De JOHN SISTERS
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The De John Sisters were a vocal duo, Julie and Dux De John (born DiGiovanni).
They were born in Chester, Pennsylvania, which had been the hometown of an earlier vocal group, The Four Aces[1]. They were the daughters of a dry cleaner and worked in their parents' store after school, but while working at the club where the Four Aces were discovered, they were heard by a scout who worked for Epic Records, a subsidiary label of Columbia. On signing with Epic, they anglicized their name and made a record, "Should I Run?" which was released as catalog # 9009 by Epic. This was not a hit, but their next record, "(My Baby Don't Love Me) No More," written by the sisters with music by their brother Leo in 1955 and released as catalog #9085, became a major hit (#6 on the Billboard magazine Top 100 chart, #8 on the Billboard Best Sellers chart). It was, however, the only one that the sisters had. In the late fifties they moved to the parent Columbia label, and made at least one single for United Artists Records and one for a small independent label, Sunbeam Records.
As the Four Aces may have inspired the De John Sisters, they in turn inspired another group, The Bonnie Sisters.
...aus wikipedia...
Collage von rockinpete
Hardi
The De John Sisters were a vocal duo, Julie and Dux De John (born DiGiovanni).
They were born in Chester, Pennsylvania, which had been the hometown of an earlier vocal group, The Four Aces[1]. They were the daughters of a dry cleaner and worked in their parents' store after school, but while working at the club where the Four Aces were discovered, they were heard by a scout who worked for Epic Records, a subsidiary label of Columbia. On signing with Epic, they anglicized their name and made a record, "Should I Run?" which was released as catalog # 9009 by Epic. This was not a hit, but their next record, "(My Baby Don't Love Me) No More," written by the sisters with music by their brother Leo in 1955 and released as catalog #9085, became a major hit (#6 on the Billboard magazine Top 100 chart, #8 on the Billboard Best Sellers chart). It was, however, the only one that the sisters had. In the late fifties they moved to the parent Columbia label, and made at least one single for United Artists Records and one for a small independent label, Sunbeam Records.
As the Four Aces may have inspired the De John Sisters, they in turn inspired another group, The Bonnie Sisters.
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