On this date in 1956 {Mar. 3rd} Gale Storm's "Ivory Tower" entered Billboard's Top 100 chart; eventually it would peaked at #6 spent 18 weeks in the Top 100...
The original version was by Otis Williams & the Charms, it reached #11 on the Top 100 and #11 on Billboard's R&B chart...
Cathy Carr's 1956 version peake at #2...
Gale Storm's "Why Do Fools Fall In Love" also entered the charts the same day her "Ivory Tower" entered...
my dad used to sing this to me all the time when my sister and I were little...I am 19 now! and while studing in Southern California, this song randomly came into my head and so I had to listen to it! great times!
I remember Gale Storm from a tv series, "Oh Susanna." I attended kindergarten in the afternoon, and that was one of the shows I watched each morning before leaving for school - a must-see for me, that one along with Tennessee Ernie Ford's show and Ernie Kovak.
Gale's version actually was a cover of Cathy Carr's cover of the Charms' original. Cathy was on Fraternity Records, Gale on Dot but both versions were done at Universal Studios in Chicago with the same engineers. Gale covered many black artists, including Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers' "Why Do Fools Fall in Love." For an artist who was a classically-trained soprano she did amazingly well with this music, mostly because she respected much. With her perfect pitch, Gale was a dream to record.
M-G-M Records had its own label. Fox later started a label. RCA, Columbia and Decca were music operations but often linked up with movie studios. Dot was Randy Wood's operation out of Tennessee and Fraternity as I remember came out of Cincinnati (maybe Cleveland). My own history--google Wayne Brasler.
This is just terrific, and a fine example of why this technology is SO important.....I had no idea that Gale's version was a cover of a black group, but upon reflection, it seemed to be the rule rather than the exception when I was growing up. Thanks for the edification!!
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On this date in 1956 {Mar. 3rd} Gale Storm's "Ivory Tower" entered Billboard's Top 100 chart; eventually it would peaked at #6 spent 18 weeks in the Top 100...
The original version was by Otis Williams & the Charms, it reached #11 on the Top 100 and #11 on Billboard's R&B chart...
Cathy Carr's 1956 version peake at #2...
Gale Storm's "Why Do Fools Fall In Love" also entered the charts the same day her "Ivory Tower" entered...
sauquoit13456 4 days ago
my dad used to sing this to me all the time when my sister and I were little...I am 19 now! and while studing in Southern California, this song randomly came into my head and so I had to listen to it! great times!
katty4god 1 year ago
gale storm should have stayed away from covering black artists
hah13 1 year ago
I remember Gale Storm from a tv series, "Oh Susanna." I attended kindergarten in the afternoon, and that was one of the shows I watched each morning before leaving for school - a must-see for me, that one along with Tennessee Ernie Ford's show and Ernie Kovak.
CheckMate657879 1 year ago
@CheckMate657879 Very good. Oh Susanna was before my time but it sounds interesting.
GSilverWorld 1 year ago
The best years 1950's thanks for bringing those beautiful songs
mishijos7 3 years ago
I agree-a great era for music, at least songs were understood. Not this bonk bonk bang bang stuff kids listen to these days.
QWZXM 2 years ago
Gale's version actually was a cover of Cathy Carr's cover of the Charms' original. Cathy was on Fraternity Records, Gale on Dot but both versions were done at Universal Studios in Chicago with the same engineers. Gale covered many black artists, including Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers' "Why Do Fools Fall in Love." For an artist who was a classically-trained soprano she did amazingly well with this music, mostly because she respected much. With her perfect pitch, Gale was a dream to record.
waynebrasler 3 years ago
Oh, you worked there?
I see Gale's entered the chart ~ a month after Cathy's. Cathy's #2, Gale #6.
Were the major labels associated with particular movie studios, eg Capitol?
GSilverWorld 3 years ago
M-G-M Records had its own label. Fox later started a label. RCA, Columbia and Decca were music operations but often linked up with movie studios. Dot was Randy Wood's operation out of Tennessee and Fraternity as I remember came out of Cincinnati (maybe Cleveland). My own history--google Wayne Brasler.
waynebrasler 3 years ago
Excellent explanation of pop covers of black music. I lived thru the era as a teenager
I always bought the black originals, except for Gale Storm, because she was so good on
'My Little Margie' I bought both versions.
Gale passed away two weeks ago, 2 days after Michael Jackson and almost no one
noticed.
Gale was an unappreciated talent both as a singer and actress, she made 50s TV worth watching.
An odd comparison, she was kinda an early
female Ricky Nelson, using TV to promote
her music.
pornguy2 2 years ago
This is just terrific, and a fine example of why this technology is SO important.....I had no idea that Gale's version was a cover of a black group, but upon reflection, it seemed to be the rule rather than the exception when I was growing up. Thanks for the edification!!
JellyFishDad1 3 years ago
A real find! Thanks! I miss the 1950s.
SummerRkl 3 years ago