- Jay and the Americans
infobox musical artist
Name=Jay and the Americans
Img_capt=Jay and the Americans backstage atMassillon, Ohio , in August, 2008. L-R Sandy Deane, Jay Reincke, Marty Sanders, Howie Kane
Landscape=yesBackground=group_or_band
Genre=Rock
Years_active=1960-present
URL= [http://jayandtheamericans.net jayandtheamericans.net]
Current_members=Jay Reincke
Sandy Deane
Howie Kane
Marty Sanders
Past_members=Kenny Vance John "Jay" Traynor Jay Black Jay and the Americans were a
pop music group popular in the 1960s. Their initial lineup consisted ofJohn "Jay" Traynor , Howard Kane (né Kirschenbaum),Kenny Vance (né Rosenberg) and Sandy Deanne (né Yaguda).Biography
Early years
They were discovered while performing in student venues at
New York University in the late 1950s. They auditioned forLeiber and Stoller , who gave the group its name. In the manner of the time, Leiber and Stoller wanted to extend this to "Binky Jones and the Americans", but Traynor declined to be known as Binky Jones his whole career. He instead offered up "Jay", a family nickname, and it suited everyone.Career pinnacle
With Jay Traynor singing lead, they first hit the Billboard charts in 1962 with the tune "
She Cried ", which reached #5 (later covered byThe Shangri-Las ,Aerosmith , and others). The next two singles didn't fare nearly as well, and Traynor left the group. David Black (né Blatt) ofThe Empires took his place (after first agreeing to adopt the nameJay Black ), and Empires' guitarist Marty Sanders (né Kupersmith) also joined. Black sang lead for the rest of the group's major hits.They returned to the charts in 1963 with "Only In America", a song originally meant for
The Drifters . Other notable hits for Jay and the Americans were "Come a Little Bit Closer " in 1964, which hit #3, and "Cara Mia " in 1965, which hit #4. They also recorded a commercial for H.I.S. Slacks and apublic service announcement for theAd Council , featuring a backing track byBrian Wilson andPhil Spector .In 1968, they recorded an album of their favorite oldies called "Sands of Time", which included "
This Magic Moment ", which was originally done by the Drifters. The single went to #9 in January 1969 (Black was astounded and claims that he much prefers the version bythe Drifters ). This was the last top ten record for Jay and the Americans, although a follow-up album, "Wax Museum", in January 1970, did yield the #19 hit single "Walkin' In The Rain", first recorded byThe Ronettes . Their next singles failed to chart, and the band grew apart, but the demand for appearances remained. (Around the same time the band recorded "This Magic Moment," Jay and the Americans member Sandy Yaguda produced a Long Island teen sextet called The Tuneful Trolley. Their late-1968 Capitol LP, "Island In The Sky"—a hybrid of Beach Boys and Beatlesque psych-pop—was reissued in 2008 in the UK on Now Sounds.)Decline
The group split in 1973.http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/12/07/ap/entertainment/mainD8LRNSVG0.shtml] All of the members moved on to solo musical careers, with the exception of Jay Black, who continued to perform as "Jay and the Americans". Black continued until the 1980s with a variety of musicians, at one point briefly including the young
Walter Becker andDonald Fagen (of laterSteely Dan fame) on backup bass guitar and electric organ. The original core group reunited in the 1990s for special performances, most notably the "45 Years of Motown" special onPBS . Jay was featured in the PBS special "Rock, Rhythm, and Doo Wop" as "Jay Black & The Americans" in 2001.ale of the band name and "reunion"
In 2006, Jay Black filed for bankruptcy due to gambling debts, and his ownership of the name "Jay & The Americans" was sold by the bankrcuptcy trustee to Sandy Deanne (Yaguda), Black's former bandmate and original member of Jay & The Americans for $100,000 to pay Black's debts. With the name purchase, former members Deanne, Howard Kane, and Marty Sanders reunited, and recruited a sound-alike singer from Chicago, coincidentally nicknamed "Jay." Thus, John "Jay" Reincke became the third "Jay" and the band returned to playing the North American oldies circuit.
Black still tours under his stage name, "Jay Black".
Kenny Vance is currently the lead singer of " [http://www.planotones.com/ Kenny Vance and the Planotones] ", a neo-doo wop band that he formed in the 1970s. After leaving the group, John Traynor recorded a handful of songs on the Coral label, including "I Rise, I Fall" in 1964. None were hits, but "I Rise, I Fall" became a minor hit for Johnny Tillotson. The label billed Traynor as "JAY formerly of Jay and the Americans". Traynor now tours with Jay Siegel's Tokens.Awards & Recognition
The group was inducted into the
Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 2002.Notes
External links
* [http://www.jayandtheamericans.com The new Jay and the Americans web site]
* [http://www.jayblackthevoice.com Jay Black's website]
* [http://worldjournal-gs.blogspot.com/2007/03/first-jay-and-americans.html Jay Traynor and the Americans article]
* [http://www.vocalgroup.org/inductees/jay_americans.html 'Jay and The Americans' Vocal Group Hall of Fame Page]
* [http://www.history-of-rock.com/jay_and_the_americans.htm History of Jay and the Americans]
* [http://www.srv.net/~roxtar/jay_&_the_americans.html Descriptions of and lyrics for the songs on the best-ofcompilation album "Come a Little Bit Closer"]
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