Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Cheers

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Active until
  
2011

Genres
  
Rock, Pop

Active from
  
1950

The Cheers httpsimgdiscogscomG3WEXNB6BLmPcgNeujDFEoa9P

Members
  
Bert Convy, Gil Garfield, Sue Allen and Billy Butterfield

Albums
  
Top Hits of 54' (Mono Version), The Cheers, Chicken / Don't Do Anything

Similar
  
The Robins, Les Paul, Jerry Leiber, The Fontane Sisters, Ray Anthony and His O

The Cheers were an American rock and roll vocal group, that had a string of hits in the mid-1950s starting with "(Bazoom) I Need Your Lovin'." which hit number three on the U.S. chart in 1954. This was the first hit written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller to chart on the Pop charts in the United States, and was one of the first rock and roll hits by a white group (after The Crew Cuts and Bill Haley and the Comets). The following year, they followed it up with "Black Denim Trousers and Motorcycle Boots" (also written by Leiber and Stoller), a song about a wild-living leather-jacketed motorcyclist, which went to number six on the charts. The Cheers members included Bert Convy (1933—1991) who would later serve as host of several daytime television game shows such as Tattletales, Super Password, Win, Lose or Draw and 3rd Degree, Sue Allen and Gil Garfield (1933—2011). Leiber and Stoller wrote and produced 'Chicken' (1955) for The Cheers, parodying the central sequence from James Dean's film Rebel Without a Cause.

Songs

Black Denim Trousers1955
I Need Your Lovin'Top Hits of 54' (Mono Version) · 2014
I Made up My Mind2000

References

The Cheers Wikipedia