
Medress died Monday at his Manhattan home, relatives said.
He was a teenager at Brooklyn's Lincoln High School when he launched his vocal quartet in 1955 with Neil Sedaka, performing as the Linc-Tones. When Sedaka departed for a successful solo career, lead singer Jay Siegel joined brothers Mitch and Phil Margo and Medress to become the Tokens.
It wasn't until 1961 that the group scored its singular smash, its hypnotic 'Wimowehs' derived from a traditional Zulu melody. The Weavers had made the song a folk staple in the '50s, but the Tokens brought their version to No. 1 on the pop charts."
4 comments:
He was born nine years to the day before me.
You whippersnapper you. Stay off my lawn!
Well, some credit to the Solomon Linda Quartet, whose recording inspired the Weavers', might not be out of place here either.
Agreed, Todd. And of course I always wish they'd mention the Kingston Trio, who also borrowed it. Probably from the Weavers rather than the Solomon Linda Quartet.
Post a Comment