The Drifters
are a long-lived African-American doo wop/R&B vocal group with a peak in popularity from 1953 to 1962, though several splinter Drifters continue to perform today. They were originally formed by Clyde McPhatter (of Billy Ward & the Dominoes) in 1953. Rolling Stone magazine states that The Drifters were the least stable of the vocal groups due to being low-paid hired musicians of The Drifters' management. [1] The Treadwell Drifters website states that there have been 60 vocalists in the history of the Treadwell Drifters line. [2] Several splinter groups by former Drifters members add to the count. Nevertheless, there are two iterations of The Drifters which are notable. The first classic Drifters formed by Clyde McPhatter was inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame as The Drifters or The Original Drifters. [3] The second Drifters formed by Treadwell featuring Ben E. King was separately inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame as Ben E. King and The Drifters. [4] In their induction, The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame eclectically selected four members from the classic Drifters, two from the second Drifters, and one from the post-King Treadwell Drifters. According to the Vocal Group Hall of Fame, "Through turmoil and changes the (original) Drifters managed to set musical trends and give the public 13 chart hits, most of which are legendary recordings today."
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THE DRIFTERS TICKETS
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History
The classic first Drifters and Clyde McPhatter
After hearing that McPhatter had left the Dominoes, on May 7, 1953
Ahmet Ertegün of
Atlantic Records signed him to form a new group. Wanting to blend gospel and secular sounds, his first effort was to get 4 out of 5 members of his old church group, the
Mount Lebanon Singers. They were William “Chick” Anderson (tenor), David Baldwin (baritone), James “Wrinkle” Johnson (bass), and David “Little Dave” Baughan (tenor). After a single recording session of four songs on June 29, 1953, McPhatter saw this combination didn't work and recruited another lineup.
This second effort also comprised gospel vocalists in second tenor
Gerhart Thrasher, baritone
Andrew Thrasher (both formerly of the gospel group the "Thrasher Wonders"),
Bill Pinkney (of the Jerusalem Stars) on high tenor,
Willie Ferbee as
bass, and Walter Adams on
guitar.
This is the group on the second session, which produced the group's first major hit, "
Money Honey", released September 1953. "
Lucille" from the first session was put on the B side, making a recording industry rarity as a single released with songs from two essentially separate groups of the same name on the A and B sides. "Money Honey" was a huge success and propelled The Drifters to immediate fame.
More lineup changes followed after the session when Ferbee was involved in an accident and left the group, and then Adams passed away to be replaced by
Jimmy Oliver. Ferbee was not replaced and the voice parts were shifted around. Gerhart Thrasher became first tenor, Andrew Thrasher was now the baritone, and Bill Pinkney shifted down to bass. This group released several more hits ("Such A Night" - Nov '53,
[5] [6] "
Honey Love" - Jun '54, "Bip Bam" Oct '54, "White Christmas" - Nov '54, and "What'cha Gonna Do" Mar '55) before McPhatter received his draft letter in May 1954. Initially stationed in Buffalo, New York, he was able to continue for a time, with "What'cha Gonna Do" being Clyde's last recording, (after which he pursued a successful solo career charting 16 R&B and 21 Pop records).
McPhatter had demanded a large share of the group's profits, which he had been denied in the Dominoes, but, upon his departure, did not ensure that this would continue for his successor. He sold his share of the group to
George Treadwell, manager, former jazz trumpeter, and husband of singer
Sarah Vaughan. As a result, the Drifters cycled through many members, none of whom made much money. McPhatter later expressed regret at this action, recognizing that it doomed his fellow musicians to unprofitability.
McPhatter was first replaced by
David Baughn, who was on the new group's first session. While his voice was similar to McPhatter's, his erratic behavior made him unsuitable in the eyes of Atlantic Records executives. Baughn soon left the group to form the Harps (1955) (finding his way back into Bill Pinkney's Original Drifters in 1958), and was replaced by
Cleveland native
Johnny Moore (formerly of
The Hornets). September 1955 saw this lineup record a major double-sided
R&B hit with the A side's "Adorable", reaching number one and the B side, "Steamboat," going to number five. These were followed by "
Ruby Baby - Feb '56," and "I Got To Get Myself A Woman".
Low salaries contributed to burnout among the members, particularly Bill Pinkney, who was fired after asking Treadwell for more money. In protest, Andrew Thrasher left as well. Pinkney formed another group, called
The Flyers, with lead singer
Bobby Hendricks, who would leave to join the Drifters the next year. Bill Pinkney was replaced by
Tommy Evans (who had replaced Jimmy Ricks in
The Ravens).
Charlie Hughes, a baritone, replaced Andrew Thrasher. Moore, G. Thrasher, C. Hughes, and Evans were the last quality lineup with top ten hit, "
Fools Fall in Love", 1957, (number 69 Pop and number 10 R&B).
Moore and Hughes were
drafted in 1957 and replaced by Bobby Hendricks and Jimmy Millender. By early 1958, the lineup was: Bobby Hendricks (lead tenor), Gerhart Thrasher (first tenor), Jimmy Millender (baritone), Tommy Evans (bass), and Jimmy Oliver (guitar). This lineup had one moderate hit, the original version of "Drip Drop" (number 58 Pop), released in April 1958.
With declining popularity, the last of the original Drifters were reduced to working the club scene and doing double duty with gigs under The Coasters and the Ravens names.
By May 1958, both Hendricks and Oliver had quit, returning only for a week's appearance at the Apollo Theater. During that week, one of the members got into a fight with the owner of the Apollo. That was the last straw for manager George Treadwell, who fired the entire group.
Bill Pinkney's Original Drifters
Though Treadwell owned The Drifters brand, original members felt they were the real Drifters and tried to keep the group alive. Bill Pinkney was the first and joined with the Thrashers and David Baughan to begin touring as "The Original Drifters" (although their first recordings, for End in 1959, were as the "Harmony Grits"). Several original Drifters came in and out of this group over time, as well as other new artists, but these Drifters never had the success of the earlier Drifters. Baughan left after a short time, leaving the group a trio.
Billy Stewart's younger brother, Johnny Stewart, joined the group in 1963. He sang lead on the song "Up On The Roof"
Bobby Lee Hollis joined in 1964 and took over the lead spot. Later that year, Andrew Thrasher was out and
Jimmy Lewis was in. Bobby Hendricks returned, making the group a quintet for a short time, before Lewis left. Andrew Thrasher returned, replacing Hollis. Hollis and Baughan bounced in and out through the 1960s. By 1968, the group was Pinkney, Gerhart Thrasher, Hollis, Hendricks and Stewart. At this point, the group split up.
Pinkney then met with an existing group,
The Tears, and recruited them to perform as part of his group on a short tour. The Tears were
Benny Anderson,
George Wallace,
Albert Fortson, and
Mark Williams. Shortly after that, they broke away from Pinkney. Learning they continued touring as the Original Drifters, Pinkney later filed suit and successfully stopped them from using his name/mark The Original Drifters.
Pinkney then brought in new members
Bruce Caesar,
Clarence Tex Walker, and
Bruce Richardson, but the lineup changed rapidly. In 1979 the group was Pinkney,
Andrew Lawyer,
Chuck Cockerham,
Harriel Jackson, and
Tony Cook. Their 1995 album
Peace in the Valley, on
Blackberry Records, credited vocals to Pinkney, Cockerham,
Richard Knight Dunbar, Johnny Stewart, ((Vernon Young)), and Greg Johnson.
[7] They appeared on the 2001
PBS special,
Doo Wop 51 with Pinkney, Dunbar, Johnson, and Bobby Hendricks. The lineup in the early 2000s was Pinkney, Cockerham, Dunbar, Young, and Clyde McPhatter's son,
Ron McPhatter. Young died in 2005
[8] and Pinkney in 2007. The other members continued performing under the auspicies of Original Drifters, Inc. The present Original Drifters lineup is Chuck Cockerham, Richard Knight Dunbar, Reginald Funderburke, and Joe Turner. The Vocal Group Hall of Fame links to Bill Pinkney's The Original Drifters as "".
The New Drifters
Treadwell owned the rights to the name "Drifters", and still had a year's worth of bookings for the Apollo when he fired the group. In the summer of 1958, he approached
Lover Patterson, the manager of The Five Crowns featuring lead singer Ben E. Nelson, better known by his later stage name of
Ben E. King. The new line-up consisted of King (lead tenor),
Charlie Thomas (tenor),
Doc Green (baritone), and
Elsbeary Hobbs (bass).
James "Poppa" Clark was the fifth "crown"; he was not included due to an alcohol problem, which Treadwell had considered to be a problem with the first group.
[9] The group went out on the road to tour for almost a year. Since this new group had no connection to the prior Drifters, they often played to hostile audiences.
This new lineup, widely considered the "true" golden age of the group, released several singles with King on lead that became chart hits. "
There Goes My Baby" was the first commercial rock-and-roll recording to include a
string orchestra, a Top 10 hit, and number 193 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. "Dance With Me" followed, and then "This Magic Moment" (number 16 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1960). "
Save the Last Dance for Me" reached # 1 on the U.S. pop charts and #2 in the UK. This was followed by "I Count The Tears." This version of The Drifters was inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2000 as Ben E. King and the Drifters. The writeup indicates an award primarily as a tribute to Ben E. King with a nod to his time in The Drifters, with only one of five paragraphs exclusively devoted to The Drifters, though Charlie Thomas was also cited by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (and the Vocal Group Hall of Fame's induction of the original Drifters, which technically was only through 1958).
With this brief golden age lasting only two years, personnel changes quickly followed. Lover Patterson (now the Drifters' road manager) got into a fight with George Treadwell. Since Patterson had King under personal contract, he refused to let him tour with the group. Thus King was only able to record with the group for about a year. (Johnny Lee Williams did the touring). When King asked Treadwell for a raise and a fair share of royalties, a request that wasn't honored, he left and began a successful solo career. Williams left at the same time, and new lead
Rudy Lewis (of
The Clara Ward Singers) was recruited.
Lewis led the Drifters on hits such as "Some Kind Of Wonderful," "Please Stay," "On Broadway," which reached number 5 on the U.S. pop singles chart and number 4 on the U.S. R&B singles chart in 1962. Lewis was also named in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Drifters induction.
Hobbs was drafted for military service and eventually replaced by the returning Tommy Evans (from the first group). Green left in 1962 and was replaced by
Eugene Pearson (of
The Rivileers and
The Cleftones). Evans left again in 1963 and was replaced by
Johnny Terry,an original member of
James Brown's singing group,
The Famous Flames ,(who was co-writer of their first hit,
Please Please Please ). After his military service and a failed solo career, Johnny Moore returned in 1964, making the group a quintet of Moore, Thomas, Lewis, Pearson, and Terry.
Later that year, the group was scheduled to record "
Under the Boardwalk" on
May 21. However, Rudy Lewis died the night before the session, and Johnny Moore took over as the sole lead (he and Lewis had been alternating). Terry was replaced in 1966 by
Dan Dandridge for a couple of months, then by
William Brent, who had been with Johnny Moore in the Hornets in 1954. Gene Pearson was replaced by
Rick Sheppard that same year. By late 1966, baritone/bass
Bill Fredricks replaced William Brent. Charlie Thomas, the group's last member from the Five Crowns, left in mid-1967 and was replaced by
Charles Baskerville, a former member of
The Limelites. Baskerville stayed only a short time.
Post-Atlantic career
After this, the Drifters moved to England and continued with unstable personnel lineups. Although early lineups included golden era singers Moore and Lewis, and later Ben E. King, having left the US, they virtually fell off the radar, but continued to have
UK chart successes, notably "Like Sister & Brother", "Kissing in the Back Row of the Movies", "There Goes My First Love" and "You're More Than a Number in My Little Red Book".
Butch Leake and former
Ink Spot Grant Kitchings replaced Sheppard and Thomas. Fredricks was replaced by
Clyde Brown the next year, and Kitchings by
Billy Lewis the year after. Leake was replaced by
Joe Blunt in 1976, making the lineup Johnny Moore, Clyde Brown, Joe Blunt, and Billy Lewis. This year, Faye Treadwell renamed the group's management company
Treadwell Drifters Inc
.
Moore left in 1978 and was replaced by
Ray Lewis. Blunt and Billy Lewis left in 1979 and were replaced by the returning Johnny Moore and former
Temptations lead
Louis Price. Moore left again in late 1982, along with Clyde Brown. They were replaced by two returning members, Benjamin Earl Nelson (a.k.a. Ben E. King) and Bill Fredricks.
Fredricks, Lewis, and Price all left in 1983, and were replaced by the returning Johnny Moore, Joe Blunt, and Clyde Brown. In 1986, the group split up, and the a new lineup was constructed by Treadwell, consisting of new member
Jonah Ellis and former members Ray Lewis, Billy Lewis, and Louis Price. The next year, more former members came in as replacements, making the group Moore, Billy and Ray Lewis, and
Gene Jenkins (replaced shortly after by
George Chandler, then
John Thurston). Ray Lewis was out in 1988, and was replaced by
Joe Cofie. In 1989, Billy Lewis left, and replaced by the returning George Chandler, then
Tony Jackson,
Keith John, and finally
Peter Lamarr in 1990.
Thurston was out at the end of the year and was replaced by . was in for Peter Lamaar briefly, before Lamaar left in 1991, and was permanently replaced by
Rohan Delano Turney. Johnny Stewart also left in the early 1990's. He later joined
The Platters and continued his singing career. This lineup lasted until 1996, when Cofie was out and
Jason Leigh was in. Leigh was replaced after two years by the returning Peter Lamarr.
Tragedy struck on December 30, 1998 when the group's longest serving member, Johnny Moore, died in London. Patrick Alan returned to the group, keeping it a quartet.
In 2001 Faye Treadwell left the United Kingdom and apparently abandoned the Treadwell Drifters franchise (even though in January 2000 a US court had previously overturned a 1999 jury verdict declaring that it was abandoned.)
[10] In this evironment, two members of her company, and Phil Lunderman, started a new management company,
Drifters UK Limited
, to run the group. Their new duties included stopping a patent by a UK group calling themselves American Drifters.
[11] [12] Lamarr left again in 2003, and was replaced by
Victor Bynoe. Hemmings left in 2004 and was replaced by the again-returning Peter Lamarr. The group's lineup as of 2007 was Peter Lamarr, Rohan Delano Turney, Patrick Alan, and Victor Bynoe.
[13] On June 20, 2007 this lineup performed at Prime Minister Tony Blair's Farewell Party in London.
[14] In 2008 Tina Treadwell won her case in a UK court establishing her ownership of the Treadwell Drifters franchise, so this lineup lost the right to use the Drifters name (see "Court Case", below).
Court Case
In December 2006, having seen a market for The Drifters in the UK, writs were served in the London High Court by Tina Treadwell, daughter of George and Faye, against Mark Lundquist and Philip Luderman Drifters UK Ltd, alleging they are not the rightful controllers of The Drifters.
In July 2008, The Treadwell family and Prism Music Group Ltd won their legal battle.
[15] The court order prohibited Phil Luderman, Mark Lundquist, Rohan Delano Turney, Peter Lamar, Patrick Alan or Victor Bynoe from using the Drifters name.
[16] [17]
Ownership of The Drifters name continues with The Treadwell family in the form of George Treadwell’s daughter, Tina, and the UK based company, Prism Music Group Ltd. Their line-up features Steve V. King, Maurice Cannon, Michael Williams and Damian Charles. None of the current members had ever even been in the Drifters before.
Splinters
In the early 1970s, promoter
Larry Marshak decided to reunite the Drifters (not realizing that they were still performing with a newer lineup). He found Doc Green, Charlie Thomas, and Elsbeary Hobbs, and began to promote them as "The Drifters". This brought swift legal action from
Faye Treadwell, wife of George Treadwell, who was managing the Drifters. In an attempt to grant his group the sole rights to the name, Marshak convinced Hobbs, Thomas, and Green to apply for a trademark on the Drifters name in 1976. The trademark was granted but due to Treadwell's legal action it was revoked in 2000 in US Federal Court. The trio of original Drifters split afterward into separate groups.
continue to tour and record. Charlie Thomas leads .
Rick Sheppard also tours with . Sheppard owns the Canadian Trademark for the Drifters name and has recently won a lawsuit in Canada, so that no other Drifters are permitted to perform there. Ray Lewis and Roy Hemmings have led . Bobby Hendricks leads a group, as does Billy Lewis (). Don Thomas leads a group, .
Aside from the official post-2008 lineup, Treadwell manages a second group,
The Drifters Legends
, composed of former members Bobby Hendricks, Butch Leake, and Joe Blunt, and new member Wolf Johnson.
[18]
Awards
The
Vocal Group Hall of Fame has inducted both 'The Original Drifters' (1998) and 'Ben E. King and The Drifters'(2000). In 2004,
Rolling Stone Magazine ranked The Drifters #81 on their list of the .
In 1988, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inducted The Drifters; naming members Clyde McPhatter, Bill Pinkney, Gerhardt Thrasher, Johnny Moore, Ben E. King, Charlie Thomas, and Rudy Lewis. Bill Pinkney, Charlie Thomas, and Johnny Moore (posthumously) received Pioneer Awards from the Rhythm & Blues Foundation in 1999.
Singles discography
Top 20 charted hits shown
in bold
.
Year
| A-Side
| Lead singer
| Label
| Chart positions
|
US Hot 100
| US R&B
| UK
|
1953
| "Money Honey"
| Clyde McPhatter
| Atlantic
|
|
|
|
1954
| "Lucille"
| Clyde McPhatter
| Atlantic
|
|
|
|
1954
| "Honey Love"
| Clyde McPhatter
| Atlantic
|
|
|
|
1954
| "Someday You'll Want Me to Want You"
| Bill Pinkney
| Atlantic
|
|
|
1954
| "White Christmas"
| Bill Pinkney and Clyde McPhatter
| Atlantic
| #80
| #5
|
|
1954
| "Such A Night"
|
|
|
|
|
|
1955
| "Whatcha Gonna Do"
| Clyde McPhatter
| Atlantic
|
| #2
|
|
1955
| "Everyone's Laughing"
| Clyde McPhatter
| Atlantic
|
|
|
|
1955
| "Adorable"/
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
|
| #1
|
|
1956
| ?"Steamboat" (B-Side)
| Bill Pinkney
|
|
| #5
|
|
1956
| "Ruby Baby"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
|
| #10
|
|
1956
| "I Gotta Get Myself a Woman"
| Johnny Moore and Bill Pinkney
| Atlantic
|
| #11
|
|
1957
| "Fools Fall in Love"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
|
| #10
|
|
1957
| "Hypnotized"
|
| Atlantic
| #79
|
|
|
1957
| "I Know"
|
| Atlantic
|
|
|
|
1957
| "Drip Drop"/
| Bobby Hendricks
| Atlantic
| #58
|
|
|
1957
| ? "Moonlight Bay" (B-Side)
|
| Atlantic
| #72
|
|
|
1959
| "There Goes My Baby"
| Ben E. King
| Atlantic
| #2
| #1
|
|
1959
| "(If You Cry) True Love, True Love"/
| Johnny Lee Williams
| Atlantic
| #33
| #5
|
|
1959
| ? "Dance With Me"
(B-Side)
| Ben E. King
| Atlantic
| #1
| #2
| #17 (as A-side)
|
1960
| "This Magic Moment"
| Ben E. King
| Atlantic
| #16
| #4
|
|
1960
| "Lonely Winds"
| Ben E. King
| Atlantic
| #54
| #9
|
|
1960
| "Save The Last Dance For Me"
| Ben E. King
| Atlantic
| #1
| #1
| #2
|
1960
| "I Count the Tears"
| Ben E. King
| Atlantic
| #17
|
| #28
|
1961
| "Some Kind of Wonderful"
| Rudy Lewis
| Atlantic
| #32
| #6
|
|
1961
| "Sweets for My Sweet"
| Charlie Thomas
| Atlantic
| #16
| #10
|
|
1961
| "Please Stay"
| Rudy Lewis
| Atlantic
| #14
| #13
|
|
1961
| "Room Full of Tears"
| Charlie Thomas
| Atlantic
| #72
|
|
|
1962
| "When My Little Girl Is Smiling"
| Charlie Thomas
| Atlantic
| #28
|
| #31
|
1962
| "Stranger on the Shore"
|
| Atlantic
| #73
|
|
|
1962
| "Sometimes I Wonder"
| Ben E. King
| Atlantic
|
|
|
|
1963
| "Up on the Roof"
| Johnny Stewart
| Atlantic
| #5
| #4
|
|
1963
| "On Broadway"
| Rudy Lewis
| Atlantic
| #9
| #7
|
|
1963
| "If You Don't Come Back" /
|
| Atlantic
|
|
|
|
1963
| ? "Rat Race" (B-Side)
|
| Atlantic
| #71
|
|
|
1963
| "I'll Take You Home"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
| #25
| #24
| #37
|
1964
| "Vaya Con Dios"
|
| Atlantic
| #43
|
|
|
1964
| "One-Way Love"
|
| Atlantic
| #56
|
|
|
1964
| "Under the Boardwalk"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
| #4
| #45
| #45
|
1964
| "I've Got Sand in My Shoes"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
| #33
|
|
|
1964
| "Saturday Night at the Movies"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
| #18
|
| #3
|
1964
| "The Christmas Song /I Remember Christmas"
|
| Atlantic
|
|
|
|
1965
| "At the Club"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
| #43
| #10
| #35
|
1965
| "Come On Over to My Place"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
| #60
|
| #9
|
1965
| "Follow Me"
|
| Atlantic
|
|
|
|
1965
| "I'll Take You Where the Music's Playing"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
| #51
|
|
|
1966
| "Memories Are Made of This"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
| #48
|
|
|
1966
| "Baby What I Mean"
| Johnny Moore
| Atlantic
|
|
| #49
|
1967
| "Ain't It the Truth"
|
| Atlantic
|
| #36
|
|
1972
| "Something Tells Me"
|
| Bell
|
|
|
|
1973
| "You've Got Your Troubles"
|
| Bell
|
|
|
|
1973
| "Like Sister and Brother"
|
| Bell
|
|
| #7
|
1974
| "Kissin' in the Back Row of the Movies"
| Johnny Moore
| Bell
|
| #83
| #2
|
1974
| "Down on the Beach Tonight"
| Johnny Moore
| Bell
|
|
| #7
|
1975
| "Love Games"
|
| Bell
|
|
| #33
|
1975
| "There Goes My First Love"
| Johnny Moore
| Bell
|
|
| #3
|
1975
| "Can I Take You Home Little Girl"
| Johnny Moore
| Bell
|
|
| #10
|
1976
| "Hello Happiness"
| Johnny Moore
| Bell
|
|
| #12
|
1976
| "Every Night's a Saturday Night With You"
|
| Bell
|
|
| #29
|
1976
| "You're More than a Number in My Little Red Book"
| Johnny Moore
| Arista
|
|
| #5
|
Discography
Music samples
Money Honey:
References
- The Immortals: The First Fifty
- Treadwell Presents The Drifters
- The Drifters (Inducted 1998)
- Ben E. King and The Drifters (Inducted 2000)
- The Drifters Official Website - Discography
- Second Hand Songs - Song: Such a Night - Elvis Presley
- Djangos.com
- Soul Music HQ The Drifters
- Marv Goldberg
- United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, MARSHAK V. TREADWELL, paragraphs 22 and 23
- Trade marks inter parte decision,O/220/05
- Lucas Management - The American Dream - info@lucasmanagement.biz
- The Drifters Official Website - The Drifters Family Tree
- Mark Lundquist News, The Drifters at the PM Party
- The Drifters settle name dispute - Yahoo! News UK
- Music Week - The Drifters triumph in court case
- The Drifters win legal battle | News | NME.COM
- The Drifters Legends