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Gerry Granahan

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Name
  
Gerry Granahan


Music group
  
The Fireflies

Gerry Granahan Gerry Granahan Russ amp Gary39s quotThe Best Years of Musicquot

Role
  
Singer · gerrygranahan.com

Albums
  
In My Heart, No Chemise Please

Similar People
  
Eddie Fontaine, Ritchie Adams, Lyn Roman

Profiles

Gerry granahan dance girl dance too big for her bikini 1961 caprice 108


Gerald "Gerry" Granahan (born April 20, 1932, Pittston, Pennsylvania) is an American singer, songwriter, and record producer, best known for his work in the 1950s and 1960s.

Contents

Gerry Granahan TRB Enterprises Honoring the Pioneers of Music

Granahan worked at WPTS in Pittston as a radio announcer and disc jockey in his youth. His Elvis Presley-like voice got him a job recording demos of songs submitted to Presley. Granahan was offered a contract with Atlantic Records in 1957 as a rockabilly artist under the name Jerry Grant, but his release sank without a trace, and another release shortly after on Mark Records was also a flop.

Gerry Granahan Gerry Granahan Dance Girl Dance YouTube

In 1958 Granahan teamed with publisher Tommy Volando on Sunbeam Records, and recorded the single "No Chemise Please". The song became a nationwide hit in the U.S., peaking at #23 on the Billboard Hot 100. None of his next four singles for Sunbeam were sales successes; however. During this time Granahan also co-wrote the song "Click Clack" with Dave Alldred of The Rhythm Orchids. A demo of the tune reached Dick Clark, as well as Tony Mammarella, who had just founded Swan Records. Because of contractual obligations, Granahan released the song under the alias Dickie Doo & the Don'ts on Swan, and Clark guaranteed it airplay on American Bandstand. The single's success resulted in Granahan recruiting a backing band consisting of Harvey Davis (bass), Al Ways (sax), Ray Gangi (guitar), and Dave Alldred (drums) to tour and record as Dicky Doo & the Don'ts, who went on to chart several more singles. Granahan also managed a regional hit in the U.S. Northeast with the single "Let the Rumors Fly", released on Gone Records.

Gerry Granahan 45cat Gerry Granahan Dance Girl Dance Too Big For

Granahan also produced extensively. He recorded the doo wop group The Fireflies and the girl group The Angels, and later in the 1960s, Patty Duke and Jay & the Americans. Granahan produced The Wild Ones' version of the song "Wild Thing", which was dwarfed by the success of the version by The Troggs.

Later in his career, Granahan served as vice president of Dot Records and Paramount Records. He still performs today as Dicky Doo and the Don'ts Featuring Gerry Granahan.

Gerry Granahan - Dancin' Man


References

Gerry Granahan Wikipedia