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The Lennon Sisters are an American vocal group that has been made up, at one time or another, of three or four sisters. The quartet originally consisted of Dianne (aka DeeDee; born Dianne Barbara, December 1, 1939), Peggy (born Margaret Anne, April 8, 1941), Kathy (born Kathleen Mary, August 2, 1943), and Janet (born Janet Elizabeth, June 15, 1946).
Shortly after breaking with long-time mentor Lawrence Welk in 1968, The Lennon Sisters appeared in this weekly series along with comedian Jimmy Durante on ABC in 1969. They appeared with Durante at the piano at the beginning of each weekly telecast with a live audience, and interacted with his guests such as Jack Benny, Phyllis Diller, Dinah Shore, Joey Bishop, The Osmonds, Noel Harrison, Mel ...
"Shake Me I Rattle" was originally recorded by American traditional pop vocal group The Lennon Sisters. The song was first composed by Hal Hackady and Charles Naylor. The sister trio recorded the track in 1957 in sessions produced by Lawrence Welk.
It was also recorded in 1956 by Lawrence Welk with The Lennon Sisters, and by the duo of Karen Chandler and Jimmy Wakely. Kay Starr recorded a searingly original version in the early 1950s, dispensing with the sentimentality of other recordings and transforming the song into a scorching anthem of self-destructive vengeance.
The Lennon Sisters, an American pop vocal group, Dianne, Peggy, Kathy, Janet, and Mimi Lennon; Level 42, an English jazz-funk band, brothers Boon Gould and Phil Gould; LeVert, an American R&B group, consisting of brothers Gerald and Sean Levert; Lijadu Sisters, Nigerian jazz/disco band, identical twins Taiwo and Kehinde Lijadu
Bahler married Janet Lennon of The Lennon Sisters in 1976. They have two children together. They have two children together. He also has three step-children from Janet Lennon's first marriage.
Two sisters from Massachusetts got well-deserved makeovers on TODAY with Hoda & Jenna. In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Kristen Flynn and Sally Peterson told their stories Oct. 16 of ...
In 1966, The Lennon Sisters recorded a cover of this song as well, which did not chart as well as the original song. It was performed by the sisters in The Lawrence Welk Show. In 1967, an instrumental version by the Baja Marimba Band reached number 98 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart and number 14 on the easy listening chart.
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related to: the lennon sisters