Falling in Love Again Lyrics Hamilton Joe Frank Reynolds

Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds

Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds.png

Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds in 1971

Background information
Origin Los Angeles, California, United states
Genres Soft rock
Years active 1968–1976, 1986–1988
Labels Dunhill Records
Playboy Records
Members Dan Hamilton (deceased)
Joe Frank Carollo
Tommy Reynolds
Alan Dennison

Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds were a 1970s soft rock trio from Los Angeles. The original members were Dan Hamilton (guitar/pb song), Joe Frank Carollo (bass/vocal), and Tommy Reynolds (multi-instrumentalist/vocal), all of whom had previously played in The T-Basic, a 1960s band noted for the instrumental hit "No Matter What Shape (Your Breadbasket's In)."

The grouping first hitting the charts in 1971 with "Don't Pull Your Dear." Reynolds left the grouping in late 1972 and was replaced by keyboardist Alan Dennison, merely the band kept the proper name 'Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds' until 1976. This revised line-up performed the group's biggest hit, 1975's "Fallin' in Love."

Early group [edit]

Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds came together as a result of Hamilton'south blood brother, musician/actor Judd Hamilton, being asked past Liberty Records producer Joe Sareceno to grade a "live" version of the studio grouping The T-Bones. In November 1965, Judd Hamilton agreed and asked brother Dan Hamilton to join him on lead guitar. Both had worked for, and had been mentored by, The Ventures, whom Saraceno likewise produced at the time. Once the Hamilton brothers officially became The T-Bones, they rounded out their initial road group with three Los Angeles musicians, George Dee (aka Arnold Rosenthal) on bass, Richard Torres on keyboards/sax, and drummer Gene Pello.

New line-up [edit]

They striking the road in January 1966 to promote their commencement unmarried "No Matter What Shape (Your Stomach's In)," an instrumental piece based upon a and then-popular Alka-Seltzer TV commercial. Dee and Torres chop-chop decided to leave the band, and were replaced past Tommy Reynolds (who would, in 1969, be the lead singer for Shango) and Joe Frank Carollo. "No Thing What Shape (Your Breadbasket's In)" reached #3 on the Usa Billboard Hot 100 in March 1966. This revised version of The T-Bones toured the US and Japan. Their third and final album was not commercially successful and they disbanded near the terminate of 1967.

Large striking [edit]

In 1970, Dunhill Records offered a recording contract to the newly formed 'Hamilton, Joe Frank and Reynolds.' The post-obit twelvemonth "Don't Pull Your Honey," produced by Steve Barri and arranged by Jimmie Haskell, hit #1 on the Greenbacks Box Top 100, peaked at #4 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, sold over one 1000000 US copies, and was awarded a gilt record by the R.I.A.A. in Baronial 1971.[1] A couple more singles ("Annabella" and "Daisy Mae") charted, only two Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds albums and several other singles failed to register any significant chart activity.

Tommy Reynolds left the grouping in late 1972. Hamilton and Carollo continued touring with various session musicians, such as Larry Knechtel on keyboards and Joe Correro on drums. However with their lack of success, their contract with Dunhill was cancelled in 1973. With the addition of Alan Dennison and Rick Shull, Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds continued to perform locally.

Proper name change and after years [edit]

In the latter part of 1974, they secured another recording deal with Playboy Records on the proviso that they retain the name Hamilton, Joe Frank, and Reynolds, even though Reynolds had left the group.[2] Within some other few months, they released "Fallin' in Love," which reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. It too became their second gold disc and their merely song to appear in the UK Singles Nautical chart, where it was licensed to Pye Records and reached #33 in the fall of 1975.[1] [three]

They followed this success with "Winners & Losers," which reached #21 in 1976, only the next releases, "Don't Fight the Easily (That Need Y'all)" and "Everyday Without Yous" both failed to reach the Height 40. While the band retained their original proper noun on the cover of their Fallin' in Love anthology, the back encompass showcased the more-accurate "Hamilton, Joe Frank & Dennison" name. However, for their 2nd Playboy Records anthology in 1976, "Love & Conversation", the band officially changed their name to "Hamilton, Joe Frank & Dennison". Only in 1980, they once again disbanded, this time permanently.

Hamilton continued to write and publish songs, and also wrote and recorded a couple of film themes. In the winter of 1993, Hamilton became seriously sick and was eventually diagnosed as suffering from Cushing'due south syndrome. He died in Los Angeles on December 23, 1994, at the age of 48.

Pop civilization [edit]

In an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000, the characters jokingly discussed how difficult it is for the average person to decide exactly how many people were in the group. Without seeing the proper noun written downwards, ane could assume it was a quartet ("Hamilton," "Joe," "Frank," and "Reynolds"), a duo ("Hamilton Joe Frank" and "Reynolds"), a trio (consisting instead of "Hamilton Joe," "Frank," and "Reynolds"), or even a quintet ("Hamilton," "Joe," "Frank," "Ann," "Reynolds").

"Don't Pull Your Love" was featured at the beginning of The West Wing episode "In the Shadow of 2 Gunmen Part Two." The song was also heard in the picture When Harry Met Sally.... It was likewise featured in the 2017 DC animated feature Batman and Harley Quinn. "Fallin' in Honey" appeared in the 2007 film The Hitcher.

A running joke from radio personality Dan Ingram, while a deejay at WABC AM, involved introducing the group as "Hamilton, Joe, Frank Reynolds and the entire Eyewitness News team," a reference to the band and a nod to ABC news anchor Frank Reynolds during his tenure as co-ballast of Globe News Tonight.

Discography [edit]

Albums [edit]

Year Album Nautical chart positions
United states of america
1971 Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds 59
1972 Hallway Symphony 191
1975 Fallin' in Love 82
1976 Love & Conversation -

Compilations [edit]

  • 1995: Greatest Hits
  • 2005: The Playboy Years

Singles [edit]

Yr Title Nautical chart positions
US
[four]
Us
AC
[4]
US
R&B
[four]
AUS[v] CAN UK
[6]
1971 "Don't Pull Your Love" 4 4 - 10 1 -
"Annabella" 46 21 - - - -
"Daisy Mae" 41 - - 70 - -
1972 "One Adept Woman" 113 - - - - -
1975 "Fallin' in Love" ane 1 24 64 2 33
"Winners and Losers" 21 v - - 21 -
1976 "Everyday Without Y'all" 62 7 - - - -
"Low-cal Up the World with Sunshine" 67 - - - - -
"Don't Fight the Hands (That Need You)" 72 - - - - -

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b Murrells, Joseph (1978). The Volume of Golden Discs (2nd ed.). London: Barrie and Jenkins Ltd. pp. 294 & 358. ISBN0-214-20512-half-dozen.
  2. ^ Allmusic.com
  3. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness Globe Records Limited. p. 242. ISBN1-904994-x-five.
  4. ^ a b c "Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds (US)". Music VF . Retrieved September 2, 2020.
  5. ^ Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Volume 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.South.Westward.: Australian Chart Volume. p. 132. ISBN0-646-11917-6.
  6. ^ "Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds (UK)". Official Charts Visitor . Retrieved September two, 2020.

For farther reading [edit]

Reynolds, Robert (2018). The Music of Hamilton, Joe Frank and Reynolds. Columbia, SC: Lulu.com. ISBN 978-i-365-28876-0.

External links [edit]

  • Life of a Roadie: The Gypsy in Me (written by Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds roadie, Ronnie Rush)
  • Hamilton, Joe Frank & Reynolds

healyviscruend41.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamilton,_Joe_Frank_%26_Reynolds

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