The Complete Liberty Singles
Collectors Choice, 2009
http://www.garylewisandtheplayboys.com
REVIEW BY: David Bowling
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED: 06/08/2009
Sometimes I can’t remember my wife’s birthday, but I can remember Gary Lewis & The Playboys playing “This Diamond Ring” on The Ed Sullivan Show way back in 1964.
Gary Lewis is the son of legendary comedian and actor Jerry Lewis and his group was discovered performing at
Collector’s Choice has just released The Complete Liberty Singles by Gary Lewis & The Playboys. This two-disc, 45-track CD contains all of the group’s single releases, both the A and B sides, plus a couple of unreleased songs. While they would release a number of albums, they were at heart a singles group. The albums would basically contain a bunch of cover songs surrounding a couple of their hits. They sold quite a few albums with this formula but the singles remain the superior recordings.
Having Jerry Lewis as you father didn’t hurt as they were able to debut their first ever recording on The Ed Sullivan Show in front of tens of millions of people. The recorded version actually featured some of the best studio musicians of the day including drummer Hal Blaine and keyboardist Leon Russell who would become a fixture in the studio. Who played didn’t matter as “This Diamond Ring” hit number one on the American charts and made stars of the group.
They would become mainstays on the
I rarely remember the flip side of old singles unless they are excellent in of themselves or memorable in some other way. While Gary Lewis had a couple of B sides that could have been hits -- “Without A Word Of Warning” and particularly the 60’s surf and drag piece “Little Miss Go-Go” -- a number of these songs were so bad or so odd that they remain etched in my memory banks.
“Tijuana Wedding” would appear a number of times but with different names. Gary Lewis would sing like his father on “Time Stands Still.” “Looking For The Stars” came complete with celebrity impersonations. And then there is the famous “I Saw Elvis Presley Last Night.” One can only hope that they made some money for all concerned.
No Gary Lewis compilation would be complete without “Doin’ The Flake.” In 1965 Kellogg’s cereal issued an EP consisting of “This Diamond Ring,” “Count Me In” and a new song recorded just for them titled “Doin’ The Flake.” All you had to do was send two box tops and 25 cents to Battle Creek, Michigan and a couple of months later the record would arrive at your door. My copy still resides in my record collection.
Gary Lewis entered the service in 1967 and while he managed to record a few songs while on leave, by 1969 his hit-making career was finished. Today he still tours on the oldies circuit.
Gary Lewis & The Playboys are a nice stopping-off point in the history of sixties pop fare, and The Complete Liberty Singles covers the length and breadth of their career well. Their music may not be brain surgery but it remains a lot of fun in places.