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Bing Crosby
Bing Crosby
American singer and actor (1903-1977)
1
Bob Crosby
Bob Crosby
American dixieland bandleader and vocalist (1913-1993)
2
The Andrews Sisters
The Andrews Sisters
American close harmony singing group
3
Perry Como
Perry Como
American singer, actor, television personality (1912-2001)
4
Cindy Walker
Cindy Walker
American songwriter, country music singer and dancer
5
Bobby Troup
Bobby Troup
American actor, jazz pianist, singer and songwriter (1918-1999)
6
Lennie Hayton
Lennie Hayton
American composer and conductor (1908-1971)
7
Rosemary Clooney
Rosemary Clooney
singer and actress from the United States (1928-2002)
8
Axel Stordahl
Axel Stordahl
American arranger, orchestra leader
9
Jo Stafford
Jo Stafford
American singer (1917-2008)
10
Buddy Bregman
Buddy Bregman
American musical arranger, record producer and composer
11
The Archies
The Archies
cartoon band; fictional music group
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David Crosby
David Crosby
guitarist, singer and songwriter from the United States
13
Val Doonican
Val Doonican
Irish male singer
The Doodletown Pipers
vocal group

The Doodletown Pipers

Intro
vocal group
News
The group appeared on That's Life with Leslie Uggams in 1968.

The Doodletown Pipers (also known as the New Doodletown Pipers) were a 1960s and 1970s easy listening vocal group founded by Ward Ellis, George Wilkins, Bernie Brillstein and Jerry Weintraub.

The Doodletown Pipers made numerous appearances on network television (including The Ed Sullivan Show), and worked with such names as Count Basie, The Carpenters, Perry Como, Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Frank Gorshin, Alan King, Mike Post, Sarah Vaughan, John Wayne, and Rowan and Martin. Members of the group included "Mic" Bell, Mike Campbell, Jim Gilstrap, Teresa Graves, Augie Johnson, Rod Anderson, Tom McKenzie, Samantha Lessard, and Oren Waters.

The Doodletown Pipers are considered by some to be the epitome of bland, squeaky-clean popular music. One critic describes their music paradoxically as "dull-as-lint" yet at the same time "weirdly but undeniably charming." [1] On his television program, Roger Miller referred to them as the "Poodletown Diapers".