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- Q6.
Who is Ted Daryll?
- Ted Daryll - a great friend and a great
songwriter. ("She Cried", Jay & The Americans' first
hit was also Ted's first hit.) We met in 1966 at Roulette
Records. Ted was a staff writer for Big 7 Music, a division
of Roulette, when I was hired to run Roulette's in-house
recording studio. We became fast friends and shortly thereafter
formed The Eastern Scene. The group's first and only release,
"Let's Be More Than Friends Tonight" on Amy Records was
written by Ted. "Baby You're Everything" was the first
Daryll-McBrien collaboration. The song was written for,
and recorded by, The Joe Cuba Sextet. That would have
been in 1972 or 1973. And until this year, that was the
only song we had ever written together. We're currently
producing a new project together and are writing most
of the songs being recorded. Good stuff.
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- Q7.
Tell us about The Casualeers.
- The Casualeers were one of the all-time-great
singing groups and were from my hometown, Amityville,
New York - the 'Friendly Village' on Long Island, forty
miles east of New York City. Arnold Davis, Ollie Johnson,
Peppy DuBois and Mike Furr - who played drums with me
in the junior high school orchestra - comprised the group.
My lifelong friend, Neal Hollander, was the group's manager.
This was a complete hometown venture.
John Giametta and I wrote a song called "Dance, Dance,
Dance." We were convinced the song was a smash and we
just needed the right artist to record it. We talked with
Neal about the possibility of producing the song with
The Casualeers and he loved the idea. He set up a rehearsal
with the group and we taught them the song. We knew we
had the right artist.
I convinced my good friend, George "Shadow" Morton of
The Shangri-Lasfame, to put up the money so John and I
could go into the studio and produce the record. The record
was released on Roulette Records.
The following year, 1967, John and I wrote and produced
two more records with The Casualeers: "You Better Be Sure,"
backed with "Open Your Eyes" followed by "Come Back To
My Arms," backed with "When I'm In Your Arms." This time,
thanks to a deal struck with Ernie Maresca, the sides
were released on Laurie Records.
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The Casualeers
"Dance, Dance, Dance" (UK) |
The Casualeers
"You Betta Be Sure" |
The Casualeers
"When I'm In Your Arms" |
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- Q8.
Tell us about John Giametta.
- John Giametta is a great songwriter and
was my first writing partner. As you can see from my discography,
we wrote many songs together. John is also one of the
founding members of The Valrays, Salt Water Taffy and
The Eastern Scene.
John and I have been the best of friends for about a hundred
years now. We were so close back in the early years of
The Valrays, we joined the U. S. Coast Guard Reserves
together under the "buddy plan." Some buddy plan! I went
to boot camp two months before John did. But we did finish
our tour of duty together because we were both in the
Coast Guard Band.
Our first two singles as The Valrays on Cameo Records
were written and produced by John Linde and Pete Antell,
but our next release on United Artists Records, "It Hurts
Doesn't It Girl," was written and produced by John and
me. We also produced all releases by The Casualeers and
Salt Water Taffy together, as well as writing almost all
of the songs recorded.
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The Val-Rays
"It hurts doesn't it girl" |
The Valrays
"Yo me pregunto" |
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- Q9.
Can you tell us about arranger Meco Monardo?
- I met Meco shortly after I arrived in
New York City. My friend, Charlie Brockner - bass player/arranger
- introduced us. Meco and Charlie had gone to Eastman
School of Music together. Meco was a hot-shot trombone
player, new in town and anxious to break into the business
as an arranger. And I was struggling to make my mark as
a songwriter and producer. We were both pretty much just
starting out, but I had a few projects lined up. In our
early days of working together when I was putting together
a production on spec - meaning no money - Meco would write
an arrangement for me and overdub all the trombone parts
to make a brass section. "Dance, Dance, Dance," by The
Casualeers and "It Hurts Doesn't It Girl," by The Valrays
were the first two real jobs - meaning we got paid - we
worked on together.
Meco was my arranger of choice for several years. He's
a verytalented arranger and contributed greatly to many
of my productions. We also produced several records together
including "Next Year (Bashana Habana)," by Joy on the
Kama Sutra label and "More Than You Know," by Corky Hale
on Bell Records. And, of course, Meco went on to produce
hits with Gloria Gaynor and his own instrumental hit of
the "Star Wars Theme." I was also a featured singer on
Meco's production of The Star Wars Christmas Album on
RSO Records as well as the single, "Summer '81," by The
Cantina Band on the Millennium label.
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- Q10.
Were The Valrays a part of Salt Water
Taffy?
- The last group of guys to record as The
Valrays was John Giametta, Bob Musac, Phil Giarratano
and me. Three of us, John, Phil and I went on to become
founding members of the Salt Water Taffy along with Janie
Brannon and Kathy Butler Weinberg.
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l-r: Rod McBrien,
Benny Palmeri, Bob Musac, John Giametta |
l-r: John
Giametta, Rod McBrien, Bob Musac |
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story goes on ...
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Copyright WEB VANDA 1997
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