Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Ron Hicklin Singers

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Ron Hicklin Singers httpsimgdiscogscomemzj1odVa5rhwxBadKpoxWkFx7

Members
  
Ron Hicklin, Tom Bahler, John Bahler, Jim Haas, Stan Farber, Gene Morford

Similar
  
Cyndi Grecco, The Love Generation, Robin Ward, Chris Morris, Charles Fox

That girl season 5 theme restoration ron hicklin singers


The Ron Hicklin Singers were a group of Los Angeles studio singers contracted and organized by Ron Hicklin. They are most famously known as the real singers behind the background vocals on The Partridge Family recordings.

Contents

In Los Angeles studio circles in the 1960s through 1980s, they were the vocal equivalent of (and often worked with) The Wrecking Crew, performing backup vocals on thousands of songs, TV and movie themes, and as lead – yet anonymous – singers on thousands of radio and television commercials.

Partridge family pilot song 1 ron hicklin singers havin a ball restoration


Cast

The core group usually consisted of:

  • Ron Hicklin, lead tenor
  • Tom Bahler, tenor
  • John Bahler, tenor
  • Jackie Ward, alto
  • Sally Stevens, soprano
  • Gene Morford, bass
  • However, this core group was often augmented with other specialist vocalists such as:

  • Thurl Ravenscroft, bass (voice of Kellogg's Tony the Tiger of Frosted Flakes cereal for 50 years)
  • Mitch Gordon
  • Jim Haas
  • Andra Willis
  • Linda Dangcil
  • Often they were not credited, or else were credited under other names. For example, when singing the TV theme of Love, American Style, they were credited as The Charles Fox Singers.

    Television and radio work

    The group also sang the themes for major hit-TV shows of the period:

  • Love, American Style, with lead vocalist John Bahler (opening theme)
  • Batman
  • Flipper
  • That Girl, (season 5 opening)
  • Happy Days, for which Hicklin himself sang lead (opening theme)
  • Laverne & Shirley, along with lead vocalist Cyndi Grecco (opening theme)
  • Wonder Woman, with John Bahler singing lead (season 2 opening)
  • Angie, along with lead vocalist Maureen McGovern (opening theme)
  • In addition, they sang many commercial vocals, including campaigns for:

  • Kawasaki ("Kawasaki, let the good times roll")
  • Datsun ("Drive a Datsun, then decide")
  • McDonald's ("You deserve a break today"), written by Kenny Karen
  • Radio and television station-ID jingle companies throughout the last four decades of the 20th century used the group in their productions, including:

  • The Heller Corporation [1].
  • JAM Creative Productions
  • TM Productions (now known as TM Studios, a division of Dial Global Media) on syndicated-radio ID jingle packages including:
  • Hot Hits
  • FUSION
  • The "You" campaign
  • Good Feelings
  • Noteworthy recording work

    The group also sang on recordings credited to:

  • Anita Kerr Singers [Jackie Ward sang alto on the group's Dot Records recordings]
  • Percy Faith Orchestra and Chorus
  • Ray Conniff Singers
  • Henry Mancini Orchestra and Chorus
  • Gary Lewis & the Playboys
  • Gary Puckett & The Union Gap
  • Cher
  • Climax featuring Sonny Geraci
  • Paul Revere & the Raiders
  • The Brady Kids
  • The Partridge Family
  • Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps (1959 Crazy Times album)
  • Works of selected members

    The Bahler Brothers can be heard performing tenor harmonies on:

  • Hugo Montenegro's The Good, the Bad and the Ugly theme
  • "MacArthur Park"
  • "Suicide Is Painless", Johnny Mandel's theme to the 1970 film M*A*S*H, along with Ian Freebairn-Smith
  • The soundtrack of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, along with Thurl Ravenscroft (Tony the Tiger's voice) singing bass, including Burt Bacharach's "South American Getaway"
  • Member Jackie Ward also had a hit on her own as Robin Ward with the 1963 hit "Wonderful Summer".

    Where are they now?

    John Bahler lives in Branson, MO and conducts the "new" Lawrence Welk orchestra as well as running Portraits By Bahler.

    Bahler's wife, Janet Lennon-Bahler of the Lennon Sisters, still tours in casinos and resorts around the country as part of an extensive nostalgia circuit, bringing music of the '40s and '50s to a new audience.

    Tom Bahler, a long-time close associate of composer Quincy Jones as well as being associate producer and arranger of "We Are the World", lives in California's Santa Ynez Valley north of Los Angeles and continues to occasionally produce as well as record. He is also a songwriter of renown, having penned the Bobby Sherman hit "Julie, Do You Love Me" and Michael Jackson's "She's Out of My Life".

    Ron Hicklin himself retired from the business in the mid-2000s, and lives in Palm Desert with his wife, Trudi.

    References

    Ron Hicklin Singers Wikipedia