The Dixie Cups
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The Dixie Cups | |
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The Dixie Cups at the New Orleans Jazz Fest, 2006
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Background information | |
Origin | New Orleans, Louisiana |
Genre(s) | R&B |
Years active | 1964 - present |
Label(s) | Red Bird Records |
Website | http://www.thedixiecups.net/ |
Members | |
Barbara Ann Hawkins Rosa Lee Hawkins Athelgra Neville Gabriel |
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Former members | |
Joan Marie Johnson Dale Mickle |
The Dixie Cups are an American pop music girl group of the 1960s.
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[edit] Career
The group hit the top of the charts in 1964 with "Chapel of Love," a song that Phil Spector, Jeff Barry and Ellie Greenwich had originally written for The Ronettes. The trio consisted of sisters Barbara and Rosa Lee Hawkins; plus their cousin Joan Johnson, from the Calliope housing project in New Orleans. They first sang together in grade school. Originally they were to be called Little Miss and the Muffets, but were named The Dixie Cups just prior to their first release.[1]
By 1963 the trio had decided to pursue a career in music and began singing locally as the Meltones. Within a year Joe Jones, a successful singer in his own right with the Top Five 1960 single "You Talk Too Much," became their manager. After working with them for five months, Jones took them to New York, where record producers / songwriters Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller signed them to their new Red Bird Records.
Their first release, "Chapel of Love," proved to be their biggest hit, although they had other hits with "People Say" (#12, 1964), "You Should Have Seen the Way He Looked at Me" (#39, 1964), "Iko Iko" (#20, 1965), and "Little Bell" (#51, 1965).[2]
"Iko Iko," a New Orleans R&B standard, was recorded early in 1965. Barbara Hawkins had heard her grandmother sing the song, first recorded in 1954 as "Jock-a-Mo" by James "Sugar Boy" Crawford. Barbara Hawkins: "We were just clowning around with it during a session using drumsticks on ashtrays. We didn't realize that Jerry and Mike had the tapes running". Leiber and Stoller overdubbed a bassline and percussion, and released it. It was The Dixie Cups' fifth and last hit.
In 1966, the Dixie Cups were moved to the ABC-Paramount record label and later temporarily retired from the record industry.
In 1969 the Hawkins sisters moved from New York to New Orleans, where Rosa Hawkins began a successful modelling career.[3] Both Rosa and Barbara also worked as make-up artists. They continued to tour and make personal appearances, with Dale Mickle replacing Joan Johnson[1] who became a Jehovah's Witness and abandoned her music career.
On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina swept through Louisiana, flooding and flattening most of New Orleans and displacing Barbara and Rosa Hawkins, who subsequently relocated to Florida. Joan Johnson relocated to Texas.
In April of 2007, The Louisiana Music Hall Of Fame honored The Dixie Cups for their contributions to Louisiana music by inducting them into The Louisiana Music Hall Of Fame.
The Dixie Cups continue to perform and make personal appearances. The current line-up consists of the same Hawkins sisters along with Athelgra Neville, sister of the singing Neville Brothers.[3]
[edit] Singles
- "Chapel Of Love" / "Ain't That Nice" (1964)
- "People Say" / "Girls Can Tell" (1964)
- "You Should Have Seen The Way He Looked At Me" / "No True Love" (1964)
- "Little Bell" / "Another Boy Like Me" (1964)
- "Iko Iko" / "I'm Gonna Get You Yet" (1965)
- "Iko Iko" / "Gee, Baby, Gee" (1965)
- "Gee, The Moon Is Shining Bright" / "I'm Gonna Get You Yet" (1965)
- "That's Where It's At" / "Two-Way-Poc-A-Way" (1965)
- "I'm Not The Kind Of Girl (To Marry)" / "What Goes Up Must Come Down" (1965)
- "A-B-C Song" / "That's What The Kids Said" (1965)
- "Love Ain't So Bad (After All)" / "Daddy Said No" (1966)
[edit] Original group members
- Barbara Ann Hawkins (born 23 October 1943)[4]
- Rosa Lee Hawkins (born 24 September 1944)
- Joan Johnson (born Joan Marie Johnson, 15 January 1945)