The Shangri-Las They were the
Leaders of the Pack They were a girl group unlike any of their contemporaries. Groups like the Dixie Cups, the Crystals, or the
Ronettes projected a sweet-16 girlishness, a youthful innocence, if you will. But the Shangri-Las looked mean. They looked like they might carry razors. And their songs were unlike those of the other
girl groups. They werent Going to
the Chapel. They hung out with The
Leader of the Pack of motorcycle gangs. And they had three major hit singles in 1964 Remember
(Walkin in the Sand), Leader of the Pack and Give Him a
Great Big Kiss as well as I Can Never Go Home Anymore in 1965. Originally high school girls from Queens, New York, the
Shangri-Las were Mary and Betty (or Liz) Weiss and identical twins Marge and Mary Ann
Ganser. Mary sang lead, and her sister only
occasionally performed with the group, making it more often than not a trio. Mary had long straight blonde hair, while the
Ganser twins were brunettes. All of them projected Attitude. The girls had formed a group on their own and sang at school
shows, talent shows and teen hops. They made
a few records prior to their run of hits, apparently under the supervision of Kama Sutras
Artie Ripp. These include Simon Says
for Smash (a Mercury subsidiary) and Wishing Well for Spokane. But their career took off when a budding producer named
George Shadow Morton used them to make a demo of a song hed hastily
written, Remember (Walkin in the Sand), which was released by Leiber
& Stollers Red Bird label. Morton
had been running what others thought was a bluff hed had no prior experience
as a record producer and he wrote the song only after lining up the recording date,
but he turned out to have the goods. (The
pianist on the date was a very young Billy Joel.) Remember
was released on July 20, 1964 and made it to No. 5 in the charts by late September. Later that fall it went to No. 14 on the British
charts as well. Hoping to keep the momentum going, Morton, with Brill
Building songwriters Ellie Greenwich and Jeff Barry, wrote and produced Leader of
the Pack. This one had it all: narration (Is she really going out with him?),
a tragic story line, and the sounds of engineer Joe Veneris motorcycle revving. It went to No. 1 by the end of November. It also hit the top of the Australian charts, and
in the U.K. it reached No. 11 and came back in 1972 to hit No. 3, and again in 1976
to be No. 7 in the British charts. The
Shangri-Las were the only American vocal group to do this.
When they performed the song onstage, as they did many times on Murray the Ks
tours, they wore leather and an actual Harley was wheeled out with them to supply the
sounds of the cycle revving. (The song also inspired the parody, Leader of the
Laundromat, by the Detergents, which itself made the top 20.) The group made a lot of TV appearances, on Hullabaloo, Hollywood
a Go Go, Shindig, and the Steve Allen, Soupy
Sales, Bruce Morrow (Cousin Brucie), Clay Cole and Dick Clark shows. They projected a sullen, pouty, sexy look which
did nothing to harm their popularity. Their
third hit was Give Him a Great Big Kiss, a more typical girl group song,
lacking the underlying tragedy of their earlier hits.
It reached No. 18. Their next few songs failed to chart as well, although Out
in the Streets had a Stravinsky-esque opening and reached No. 54. In March, 1965, Red Bird released an LP, Leader of the Pack (RB 20-101). It consisted of the A and B sides of their first
three singles, on side one, and a live show on side two.
What was impressive was the way they sang even the B sides, like Bull
Dog a Leiber & Stoller song with the kind of emotion one expected
of far more mature singers. And the live
show, with rock classics like Twist and Shout, Maybe, So
Much in Love, Shout, Good Night My Love, Pleasant Dreams and
You Cant Sit Down, showed their mastery of the material and the
audience. In the fall of 1965 I Can Never Go Home Anymore,
another Morton composition, climbed to No. 6, their last major hit. Only a month earlier Red Bird had rushed out a
second LP, Shangri-Las-65! (RB 20-104), with a
red sticker proclaiming Included in this album Right Now and Not Later The back cover includes liner notes by Faith
Whitehall which mention that there had been a Shangri-Las Day at the 1964-65
New York Worlds Fair. The success of
I Can Never Go Home Anymore caused Red Bird to quickly reissue the album with
the same front cover, but with a white sticker which said, Included in this album is
I Can Never Go Home Anymore. The
album kept the same catalog number, but substituted the new hit for a track on side two
called The Dum Dum Ditty. And
this version of the album has no liner notes. Collectors
take note: the earlier version of the album
is rarer. Red Bird issued these albums only in mono, although some of
the singles were recorded in stereo. In
addition to the two Shangri-Las albums, Red Bird released Red Bird Goldies (RB 20-102) on which three
Shangri-Las hits are used. After Past,
Present and Future, which made it to No. 59 in the summer of 1966, Red Bird
effectively folded, and the group moved briefly to Mercury, still under the watchful eye
of Morton. In 1966 Mercury issued two singles
and an LP, Golden Hits of the Shangri-Las (MG
21099/SR 61099). Most of the short album is
made up of their Red Bird hits. Interestingly,
the stereo version of Leader of the Pack is used, and its
missing the first line of the second verse (One day my dad said, find someone
new) which is true of all the stereo versions of this song released
thus far. In 1985 Mercury/Polygram reissued Golden Hits of the Shangri-Las (824 807-1) this
time using the mono (complete) version of Leader of the Pack, and the use of
fake (rechanneled) stereo for the mono recordings was dispensed with, with
seven out of the 12 tracks in mono. In 1969
Buddah released a collection, Incense and Oldies
(BDS-5014), which uses the stereo version of Leader of the Pack with the
missing line, and uses alternate takes of Give Him a Great Big Kiss (without
overdubs at the beginning, and without the voice overdub at the end) and Remember
(no beach sounds overdubbed). The group broke up in 1968, after having been reduced to playing local Brooklyn bars. In 1989 the three then-surviving members of the group reformed and appeared for the first time in over 20 years with Cousin Brucie at his first Palisades Amusement Park Reunion on June 3rd. They closed the show with motorcycles and The Leader of the Pack. There were no follow-up appearances, and none are now likely. Betty Weiss married Jeremy Storch and later remarried to become Betty Weiss Nelson. Mary Weiss became an interior decorator and married a man named Stoker. Mary Anne Ganser died in 1971 of encephalitis. Her sister married to become Marge Ganser Droste, and died in 1996 of breast cancer. |
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