with You" | — | — | — | — | Re-Doo-Wopp | ||
1994 | "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" (re-release) | 51 | — | — | — | The Lion Sleeps Tonight (1994 CD reissue) | ||
1996 | "Only in My Dreams" (CD single) | — | — | — | — | Tonight, The Lion Dances | ||
"Save the Last Dance for Me" b/w "Suavito" | — | — | — | — | ||||
"—" denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that territory. |
As well as being performing and recording artists the Tokens were also record producers. Here are some of the records they produced:
The Tokens were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2004.
In 1998, the Tokens were mentioned by the Guinness World Records for performing "The Star-Spangled Banner" at all 30 Major League Baseball stadiums in the United States and Canada.
The Chiffons were an American girl group originating from the Bronx, a borough of New York City, in 1960.
"The Lion Sleeps Tonight" is a song originally written and first recorded in 1939 by Solomon Linda under the title "Mbube", through South African Gallo Record Company. Lyrics of Linda's original version were written in Zulu, while those of the English one were later written by George David Weiss.
"Knock Three Times" is a popular song credited simply to "Dawn", obscuring the actual performers. The song was released as a single which hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in January 1971 and eventually sold six million copies. It reached No. 2 on 'Billboard's "Easy Listening" survey. Outside the US, "Knock Three Times" also claimed the No. 1 spot on the UK Singles Chart.
"Candida" was the first single released by the American pop music group Dawn, with vocals by Tony Orlando, in July 1970. The song, written by Irwin Levine and Toni Wine, was produced by Dave Appell and Hank Medress for Bell Records. Appell and Medress originally recorded another singer on the track, but decided that a different vocal approach would be preferable. Medress then approached Orlando to do the vocals. Orlando had been a professional singer in the early 1960s, but now worked as a music publishing manager for Columbia Records. Although initially worried about losing his job at Columbia, Orlando eventually agreed to lend his voice to the track.
Tony Orlando and Dawn is an American pop music group that was popular in the 1970s, composed of singer Tony Orlando and the backing vocal group Dawn. Their signature hits include "Candida", "Knock Three Times", "Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree", "Say, Has Anybody Seen My Sweet Gypsy Rose", and "He Don't Love You ".
Jay and the Americans are an American rock group who formed in the late 1950s. Their initial line-up consisted of John "Jay" Traynor, Howie Kane, Kenny Vance and Sandy Deanne, though their greatest success on the charts came after Traynor had been replaced as lead singer by Jay Black and Marty Sanders were added to the line-up. They were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2002.
Henry "Hank" Medress was an American singer and record producer, best known for his taking part in the American band The Tokens.
Toni Wine is an American pop music songwriter, who wrote songs for such artists as The Mindbenders, Tony Orlando and Dawn ("Candida"), and Checkmates, Ltd. in the late 1960s and 1970s. Wine also sang the female vocals for the cartoon music group The Archies, most notably on their #1 hit song "Sugar, Sugar". She shared the lead vocals in the Archies' subsequent single, "Jingle Jangle" with Ron Dante using his falsetto voice. In addition, Wine was a backing vocalist on "It Hurts to Be in Love" and on Willie Nelson's "Always on My Mind."
"Breaking Up Is Hard to Do" is a song recorded by Neil Sedaka, co-written by Sedaka and Howard Greenfield. Sedaka recorded this song twice, in 1962 and 1975, in two significantly different arrangements, and it is considered to be his signature song. Between 1970 and 1975, it was a top-40 hit three separate times for three separate artists: Lenny Welch, The Partridge Family and Sedaka's second version. The song was also adapted into multiple languages, most notably in Italian and French.
Abraham Lincoln High School is a public high school located at 2800 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, New York under the jurisdiction of the New York City Department of Education. The school was built in 1929, and since graduated four Nobel Prize laureates. The current principal is Ari A. Hoogenboom.
Candida is a 1970 album by Dawn, a studio session group including Tony Orlando, Toni Wine, and Linda November. Orlando was singing under the group name "Dawn" in order to avoid problems with his contract with his other label, CBS. However, after the success of the album tracks "Candida" and "Knock Three Times", he invited two other singers to become the real-life "Dawn", and then "Tony Orlando and Dawn" could tour in support of the songs.
"He's So Fine" is a song written by Ronnie Mack. It was recorded by The Chiffons who topped the Billboard Hot 100 for four weeks in the spring of 1963. One of the most instantly recognizable golden oldies with its doo-lang doo-lang doo-lang background vocal, "He's So Fine" is also renowned as the plaintiff song in the famous plagiarism case against George Harrison's "My Sweet Lord".
"One Fine Day" is a song written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King. It first became a popular hit in the summer of 1963 for American girl group the Chiffons, who reached the top five on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. In 1980, King covered it herself and charted at No. 12 on the Hot 100 with her version, becoming her last top 40 hit. The song has subsequently been covered by numerous artists over the years.
Cross Country was an American harmony trio from Brooklyn, New York, United States. The folk rock band was formed as a side project of The Tokens, and featured three of its members: Jay Siegel, Mitch Margo and Phil Margo.
Mitchell Stuart Margo was an American singer and songwriter.
Philip Frederick Margo was an American musician and author who was a longtime member of The Tokens, along with his brother Mitch. They are best known for their hit recording of "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" which rose to #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and remained there for three weeks in 1961.
Norman Bergen is an American pianist, arranger, record producer, band leader, musical director, and vocalist.
Ronald Augustus Mack was an American songwriter, singer and talent manager who wrote "He's So Fine", a number one chart hit in 1963 for the Chiffons and the apparent inspiration for George Harrison's "My Sweet Lord". Mack's early death reportedly inspired Holland, Dozier and Holland to write the song "Jimmy Mack".
Tuneweaving is the third album by American popular music group Dawn released in 1973 by Bell Records. The title track reached number one in both the US and UK. In terms of sales, this single was the most successful in the group's career, starting a string of seven consecutive Hot 100 appearances. Another track, "You're a Lady" by English singer/songwriter Peter Skellern, reached number 70 on the US charts. The group changed their name to "Tony Orlando and Dawn" later in 1973.
Tony Orlando and Dawn is a television variety show that aired from 1974 to 1976 on CBS. The show featured the American pop music group Tony Orlando and Dawn. The show was titled The Tony Orlando and Dawn Rainbow Hour during the 1976–1977 television season.