Product Details
The Doo Wop Box

The Doo Wop Box
Various Artists

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Product Description

Born on street corners, doo wop came to symbolize a lush vision of idyllic teen romance. This comprehensive survey of doo wop music contains 101 vocal group gems and spans three decades. Among the classic sides are \""Sh-Boom,\"" \""Earth Angel,\"" \""Come Go With Me,\"" \""16 Candles,\"" \""Stay\"" and \""Why Do Fools Fall in Love?\""
No Track Information Available
Media Type: CD
Artist: DOO WOP BOX
Title: DOO WOP BOX
Street Release Date: 05/17/1994
Domestic
Genre: OLDIES COLLECTIONS

Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. It's Too Soon to Know - The Orioles
  2. Count Every Star - The Ravens
  3. Glory of Love - The Five Keys
  4. Gee - The Crows
  5. Crying in the Chapel - The Orioles
  6. Money Honey - The Drifters, Clyde McPhatter, Clyde McPhatter
  7. Golden Teardrops - The Flamingos
  8. Sunday Kind of Love - The Harptones, Willie Winfield
  9. I - The Velvets
  10. Goodnite, Sweetheart, Goodnite - The Spaniels
  11. Sh-Boom - Chords, The Chords
  12. Gloria - The Cadillacs, Jesse Powell Orchestra
  13. Hearts of Stone - The Jewels
  14. Earth Angel - The Penguins
  15. Sincerely - The Moonglows, The Moonglows
  16. Mary Lee - The Rainbows
  17. Close Your Eyes - The Five Keys
  18. (Will You) Come Back My Love - The Wrens
  19. Story Untold - The Nutmegs
  20. Only You (And You Alone) - The Platters
  21. Why Don't You Write Me - The Jacks
  22. When You Dance - The Turbans
  23. At My Front Door (Crazy Little Mama) - The El Dorados
  24. Great Pretender - The Platters
  25. Lily Maebelle - The Valentines, The Valentines

Disc 2:

  1. Speedoo - The Cadillacs, Jesse Powell Orchestra
  2. Why Do Fools Fall in Love? - Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers
  3. I'll Be Home - The Flamingos
  4. Devil or Angel - The Clovers
  5. Church Bells May Ring - The Willows
  6. Little Girl of Mine - The Cleftones, Jimmy Wright
  7. I Want You to Be My Girl - Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers, Jimmy Wright
  8. In the Still of the Night - The Five Satins
  9. Closer You Are - The Channels
  10. Oh, What a Night - The Dells
  11. Thousand Miles Away - The Heartbeats
  12. Please Say You Want Me - Leroy Kirkland Orchestra, The Schoolboys
  13. Come Go with Me - The Del Vikings
  14. I'm So Happy (Tra-La-La-La-La-La) - Louie Lymon & the Teenchords
  15. Walking Along - The Solitaires
  16. Little Darlin' - The Gladiolas
  17. Don't Ask Me to Be Lonely - The Dubs
  18. Florence - The Paragons
  19. Deserie - The Charts
  20. Whispering Bells - The Del Vikings, Corinthian "Kripp" Johnson
  21. Tonite, Tonite - The Mello-Kings
  22. Long Lonely Nights - Lee Andrews & the Hearts
  23. Baby Oh Baby - The Shells
  24. Tell Me Why - Norman Fox & The Rob Roys, The Rob Roys
  25. Buzz Buzz Buzz - Hollywood Flames
  26. Teardrops - Lee Andrews & the Hearts

Disc 3:

  1. Been So Long - The Pastels, The Pastels
  2. Get a Job - The Silhouettes
  3. Book of Love - The Monotones
  4. Maybe - The Chantels
  5. I Wonder Why - Dion, Dion & the Belmonts
  6. One Summer Night - The Danleers
  7. For Your Precious Love - Jerry Butler & the Impressions
  8. You Cheated - The Shields
  9. I'm So Young - The Students
  10. Every Day of the Week - The Students
  11. Little Star - The Elegants
  12. Tears on My Pillow - Little Anthony & the Imperials
  13. Trickle Trickle - The Videos
  14. Ten Commandments of Love - Harvey & The Moonglows, The Moonglows
  15. Sixteen Candles - The Crests
  16. So Fine - The Fiestas
  17. Lovers Never Say Goodbye - The Flamingos
  18. Since I Don't Have You - Lenny Martin & the Orchestra, The Skyliners
  19. Pizza Pie - Sid Bass, Norman Fox & The Rob Roys, The Rob Roys
  20. Sorry (I Ran All the Way Home) - Leroy Holmes & His Orchestra, The Impalas
  21. Teenager in Love - Dion & the Belmonts
  22. Who's That Knocking - The Genies
  23. I Only Have Eyes for You - The Flamingos
  24. Hushabye - The Mystics
  25. Rockin' in the Jungle - The Eternals

Disc 4:

  1. Mope-Itty Mope - The Boss-Tones
  2. Oh Rosemarie - The Fascinators, Jesse Stone Orchestra
  3. Just to Be With You - The Passions
  4. Shimmy, Shimmy, Ko-Ko-Bop - Little Anthony & the Imperials
  5. Wind - The Jesters
  6. Stay - Maurice Williams & the Zodiacs
  7. There's a Moon Out Tonight - The Capris
  8. Blue Moon - The Marcels
  9. Tonight I Fell in Love - Fields-Madera Orchestra, The Tokens
  10. Daddy's Home - The Limeliters, Shep & the Limelites
  11. Barbara Ann - The Regents
  12. Rama Lama Ding Dong - The Edsels
  13. Tonight (Could Be the Night) - Virgil Johnson, The Velvets
  14. My True Story - The Jive Five, Joe Rene & Orchestra
  15. Nag - The Halos
  16. Lookin' for My Baby - The Earls
  17. Imagination - The Quotations
  18. Coney Island Baby - The Excellents
  19. Remember Then - The Earls
  20. Never Let You Go - The Five Discs
  21. Denise - The Rainbows, , Randy & the Rainbows
  22. Unchained Melody - The Salutations, Vito
  23. I Do - The Marvelows
  24. Morse Code of Love - The Capris
  25. My Juanita [Live] - Brooklyn Bridge, Johnny Maestro

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #28511 in Music
  • Brand: DOO WOP BOX
  • Released on: 1994-05-17
  • Number of discs: 4
  • Format: Box set
  • Dimensions: 1.72 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
The unwritten rules for doo-wop groups were deceptively simple: name your group after a bird (the Wrens, the Flamingos) or a car (the Cadillacs, the El Dorados), practice your two-, three-, or four-part harmonies on a neighborhood street corner or in the back of a candy store, and sing songs about how much you love your baby. It might have seemed like an obvious formula, but getting it just right was never easy. When it worked, that formula created some of the most joyful and unforgettable music of the 20th century. From the Orioles ("It's Too Soon to Know") to Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers ("I Want You to Be My Girl"), this four-CD collection is without a doubt the definitive introduction to the rock & roll vocal music of the 1950s and early '60s. --Percy Keegan


Customer Reviews

Better than having access to Mr. Peabody's wayback machine!5
Once again, the highest praise for Rhino Records. This box set, while pricey, is worth every dime. There is no place to find this much classic music in any one (or two or ten) disc package.

These discs have a great range, from the finger popping rhythms of The Turban's "When You Dance" (which according to the extensive liner notes was the first recording of the background sound which gave the genre the name "doo wop"), and the Cadillac's "Speedo" to the Marcell's classic "Blue Moon". Of course, the many tributes to love are well represented too, with The Five Keys "Glory of Love", The Five Satin's "In The Still of the Night", and my personal favorite of this style, The Flamingoes timeless "Lover's Never Say Goodbye".

Aside from these all well known gems, it is also a repository of some lesser publicized classics wonderfully interspersed with those songs now the staples of many oldies stations. It is also the only place I am aware of with the greatest named doo-wop group of all time: Vito and the Salutations, and their inimitable (and seldom heard) rendition of "Unchained Melody". It is so different from the Righteous Brothers and a wonderful piece of music.

I grew up in New York listening to this music first on the corner and then on the radio. It brings back wonderful memories of warm summer nights, and the talented (and not so-talented) guys harmonizing on the streets.

Doo Wop Fever5
I have purchased both boxes of this Doo Wop set and I am truly amazed at what I've bought. I am 50 years old, so I vaguely remember some of the songs and others I had never heard. This is some of the best music in the world. I grew up in the 60s with Motown, etc. and love that music to death. This is different and lets me know that I was a generation behind the truly great music. The way the vocalists use their voices to mimic instruments is truly amazing. I am not musically inclined - I just love good music and I rate these two box sets at the top of my list.

What actually surprised me most of all was how high the quality was on these recordings. They are original recordings and I think they sound fuller than some of the recordings that are out today. If your age is fifty or older, I know you will enjoy these cd's. I can't stop listening to them. My old motto used to be "I'm stuck in the 60s" but for now I have to change it to "I'm back in the 50s".

Enjoy!

Timeless Music, and Rare Treasures!!!5
WOW! Well, after reading the reviews written here for this set, I went out yesterday and bought it, pretty much on a whim! But this was one of those rare occasions where my whim has actually paid off in spades! First of all, I should say that I'm 19 years old (okay, I'll be twenty in eleven days, but I'm still a teenager at heart!) so, needless to say, I never had the opportunity to sit at a Bronx apartment stoop, harmonizing with four other guys about lost love and moonlit nights. But sometimes, when I listen to this music, I feel like I could very well have been there in a past life! And as far as this set goes, well, it's pure magic! From the first note 'til the last, this box takes a thorough and enjoyable look at the entire doo-wop genre. I learned more about doo-wop's history from the amazing companion booklet than I ever have from any other source. I always used to think that all doo-wop was pretty much the same no matter what year it was released in. Not so! In fact, as it turns out, the doo-wop sound changed so rapidly that you can hear subtle changes in the musical approach from YEAR to YEAR! And in fact, doo-wop falls into three distinct sub-eras; the initial R&B movement of the late forties when groups like The Ravens splintered off from more traditional black vocal groups of earlier years, the acceptance of the music by white America in the mid-fifties and its fusion with rock & roll, and the early 60's doo-wop revival, due in large amount to Italian groups like Dion & the Belmonts, and conscientious record collectors who brought doormant singles to deejays, who made hits out of them YEARS after they were recorded! That means that doo-wop, in some form or another, existed actively in three decades! That's a lot of great music, and this set tackles all of it with outstanding gusto! As a bit of an early-rock historian myself (at least in my own mind ;-), I do have a small bone to pick with the head compiler of this set, who asserts that while groups like the Ink Spots were catering to a mostly white pop audience in the 30's and 40's, the Orioles recorded the first "real" doo-wop tune "It's Too Soon to Know" in 1948. As popular as that theory is and as widely-held as it is among doo-wop aficianados, I'm afraid I just don't see it. The Orioles don't sound any more "doo-wop" than the Ink Spots themselves did! In fact, in my mind, the Ink Spots have just as much doo-wop street cred as the Orioles do, and they started all the way back in 1939 with their countrified, harmonically-satisfying ballad "If I Didn't Care". The Orioles didn't really have any quality to distinguish them from the Ink Spots, so I'd have to say that the first "real" full-fledged doo wop tune was the SECOND song on this set "Count Every Star" by the Ravens, from all the way back in 1950! A beautiful song that gives me goosebumps every time I hear it, especially when I hear that soaring falsetto doing vocal loop-de-loops at the beginning! While this whole set is pure gold, I'd have to say that the first disc is my favorite because it encompasses the spirit of pure black streetcorner music, before it became commercialized and before it was fodder for novelty tunes. My favorites of this set are the really obscure old gems from the days when this was the stuff you REALLY didn't want your parents to hear, some of these that I had never even heard before, like "Gee" by The Crows, "Why Don't You Write Me?" by The Jacks (I wish to Heaven that I could find out who that lead vocalist is, he's fantastic!), "Mary Lee" by The Rainbows, "Come Back My Love" by the Wrens, "I" by The Velvets, "Hearts of Stone" by the Jewels, "Sh-Boom" by the Chords, "A Sunday Kind of Love" by the Harp-Tones, "Story Untold" by the Nutmegs, and OF COURSE "Count Every Star" by the Ravens! The later days of doo-wop are just as great to listen to and maybe even more developed stylistically, but never again was it at its purest, most emotionally tormented form. The later discs in this set are fabulous also, with all the feverish and fun doo-wop rockers that were to come along in the rock era and some truly classic and well-known tunes by the Skyliners, the Cadillacs, the Dell Vikings, the Capris, Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers etc. as well as some of the great white and Italian streetcorner groups that picked up and carried the torch of doo-wop in the revival period, but I think the last two discs are brought down just a TAD by one or two not-so-great novelty tunes that wouldn't have been missed if they had stayed in the doo-wop vaults (did we REALLY need "Pizza Pie" by Norman Fox & the Rob-Roys?! Uggh!). All criticisms aside, this is still THE set to buy! And even though it's a bit pricey, the informative and lovingly rendered booklet alone is worth half of the price tag just for what you'll learn from reading it, and you get some really rare songs here (from all three eras) that you WON'T find in other collections and, probably, many that you've never heard before and that you'll be glad you met! If you lived through this period, you'll relive some priceless memories, and if you're like me and you didn't see this music's heyday, now is the perfect chance to get it and create some priceless memories of your own!

Keep rockin'!