| THE
CRYSTALS (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
The Crystals were one of the most successful girl
groups of the early 1960s, best remembered for the hit singles “He’s
A Rebel”, “Da Doo Ron Ron” and “Then He Kissed Me”
In the late 1950s, Barbara Alston, Mary Thomas, Delores “Dee Dee”
Kennibrew, Merna Girard and Patricia “Patsy” Wright formed The
Crystals in high school under the leadership of Alston’s uncle,
Benny Wells. Soon, the quintet signed with Phil Spector’s label
Philles Records. Spector then chose Alston to be the group’s lead
singer, which made her very uncomfortable since she had a fear of
singing in front of audiences.
Their first hit was 1961’s “There’s No Other Like My Baby”. This
song’s B-side “Oh Yeah, Maybe Baby” (featuring Wright on lead) and
the following single “Uptown” were topical and socially-aware pieces
about growing up in the ghetto. After the success of “Uptown”, a
pregnant Girard was replaced by Dolores “LaLa” Brooks. The next
single was 1962’s “He Hit Me (And It Felt Like a Kiss)”, still
widely remembered though only rarely played on the radio due to the
touchy subject matter of spousal abuse. Sales were sluggish.
Soon after “He Hit Me” flopped, Phil Spector began recording singer
Darlene Love and her backing group The Blossoms under the name “The
Crystals”. Legend has it that the real Crystals were not able to
travel from New York to Los Angeles fast enough to suit the LA-based
Spector, who wanted to quickly record and release “He’s a Rebel” (written
by Gene Pitney) before anyone else had a chance to cover it and have
a hit with it. The Crystals were unavailable, but Love and the
Blossoms were also based in LA, so Spector recorded them and put the
record out under The Crystals’ banner.
“He’s A Rebel” is perhaps the Crystals’ most well-remembered and
beloved songs, and one of the most enduring of the girl group genre.
It was also their only US #1 hit. The follow-up Crystals single,
“He’s Sure the Boy I Love”, in actuality also featured Love and The
Blossoms.
The next single credited to The Crystals is one of the rarest — and
also possibly the strangest — in rock music history. Reports vary as
to the actual motivation behind the recording, but most agree that
Phil Spector was looking for a way to annoy former business partner
Lester Sill. What he came up with was a nearly six-minute song
called “Let’s Dance The Screw - Part I”, which would be unplayable
on 1963 radio. The record featured simple instrumentation (very much
unlike Spector’s famous Wall of Sound production style), repetitive
lyrics, and Spector himself intoning the lyric “Dance The Screw”
numerous times in a deadpan monotone. (The B-side, Part II, was more
of the same.) The Crystals sang the song’s repetitive verses, though
it is unclear if these singers were the ‘real’ Crystals or The
Blossoms.
The single was never commercially released, and only a few copies
are known to exist (all marked D.J. COPY - NOT FOR SALE). The record
was apparently only created to be a bizarre sort of joke at Sill’s
expense, as a single copy was specially delivered to him in early
1963.
Though it’s unclear as to the level of their participation in “Let’s
Dance The Screw”, the ‘real’ Crystals definitely began recording
again under their own name in 1963. However, Thomas had departed to
get married which reduced them to a quartet, and Alston stepped down
from the lead spot giving it to Brooks.
After “Let’s Dance The Screw”, the group’s next release was the
classic “Da Doo Ron Ron.” According to Darlene Love, the track was
originally recorded by The Blossoms, with Love on lead vocal. Prior
to release, Spector erased Love’s lead vocal and replaced it with a
vocal by LaLa Brooks, although he kept the Blossoms’ backing vocals
in place. The song was a top 10 hit in both the US and the UK, as
was the follow-up single “Then He Kissed Me” — the first Crystals
single since “He Hit Me” to feature all members of the Crystals as a
definite group.
Both “Da Doo Ron Ron” and “Then He Kissed Me” were penned by Spector
with Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich.
Despite the steady flow of hit singles, tensions between Spector and
the Crystals mounted. Already unhappy with having been replaced by
Love and company on two singles, The Crystals were even more upset
when in 1964, Spector began focusing much of his time on rival girl
group The Ronettes. Two failed Crystals singles followed, before the
band left Spector’s Philles Records for Imperial Records later in
1964. 1964 also saw the departure of Wright who was replaced by
Frances Collins; toward the end of that year Alston departed leaving
the group a trio. They disbanded in 1966. They reunited in 1971 and
toured widely in varying incarnations on the oldies circuit; they
still occasionally perform today. Kennibrew is the only original
Crystal who remained active throughout their touring from the
seventies to the present. |