The Four Knights
The Four Knights were an American vocal group from Charlotte, North Carolina.
Career
The group was formed in 1943, with an original membership of Gene Alford (lead tenor), Oscar Broadway (bass), Clarence Dixon (baritone), and John Wallace (tenor, guitar). This line-up remained the same for much of the band's career. They first sang under the name Southland Jubilee Singers, and performed gospel music as well as vocal pop and doo-wop numbers. Their first professional job came in 1944 on WSDC radio, and NBC subsidiary based out of Charlotte. Soon after they became featured performers on the program Carolina Hayride, broadcast on CBS affiliate WBT. They recorded transcription discs for Langworth in the middle of the decade and changed their name to The Four Knights in 1945.[1]
Later in 1945, the group moved to New York, where they appeared on Arthur Godfrey's radio show. They signed with Decca Records in 1946, releasing four singles over the next two years. They appeared on Red Skelton's radio program through most of 1948 and toured with Bill "Bojangles" Robinson. In 1949 they released two more singles on the Decca subsidiary Coral Records.
The group lost its recording contract with Skelton in 1950, but signed to Capitol Records the following year, where they would remain for six years and some 40 single releases, along with two LPs and three EPs. The 1951 release "I Love the Sunshine of Your Smile" hit #23 on the U.S. pop chart.[1] As television became more widespread, they renewed their contract with Skelton for his TV show and also appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show. Their 1954 hit "I Get So Lonely When I Think About You (Oh Baby Mine)" went to #2 on the charts in the U.S. and was their biggest success in America, though they had several other charting releases in the early 1950s.[1] Under the name "Oh Baby Mine (I Get So Lonely)", the song also went to #5 in the UK Singles Chart that year. The group accompanied Nat King Cole on his hits "My Personal Possession" and "That's All There Is to That".
Gene Alford had to leave the group in the middle of the 1950s due to his worsening epilepsy, and was replaced by George Vereen and then Clifford Holland (formerly of the Delta Rhythm Boys). Alford died in 1960.
In 1957 the group re-signed with Coral, releasing four further singles and two LPs. Their last hit was "Oh Falling Star" in 1959, which peaked at #83.[2] They released a few further singles on minor labels into the 1960s but had essentially quit the business by the middle of the decade.
References
- ^ a b c The Four Knights at All Music Guide
- ^ Billboard, Allmusic.com. (Note: lists only post-1955 chart data)