Shepherd Sisters

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The Shepherd Sisters (also known as The Sheps) were a vocal quartet from Middletown, Ohio. All four members were indeed sisters: Martha, Gayle, Judy and Mary Lou Shepherd.

In the late 1950s, they appeared on Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts.

One of their first recordings, "Gone with the Wind" got them a "call" from Dick Clark. Subsequently they made many appearances on Dick Clark's American Bandstand.

In New York, Morty Craft had a song he wanted them to record, "Alone (Why Must I Be Alone)". In 1957 "Alone" would become their biggest hit and their signature song. In the U.S. it reached No.18 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart; in the UK it made No.14. It may have climbed higher had it not been up against several rival cover versions on both sides of the Atlantic. In all the Shepherd Sisters recorded over thirty songs, many of them on one of Morty Craft's labels like Melba and Lance.

Morty also "introduced" them to the DJ Alan Freed, the man who first coined the term "rock and roll." The Shepherd Sisters played the Brooklyn and Manhattan Paramount Theaters and toured with Alan Freed's "America's Greatest Teenage Recording Stars"- The Everly Brothers, Paul Anka, Buddy Holly and the Crickets, Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers, Jerry Lee Lewis, Fats Domino, Danny and the Juniors, Lee Andrews and the Hearts, The Twin Tones, Little Joe Dubs, Thurston Harris, Terry Nolan, and Jo Ann Campbell.

Besides rock and roll the Shepherd Sisters were also a stage and cabaret act. They performed at big hotels, nightclubs, NYC's Apollo Theater and casinos in Reno and Las Vegas. They also sang in the Philippines, Canada, South America and parts of Europe.

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