The Jewels

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The Jewels (initially The Impalas, later The Four Jewels) were a girl group from Washington, D.C..

The group began singing as The Impalas in 1961;[1] its members had attended Roosevelt High School and sang in Trinity AME Zion Church.[2] Early on the group began performing in Bo Diddley's basement, and Diddley recorded their debut single "I Need You So Much", which was released on Checker Records. The record never caught on, and in 1962 producer Bob Lee changed the group's name to The Four Jewels. The single "Loaded with Goodies" next appeared on Start Records, a local D.C. label, followed by Chess single "That's What They Put Erasers on Pencils For". They also sang backup vocals for member Grace Ruffin's cousin, Billy Stewart. Carrie Mingo left the group around 1963 and was replaced by Martha Harvin; at this time the group became simply The Jewels. The group went on to record for Dynamite, Federal, Tec, and King over the next few years.

In 1964 the group signed to Dimension Records and released the single "Opportunity". The tune peaked at #64 on the US Billboard Hot 100 that year.[3] This was followed by the single "But I Do" b/w "Smokey Joe", which missed the national charts and marked the end of their association with Dimension. Beginning in 1965, the group toured across the U.S. as backing vocalists with James Brown. They intended to record at Motown Records when the tour stopped in Detroit, but the studios were closed the day they were in town.[1] Brown produced two more singles for the group, but they did not sell, and the group disbanded in 1968.

Martha Harvin changed her stage name to Martha High and went on to tour with Brown for some thirty years, in addition to releasing a solo disco album in 1979.[2] The original four members reunited in 1985 and released an album of their singles re-recorded, entitled Loaded with Goodies.[1]

[edit] Members

  • Sandra Bears
  • Grace Ruffin
  • Margie Clarke
  • Carrie Mingo (1961-1963)
  • Martha Harvin (1963-1968)

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c The Jewels at Allmusic.com
  2. ^ a b Martha High at Allmusic.com
  3. ^ Chart Positions, Allmusic.com