Johnny Maestro & the Brooklyn Bridge
(Read about The Brooklyn Bridge after the video)
Johnny Maestro & the Brooklyn Bridge (or simply The Brooklyn Bridge) is an American musical group, best known for their million-selling rendition of Jimmy Webb's "The Worst That Could Happen" (1968).
History
New York City-born Johnny Maestro (born John Mastrangelo aka Johnny Mastro, Johnny Masters; May 7, 1939 – March 24, 2010) began his career in 1957 as the original lead singer of The Crests, one of the first interracial groups of the recording industry.[1][2] Patricia Van Dross, older sister to famed R&B singer Luther Vandross, sang with Johnny Maestro while The Crests were signed to the Joyce Record label. Before The Crests signed with Coed Records,
Patricia left the group because her mother didn't want her 15-year-old
daughter touring with the older guys. After a regional hit with "My
Juanita"/"Sweetest One" on the Joyce label, he had three years of chart
success with The Crests on Coed Records
with "16 Candles", "Six Nights A Week", "Step by Step", "The Angels
Listened In", and "Trouble in Paradise". Between "Step by Step" and
"Trouble in Paradise", Coed released a single "The Great Physician"/"Say
It Isn't So" under the name Johnny Masters. Late in 1960, Maestro would
leave The Crests for a solo career. Maestro was unable to reach his
former chart heights with The Crests, but did have Top 40 hits with
"What A Surprise" and "Model Girl" in 1961 as solo artist Johnny Mastro,
"The Voice of the Crests" for Coed Records. For his next three singles
with the label, he was known as Johnny Maestro, the third spelling
change for the label. None of those records charted and Maestro recorded
for three different labels before recording with new backup singers
(none from the original group) as Johnny Maestro & The Crests in
1965 and 1966, which produced four singles on two more labels.
By 1967, another New York vocal group called The Del-Satins—who had
become well known in the New York area as weekly performers on the local
dance party program The Clay Cole Show, had made several non-charting recordings between 1959 and 1967 under their own name, and were also noted for backing up Dion on his post-Belmonts
recordings—were looking for a new lead singer to replace original lead
Stan Zizka. Other members were brothers Fred and Tom Ferrara (baritone
and bass), Les Cauchi (first tenor) and Bobby Faila (second tenor).
According to Cauchi, members of the group ran into Maestro at a local
gym, playing his guitar, and approached him with the offer to join the
group. After initially turning them down, Maestro's manager, Betty
Sperber, called Cauchi and told him Maestro had changed his mind.[citation needed]
In 1968, Sperber, owner and founder of the talent management and
booking agency Action Talents in New York City, was hosting her once a
month Battle of the Bands talent search at the Cloud Nine nightclub in
Long Island and brought Maestro along as the evening's special guest
star. Action Talents' Vice President and General Manager Alan White
suggested that Maestro be backed up that night by a seven-piece
brass-filled group of youngsters called The Rhythm Method. That night's
performance was such a success that the next day Sperber decided to
combine the talents of Maestro, the four Del-Satins, and The Rhythm
Method. The new group's name came about after White made the off-handed
comment that "it would be easier to sell the Brooklyn Bridge" than book
the proposed 11-piece act.[3]
Johnny and the Bridge rehearsed their unusual combination of smooth
vocal harmonies and full horns, and signed a recording contract with
Buddah records. Their first release, a version of the Jimmy Webb song "Worst That Could Happen" (a note-for-note cover of the version previously recorded by The 5th Dimension on the album The Magic Garden, which had not been released as a single), reached No. 3 on the Billboard pop chart. It sold over one and a quarter million copies, and was awarded a gold disc by the R.I.A.A..[4] The follow-up, "Welcome Me Love", and its flip side, "Blessed is the Rain" — both by Tony Romeo —[5]
each reached the Top 50. A dramatic version of "You'll Never Walk
Alone" and the controversial "Your Husband, My Wife" also reached the
middle ranges of the charts. The group sold over 10 million records by
1972, including LP sales, mostly produced by Wes Farrell. Appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show, The Della Reese Show, and other programs helped to bring the group to the national stage.
After its heyday, the Brooklyn Bridge downsized to a five-man group,
with the vocalists playing their own instruments. For example, Maestro
could be seen on stage playing rhythm guitar, while former Rhythm Method
bassist Jim Rosica picked up a vocal part. Later in the 1970s, as the
Rock and Roll Revival evolved from a nostalgic fad to a respected genre,
the group began to add members, retaining its core vocalists. By 1985,
the group had solidified into an eight piece group, including original
Del Satins, Cauchi, Fred Ferrara, and original Bridge member Rosica,
augmented by a horn section for special occasions. The drummer for the
current line up, Lou Agiesta, was the drummer for the Original American
Touring Company of Jesus Christ Superstar (1970). Today he is drummer (Brooklyn Bridge) and sub drummer for Little Anthony and The Imperials.
The later version of the Brooklyn Bridge released a Christmas EP in
1989 and a greatest hits compilation in 1993, re-recording Maestro's
hits with The Crests. In the early 1990s, Maestro moonlighted as the
background tenor on Joel Katz's studio project CD Joel & the Dymensions (which also featured baritone-bass Bobby Jay). In 1994, The Brooklyn Bridge recorded the 10-song CD Acappella.
Recently, the Brooklyn Bridge was featured in one of PBS's biggest
fundraising events ever, "Doo Wop 50", performing both "16 Candles" and
"The Worst That Could Happen"; the entire program was released on VHS
and DVD. In 2005, the Brooklyn Bridge released a full concert-length DVD
as part of the Pops Legends Live series. They continue to tour and in 2004 released a CD on the Collectables label titled Today, featuring more re-recordings of their hits and versions of other groups' songs of the 1950s and 1960s.
The Brooklyn Bridge was inducted into the Vocal Group Hall Of Fame
in 2005. They were inducted into the South Carolina Music (Rhythm &
Blues) Hall of Fame in May 2006 and the Long Island Music Hall of Fame
on October 15, 2006.
In 2007, Collectables Records reissued the Brooklyn Bridge's 2002 album Peace on Earth as Songs of Inspiration. On March 31, 2009, the album Today, Volume 2 was released on CD by Collectables Records.
Johnny Maestro died on March 24, 2010, from cancer in Cape Coral, Florida, at age 70.[3]
In April 2010, the Los Angeles-based rights-management firm Beach
Road Music, LLC, acquired the Coed Records catalog, subsequently
re-releasing the Maestro song "The Great Physician"[6] on the 2011 compilation album From The Vault: The Coed Records Lost Master Tapes, Volume 1. "The Great Physician" was originally released in 1960 as Coed 527, under the pseudonym "Johnny Masters".
Freddy Ferrara died on October 21, 2011, from amyloidosis.[7]
Following the deaths of Maestro and Ferrara, original member Joe Ruvio
returned, and the group recruited new lead singer Roy Michaels.[8] Michaels was replaced by Joe Esposito in 2013.
On May 9, 2012, Johnny Maestro was honored by the House of Representatives of the United States of America. Congressman Jerrold Nadler
of New York, whose district includes the neighborhood where Johnny was
born and raised, and where he began his music career, introduced an Extension of Remarks in the House of Representatives.[9]
In June 2012, a 40th Anniversary DVD was released by the Brooklyn
Bridge. The DVD includes a full concert and interviews with group
members, recorded on May 6, 2006 (38 years after the group formed).
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