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Danny & The Juniors
Danny and The Juniors (originally The Juvenairs) all attended John
Bartram High School in Philadelphia and formed in 1955, practicing
their harmonies in a car initially, before graduating to street
corners when they became more confident.
In 1957 the group began to target record producer John Madara,
making it a ritual to sing under his window. Madara initially told
the boys to get lost because they were keeping his children awake,
but eventually gave in and arranged for them to meet his friend,
Artie Wayne, owner of Singular Records.
Dave White had written two songs for The Juvenairs: Sometimes
- a typical doo-wop ballad of the period, and a rocker called
At The Bop. Artie Wayne couldn't make up his mind about
the group but took a test pressing of At The Bop to the
influential Dick Clark.
Clark liked the song but suggested At The Hop would be
a better title because, in his opinion, no one danced to the
'bop' anymore. And Artie Singer told the boys to change their
name to Danny & The Juniors before he recorded them.
Sometimes/At The Hop, by Danny & The Juniors, was
released on Singular in November 1957. Sales were extremely poor,
but a break came when the group was asked to replace Little
Anthony and The Imperials on Dick Clark's American Bandstand
TV show, where they mimed to their record.
The sudden demand for At The Hop prompted
ABC-Paramount to buy the masters of the record from Artie Singer,
and by January 1958, Danny & The Juniors had a Number one hit
which stayed at the top of the charts for seven weeks, with
another 21 weeks in the Top 100. The record made it to the UK the
following year where it charted at Number three.
At The Hop was a classic record that was followed by
many imitations, but it was totally expressionless. Yet that
synthetic, de-personalised feel was what made people buy this and
many other 'high school' hits.
Danny Rapp committed suicide on 5 April 1983.
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Danny Rapp
Lead vocals
Dave White
Tenor
Frank
Maffei
Second Tenor
Joe Terranova (Joe Terry)
Baritone
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