#1: Three Sheets To The Wind by the Four Aces
City: Oshawa, ON
Radio Station: CKLB
Peak Month: July 1957
Peak Position in Oshawa ~ #1
Peak position in Vancouver ~ did not chart
Peak Position on Billboard Hot 100 ~ did not chart
YouTube: “Three Sheets To The Wind”
Lyrics: N/A
Al Albertini was born in Chester (PA) in 1922. In his childhood, young al appeared on a radio show from Philadelphia called The Horn and Hardart Children’s Hour. Horn and Hardart’s slogan was “Less work for mother dear whose gentle hands, lead us so kindly through little folk lands. We’ll give her happiness, each kindness, each caress repaid with thoughtfulness. Less work for mother dear.” After high school graduation in 1940, he was drafted into the United States Navy after the nation entered WWII in December 1941. While he was in the navy, Albertini met Dave Mahoney, and the pair discovered a mutual interest in singing and music. After WWII, they added Rosario “Sod” Vaccaro and Lou Silvestri to become a foursome. By the late 40s they were billed as The Four Aces. They released their first single, “Baby, wha hoppen”, in 1949.
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#3: Date With The Blues by Billy Williams
City: Oshawa, ON
Radio Station: CKLB
Peak Month: July 1957
Peak Position in Oshawa ~ #2
Peak position in Vancouver ~ did not chart
Peak Position on Billboard Hot 100 ~ did not chart
YouTube: “Date With The Blues”
Lyrics: “Date With The Blues”
Wilfred “Billy” Williams was born in Waco (TX) in 1911. His dad was a Methodist minister. Growing up, he sang in choirs at churches where his father was the pastor, with his mother often the choir director. He was frequently a soloist, and he also learned to help her arrange music. From the early 1930s, Billy Williams was a member of the Charioteers, a gospel and pop group. With Williams as lead singer from 1935, The Charioteers signed a contract with Decca Records. They had a #23 pop hit in the USA in 1940 titled “So Long”. Williams served in the United States Army during World War II after the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. He received a medical discharge in 1944. Back from the Army, Williams and the Charioteers had a #9 pop hit backing Frank Sinatra in 1945 titled “Don’t Forget Tonight Tomorrow”. In 1947 The Charioteers version of “Open The Door Richard” climbed to #6 on the pop chart. They equaled their success in 1948 backing Buddy Clark on “Now Is The Hour”.
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