Harman Patil (Editor)

The Williams Brothers

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Origin
  
United States

Years active
  
1938–1990s

Genre
  
Pop music

Genres
  
Pop music

Active from
  
1938

The Williams Brothers williamsbrothersmusiccomimageswallpaper1jpg

Past members
  
Andy WilliamsDick WilliamsBob WilliamsDon Williams

Albums
  
The Best Of & More Live, Still Standing

Members
  
Andy Williams, Melvin Williams, Dick Williams, Bob Williams, Leonard Williams, Don Williams, Henry Green

Record labels
  
Warner Bros. Records, Geffen Records

Similar
  
Doug Williams, Lee Williams, Lee Williams & the Spirit, The Canton Spirituals, Kay Thompson

Profiles

Still here the williams brothers


The Williams Brothers were a singing quartet that performed extensively on radio, movies, nightclubs, and television from 1938 through the 1990s.

Contents

The Williams Brothers Prayers for The Williams Brothers in Loss of Mother Path MEGAzine

History

The Williams Brothers Williams Brothers Greatest Hits Plus Amazoncom Music

The four Williams Brothers—Bob, Don, Dick and Andy Williams—formed a singing quartet in the mid-1930s in Wall Lake, Iowa. Their father, Jay Williams, managed and promoted the group. They entertained on radio stations, first at WHO in Des Moines, Iowa, and later at WLS in Chicago and WLW in Cincinnati, before they moved to Los Angeles in 1943, where they were under contract with the MGM film studio. The Williams Brothers appeared in Janie (1944), Kansas City Kitty (1944), Ladies' Man (1947), and Something in the Wind (1947).

The Williams Brothers Melvin Williams Of Gospel Group The Williams Brothers Mourns The

They also appeared with Bing Crosby on the hit record "Swinging on a Star" (1944). This led to a nightclub act with entertainer Kay Thompson from 1947 to 1951. The act was staged by MGM choreographer, Robert Alton. They toured night-clubs and cabarets in the United States and internationally with great success and appeared on radio and television establishing a loyal cult following with their jazz-based harmonies and flamboyant performance style. The act broke up in 1951 and the brothers went separate ways, appearing annually on The Andy Williams Christmas special from 1962 through the 1990s.

Tribute

The Williams Brothers The Williams Brothers Biography Albums Streaming Links AllMusic

Liza Minnelli has paid tribute to the Kay Thompson and the Williams Brothers act in The South Bank Show (2008). In her 2008 tour, Minnelli devoted much of the performance to recreating the act, using Thompson's trademark music. The success of this tribute led to Minnelli's return to Broadway in December 2008. "Liza's At The Palace!" opened at New York's legendary Palace Theatre, an affectionate salute to her godmother, Kay Thompson. Supported by a quartet of dynamic singer/dancers standing in for the original Williams Brothers, Liza performed musical hits (with the original vocal arrangements) from the famous act, including such numbers as “I Love a Violin,” “Clap Yo' Hands,” “Jubilee Time”, and “Hello Hello”. The show won a Tony Award, and was subsequently released on a double CD- preserving the nightclub material in a state-of-the-art recording.

Second generation

Twin brothers Andrew Williams and David Williams (born February 22, 1959), nephews of singer Andy Williams, from Henderson, Nevada, recorded as the Williams Brothers in the 1990s, and made the Billboard Hot 100 with their song "Can't Cry Hard Enough" in 1992. As teen idols, they also made the Hot 100 in 1974, billed as "Andy and David Williams", with the #92 entry "What's Your Name". This followed an appearance in The Partridge Family.

They released three albums after their teens: Two Stories 1987, The Williams Brothers 1991, Harmony Hotel 1993.

The gospel group "The Williams Brothers"

This identically named group was organized in 1960 by Leon "Pop" Williams. They were originally known as "The Little Williams Brothers" and later "The Sensational Williams Brothers". Today the group is simply called "The Williams Brothers".

Articles and reviews

  • Detroit News Pictorial. December 14, 1947.
  • Chicago Daily News. Thursday, June 17, 1948.
  • This Week in Montreal. Friday, December 31, 1948.
  • Paul V. Coates. “Well, Medium and Rare”. Los Angeles Mirror. Monday, July 31, 1951. p. 10.
  • Variety. October 3, 1951. p. 64.
  • Songs

    I'm Just a NobodyGreatest Hits Plus · 2001
    Still HereStill Here · 1999
    Living TestimonyThe Concert · 1996

    References

    The Williams Brothers Wikipedia