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Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs
Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs
1
The Zircons
The Zircons
musical artist
2
The Willows
The Willows
American vocal group
3
The Elegants
The Elegants
band
4
Frankie Beverly
Frankie Beverly
American singer, musician, songwriter, record producer
5
The Danleers
The Danleers
6
The Del-Vikings
The Del-Vikings
American doo-wop musical group
7
The Chords
The Chords
1950s American doo-wop group
8
The Teenagers
The Teenagers
American doo wop group
9
The Solitaires
The Solitaires
10
The Jive Five
The Jive Five
American doo-wop group
11
The Reflections
The Reflections
12
The Penguins
The Penguins
American doowop band, formed in 1953
13
The Four Seasons
The Four Seasons
American rock and pop band
14
The Flamingos
The Flamingos
American "doo wop" group
15
Frankie Valli
Frankie Valli
American singer
16
The Tokens
The Tokens
American male doo-wop-style vocal group
17
The Jesters
The Jesters
18
The Capris
The Capris
American doo-wop group from New York
19
The Fleetwoods
The Fleetwoods
vocal group from Olympia, Washington, USA
20
Cannibal & the Headhunters
Cannibal & the Headhunters
American musical group
21
The Parliaments
The Parliaments
American band
22
The Orioles
The Orioles
American R&B group
23
The Diamonds
The Diamonds
Canadian Vocal Quartet
24
The Crests
The Crests
band
25
The Mystics
The Mystics
musical artist
26
David White
David White
singer and songwriter from the United States
27
The Crows
The Crows
band
28
The Velours
The Velours
29
Parliament-Funkadelic
Parliament-Funkadelic
American band
30
Lillian Leach
Lillian Leach
American singer
31
The Monotones
The Monotones
American doo-wop vocal group in the 1950s
32
Larry Chance and the Earls
Larry Chance and the Earls
33
Randy & the Rainbows
Randy & the Rainbows
band that plays doo-wop
34
The Earth Angels
The Earth Angels
Spanish vocal group
35
The Quotations
The Quotations
36
The Righteous Brothers
The Righteous Brothers
American singing duo
37
The Dubs
The Dubs
38
Little Anthony and the Imperials
Little Anthony and the Imperials
rhythm and blues/soul/doo-wop vocal group from New York
39
The Silhouettes
The Silhouettes
American doo-wop group
40
Quiet Riot
Quiet Riot
American heavy metal band
41
Jimmy Jones
Jimmy Jones
singer
42
The Clovers
The Clovers
American rhythm and blues/doo-wop vocal group
43
Rick Davies
Rick Davies
English musician
44
The Edsels
The Edsels
american band
45
The Turbans
The Turbans
american doo-wop vocal group
46
Jeffrey Foskett
Jeffrey Foskett
American guitarist and singer
47
The Charts
The Charts
48
The Valentines
The Valentines
American doo-wop group
49
The Jackson 5
The Jackson 5
American pop music family group
50
Bob Crewe
Bob Crewe
American songwriter, dancer, singer, manager, and record producer
51
The Chimes
The Chimes
doo wop group from Brooklyn
52
The Swallows
The Swallows
american band
53
Color Me Badd
Color Me Badd
American musical group; R&B boy band
54
The Wrens
The Wrens
doo-wop singing group from New York City from the 1950s
55
The Quin-Tones
The Quin-Tones
56
Jay and the Americans
Jay and the Americans
American rock band
57
The Belmonts
The Belmonts
58
The Regents
The Regents
American doo-wop vocal group from New York, operating in the late 1950s and early 1960s
Unchained Melody on the Red Boy label (originally released on Herald)

Vito & the Salutations is an Italian/Irish/Jewish-American New York City doo-wop group from the 1960s. They began performing their four-part harmonies while still in high school, getting practice by singing in subways and at railroad stations. But they never expected anything to come of it, until one of the band members was introduced to someone at a local record company, and the band was asked to make some recordings. Their first popular record, "Gloria," was a regional hit. But Vito & the Salutations became best known for a surprise million-selling hit a year later, in the summer of 1963: they took "Unchained Melody," a 1955 hit ballad by Al Hibbler that they heard on the car radio, as they drove to perform at a concert, and transformed it into an up-tempo, doo-wop song. "Unchained Melody" reached number 66 on the Cash Box hit parade, and it made the top ten in many cities: for example, in New York City, the song reached #3 on top-40 powerhouse WABC. The record was originally released on Herald (H-583). This group consisted of Frankie Fox (bass baritone), Sheldon Buchansky (second tenor), Raymond JP Russell (first tenor) and Vito Balsamo (lead, baritone, and falsetto). Balsamo came from an immigrant family: his parents were from Palermo, Italy and he grew up in Brooklyn, listening to opera. But he fell in love with rock and roll, much to the dismay of his parents. Vito joined a group and recorded his first song when he was only fifteen. The B side of "Unchained Melody" was "Hey, Hey, Baby," a tune composed by Murray Kanner, Frankie Fox and Dave Rick. Vito & the Salutations also performed their version of "Unchained Melody" on American Bandstand.

The group existed from 1961–1967, with a reunion concert performed at Hunter College in 1971, only Frankie and Sheldon Buchansky were the original members of this group in this performance. Featured lead singer was Vito Balsamo, who also performed with the DelVons and The Kelloggs. In the early 1990s, Balsamo participated in a doo-wop nostalgia tour, performing as Vito Balsamo and the Cavaliers: this band included some former members of J. Frank Wilson and the Cavaliers (whose big hit was "Last Kiss" in 1964). From (1990-1991)-(1996-1999) Balsamo recorded and toured continuously with The Doo Wop All Stars whose members included Eugene Pitt (Jive Five), Artie Loria (Belmonts/Earls), Randy Silver (Impalas) and Lenny Welch. Vito still performs on occasional nostalgia tours, such as in The Golden Group Memories, which was seen on PBS in 1999 and 2000. Other lead singers were bass baritone Frankie Fox and falsettos Ray Russell and Randy Siver, who joined the group after Ray Russell moved on to become a producer, writer and director with James Duffy of Britton records; later, Frank Hidalgo and Eddie Parducci shared the lead with Vito in the group or on leave from the group. Over the years there have been many substitutes and replacements: Jack Mercury, Alan Messinger, Madie Seigal, Vinny Cognato, Johnny Monforte and Randy Silverman along with Frank and Vito recorded a single in 1967, "Bring Back Yesterday" b/w "I Want You to Be My Baby", on Boom Records. In the early 70's Sheldon Buchansky returned to form a new Salutations with Vito Eddie Parducci, Jimmy Spinelli, Frankie Graziano and others. Meanwhile, Vito Balsamo lost the right to use the name "Vito & the Salutations" in a court case in 1984, as a new band that included several former members took over the name. By 1986, after several appeals, Vito began using "Vito Balsamo and his Group," when he performed. And sometimes, when he toured, he was listed in newspapers as or "Vito Balsamo, formerly of the Salutations."

The group's unique version of "Unchained Melody" has been included in several movies, most notably the 1990 film Goodfellas. It also can be heard in the Sci-Fi Dine-In restaurant at Disney's Hollywood Studios at Walt Disney World.