S/D: The Tokens

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Seems like the appropriate time for this...so....Do the Tokens have anything good besides the Lion Sleeps Tonight? That song is gorgeous.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 18:34 (twenty-two years ago)

Check out Intercourse the album they made in 1968 to get out of a contract with warner brothers. cool psych! the earlier B.T. Puppy stuff is sometimes okay and sometimes not even as good as the Cufflinks.

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 18:42 (twenty-two years ago)

ooh Tokens psych! I am psyched thanks!

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 18:44 (twenty-two years ago)

actually, it might have been that warner brothers turned it down cuz it was too weird. i don't remember the whole story. it's great though. i need a copy too. i haven't heard it in years.

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 11 February 2004 18:51 (twenty-two years ago)

Guys, I can get you that copy.

www.revola.co.uk

You should write about it!

Jimmy the Saints, Wednesday, 11 February 2004 18:52 (twenty-two years ago)

seven months pass...
OH MY DAYS! I just bought "Intercourse" secondhand for 6 measly quid and it's already one of the bestest things I've heard since I ran out of Beach Boys stuff to buy! Christ! It's like Smiley Smile but more subversive! Adverts for marijuana! Smacked baby intros! Cheeky songtitles like "I Want To Make Love To You"! CHRIPES!!!!

dog latin (dog latin), Thursday, 23 September 2004 22:54 (twenty-one years ago)

i agree with DL.
i just picked this up and i'm not even sure if it's the same group who did "the lion..."!!!

way kewl.

eedd, Friday, 24 September 2004 13:55 (twenty-one years ago)

a few years ago, for my parents' anniversary, the family took a caribbean cruise, and the tokens were the ship's entertainment one night, somewhere between curacao and st. maarten. as cruise ship entertainment goes, they were utterly fantastic. your basic vegas-style show, but they were really charming and funny and damn good singers and they told good stories. and then the next day my dad, who's an observant jew, showed up at the temple's saturday morning service only to find one of the tokens leading it. my dad was duly impressed.

fact checking cuz (fcc), Friday, 24 September 2004 14:19 (twenty-one years ago)

a few years ago, for my parents' anniversary, the family took a caribbean cruise, and the tokens were the ship's entertainment one night, somewhere between curacao and st. maarten. as cruise ship entertainment goes, they were utterly fantastic. your basic vegas-style show, but they were really charming and funny and damn good singers and they told good stories. and then the next day my dad, who's an observant jew, showed up at the ship's saturday morning service only to find one of the tokens leading it. my dad was duly impressed.

fact checking cuz (fcc), Friday, 24 September 2004 14:20 (twenty-one years ago)

dammit!

fact checking cuz (fcc), Friday, 24 September 2004 14:20 (twenty-one years ago)

(but now that they're both there, the second post, which substitutes the possessive "ship's" in place of the errant "temple's," is the one to read!)

fact checking cuz (fcc), Friday, 24 September 2004 14:21 (twenty-one years ago)

Hmmm... the lyrics of the second track on Intercourse are a bit dodgy...

dog latin (dog latin), Friday, 24 September 2004 14:46 (twenty-one years ago)

two years pass...

RIP Hank Medress

June 22, 2007
Hank Medress, 68, Doo-Wop Singer on ‘Lion Sleeps Tonight’, Dies
By BEN SISARIO

Hank Medress, a founding member of the 1960s doo-wop group the Tokens, whose biggest hit was “The Lion Sleeps Tonight,” died on Monday at his home in Manhattan. He was 68.

The cause was lung cancer, his family said.

The Tokens’ sole Top 10 hit was a big one, an update in street-corner harmony of a Zulu song from South Africa. The song had become a folk staple in the 1950s after a recording by the Weavers — with Solomon Linda’s original lyric, “mbube” (lion), misheard as “wimoweh” — but entered pop eternity in the Tokens’ chirruping 1961 version, which stayed at No. 1 for three weeks.

Mr. Medress formed the group in 1955 with friends at Abraham Lincoln High School in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, among them a young Neil Sedaka; its original name was the Linc-Tones. By 1960 Mr. Sedaka had a solo career, and the quartet was repopulated with Jay Siegel, who sang most of the leads, and the brothers Mitch and Phil Margo.

The group reached No. 15 in early 1961 with “Tonight I Fell in Love,” but besides “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” it had no other significant hits for years, reaching No. 30 in 1966 with “I Hear Trumpets Blow” and No. 36 the next year with “Portrait of My Love.”

But “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” was enough to propel Mr. Medress’s career. The Tokens were given an unusual production deal by Capitol Records, and one record the group produced — that Capitol passed on — was the Chiffons’ “He’s So Fine,” a No. 1 hit for four weeks in 1963 on the Laurie label.

Two other Tokens-produced songs by the Chiffons, “One Fine Day” and “Sweet Talkin’ Guy,” reached the Top 10, and the Tokens made two Top 10 hits with the Happenings, “See You in September” and “I Got Rhythm.” With Dave Appell, they also recorded “Candida,” “Knock Three Times” and “Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Ole Oak Tree” with Tony Orlando & Dawn.

Mr. Medress sang backup harmony with the Tokens but took a primary role in their studio efforts, and he left the group in 1973 to concentrate on producing. Among those he recorded were Dan Hill, Melissa Manchester, Richard Simmons, Rick Springfield and David Johansen (as his alter ego, Buster Poindexter).

From 1990 to 1992 Mr. Medress was president of EMI Music Publishing Canada and after returning to New York became a partner in Bottom Line Records, which released recordings of performances at the Bottom Line club in Greenwich Village as well as new work by emerging artists. In recent years Mr. Medress had worked as a consultant for SoundExchange, an agency that collects royalties from digital broadcasters, like satellite and Internet radio.

His marriage to Jane Aucoin ended in divorce.

Mr. Medress is survived by four children: Julie Wheeler of Foster City, Calif.; Daniel Medress of Los Angeles; Sarah Medress and Zachary Medress, both of Brooklyn; and two grandchildren.

hstencil, Friday, 22 June 2007 11:32 (eighteen years ago)

RIP.

Here is an interview I just found- haven't read it yet but looks interesting.
http://spectropop.com/HankMedress/index.htm

James Redd and the Blecchs, Friday, 22 June 2007 13:24 (eighteen years ago)

four years pass...

<3 this track

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mxvnB9r5kPQ

yuoowemeone, Monday, 25 July 2011 02:21 (fourteen years ago)

it is p chill

yuoowemeone, Monday, 25 July 2011 02:21 (fourteen years ago)

Don't see it mentioned here, but I seem to recall them providing some of the cues or clues on a game show called Musical Chairs

SuedeHOOS (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 25 July 2011 02:38 (fourteen years ago)


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