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THE OHIO
EXPRESS (ARTIST BIOGRAPHY)
The Ohio
Express was a Bubblegum pop/garage band that fronted for Kasenetz
and Katz’s Super K Productions studio musicians working out of New
York, including singer/songwriter Joey Levine (“Yummy Yummy Yummy”).
The band is strongly associated with the bubblegum group 1910
Fruitgum Company. Both groups were partially faceless studio
assemblages, and partially a real group.
The real band behind The Ohio Express was originally named Sir
Timothy & The Royals and hailed from Mansfield, Ohio. They hooked up
with the men of Super K in 1966 and were renamed The Ohio Express.
They released their first single and LP on Cameo-Parkway Records of
Philadelphia in the autumn of 1967. Unfortunately, the record label
went into bankruptcy shortly after that and was purchased by music
business mogul Allen Klein, who still owns the masters to this day.
The group then moved to the home label of bubblegum pop, Buddah
Records (purposely misspelled so as not to be sacrilegious), where
they released four LPs and a multitude of singles. They charted
several singles in the Top 40, most featuring the vocals of Levine,
though their albums sold less well and none never charted above #100
on the Billboard charts.
The New York studio musicians were mostly heard on the tracks
released as singles, while the five lads from Ohio could be heard on
some of the album tracks, as well as appearing at various concerts
and making several television appearances.
By the end of Ohio Express’ career at Buddah, recordings made by
various groups of musicians were released as singles under the Ohio
Express name, including “Sausalito,” recorded in England by future
members of 10cc.
The song “Yummy Yummy Yummy” was featured in several popular
television shows. at the end of a Monty Python episode called “How
Not to Be Seen,” though this was a cover version and not the
original recording. It was also featured in at least two episodes of
The Simpsons, once in an episode in which Bart munches his way to
obesity due to an addictive set of snack machines being installed at
Springfield Elementary, and another instance in an episode in which
Homer listens to and sings along to “Yummy Yummy Yummy” while his
father watches the first moon landing in 1969. It was also featured
in an end scene from the popular documentary from Morgan Spurlock,
Super Size Me in which Spurlock is eating his “Last McSupper”, as
dubbed in the movie while joined by a crowd of fans and friends.
Several Ohio Express songs have been used in television commercials
in the ensuing years, most recently “Chewy Chewy” in an ad for
Quaker Oats Granola bars. |