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Various Artists
Doo Wop Gold: More Doo Wop 50!

Time Life Year: .

Host Jerry Butler, artists: Platters (Smoke Gets in Your Eyes), Capris (Morse Code of Love), Del-Vikings (Whispering Bells), Marcels (Heartaches), Jonny Maestro & Brooklyn Bridge (Step By Step, Thank the Moon), Mystis (White Cliffs of Dover), Jimmy Gallagher (I Only Want You), Eternals (Rock & Roll Cha Cha Cha, Rockin' In the Jungle) & more!

Various Artists
Rock Rhythm & Doo Wop: Greatest Early Rock

Rhino / Wea Year: 2002.

When music fans wax nostalgic about the good old days of rhythm & blues, doo wop, and early rock’n’roll, they’re referring to the seminal recordings on this new collection of nonstop hits. These classics helped define rock’s first generation, and their impact remains undiminished. They pack the same joyous wallop today as when they first scorched their way to the uppermost levels of the charts. ...
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Various Artists
Ed Sullivan's Rock 'n' Roll Classics Boxed Set

Rhino / Wea Year: 2002.

On Sunday nights throughout the '50s and '60s, Ed Sullivan brought pop culture into America's living rooms with th e most influential show of its kind. If you made it there, you had it made because for the first time, the entire county was at home watching. During the course of the show's run, many of the early rock and roll legends were featured in career-defining p erformances. These cultural ...
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Various Artists
Doo Wop 50 Volume 1, Doo Wop Gold!

Time Life Year: .

Track list:
(Only You, Great Pretender) The Platters; (Come Go With Me) Del-Vikings; (This I Swear, Since I Don't Have You) Jimmy Beaumont and the Skyliners; (Earth Angel) The Penguins; (Duke of Earl) Gene Chandler and Pure Gold; (Sixteen Candles, Worst That Could Happen) Johnny Maestro and The Brooklyn Bridge; (Long Lonely Nights) Lee Andrews And The Hearts; (Little Girl of Mine, Heart & Soul) ...
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Various Artists
Rock 'n' Roll Invaders: AM Radio DJ's (1957)

Winstar Year: 1999.

During the late 1940s and early '50s, the rise of television sent seismic shocks through American culture and business, threatening to eclipse its broadcast predecessor, radio. But even as RCA chief Robert Sarnoff declared the radio dead, a cultural cusp energized the airwaves. The post-war baby boom entered its adolescence, while rhythm & blues and country music were filtered into an emerging ...
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