https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8BTTS96XsM



Saturday Night Beech-Nut Show. January 02, 1960. This clip was re-posted by request. Corrected audio level and no gray bar at the bottom.


Looking Back Review by Bruce Eder
These sides didn't sell at all, but they do show that Floyd had everything that he needed, in terms of style and voice, for stardom as early as 1962, when they were cut. The numbers bridge the gap between doo wop-type R&B and his subsequent, more soulful and mature sound at Stax, with some killer tracks, Floyd's own "Bye Bye Baby," "Never Get Enough of Your Love," and "I'll Never Find Another Girl Like You," plus one cool shouter, "The Whip"; his singing and the emotions he calls up are nearly enough to bring the listener's heart to their throat. Much of what is here is a little too busy, having been cut too close to the doo wop era, but the ingredients for success are all here...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UlXZ8-2e23k&list=RDUlXZ8-2e23k&start_radio=1
Groovin' with The California Raisins! 🍇
Remember these soulful snacks hitting all the right notes?
The iconic California Raisins in their claymation prime!
#californiaraisins #raisinbran #claymation #stopmotion #retrocommercial #vintagead #80s #90s #eighties #nineties #soulmusic #doowop #nostalgia #childhoodmemories #popculture #classictvads #iconiccharacters #animatedcommercial
@MirrorAyako @startrek
#AllStarTrek #music #DooWop
Not as good as Vic, but still kinda Trek if you think about it.
... one of the very first racially integrated vocal groups of the '50s: Texas-born lead tenor Herman Chaney (aka Sonny Chaney) and Louisiana-born bass singer Charles Middleton were both black, while Detroit-born second tenor Valerio "Val" Poliuto was white and baritone Manuel "Manny" Chavez was a Hispanic and the only native Californian in the group
https://youtu.be/qG2GB4QjkB4?list=RDqG2GB4QjkB4
