The Royal Teens | |
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Origin | Bergenfield, New Jersey |
Genres | Rock/Pop |
Years active | 1956–1965 |
Labels | RCA Victor, Epic |
Associated acts | The Four Seasons |
Members | |
Tom Austin - drums Bob Azzara - piano Flip Cesario - guitar Bill Crandall - saxophone Bill Dalton - bass Bob Gaudio - piano Al Kooper - guitar Larry Qualiano - saxophone Dan Sabatino - vocals Joe Villa (Joe Francovilla) - vocals Vince Cautero - vocals |
The Royal Teens were a New Jersey rock and roll band that formed in 1956, consisting of Bob Gaudio on piano, Tom Austin on drums, Billy Dalton on guitar, and Billy Crandall on saxophone.[1] They are best known for their single "Short Shorts", which was a #3 hit in the United States in 1958.[2] The follow-up single, 1959's "Believe Me", hit #26.[2] They never recorded an album, and broke up in 1965.
The term "Short Shorts" was a description Bob Gaudio and Tom Austin had given to the cutoff jeans teenage girls were wearing during the summer of 1957.[1] On that musically fateful afternoon, Gaudio and Austin were driving up Washington Avenue in Bergenfield, New Jersey in Tom Austin's red and white 1957 Ford Fairlane 500, trying to figure out what to call the latest song they had written for their Rock and Roll band then known as The Royals. Just then, two girls came strutting out of Luhmann's (the local teenage sweet shop) wearing cutoff jeans that were cut so short they were almost illegal. At that point, the song "Short Shorts" was born.[1]
On the original recording, Tom Austin did the whistle, Billy Dalton mimicked the whistle on guitar, and Billy Crandall said “Man, dig those crazy chicks.” [1] With Tommy on drums, Bobby on piano, Billy Dalton on guitar, and Crandall on sax, along with the female vocal provided by Diana Lee a girl from Leo’s stable of talented youngsters, the Royal Teens became a success.
Leo Rogers owned a label named Power Records with Lee Silvers. Before the record was released on Power, Leo made The Royals change their name to Royal Teens because there was another group called The Royals.[1] The Royals reluctantly added Teens to their name.
Before the first rock and roll tour was launched which included The Royal Teens, Billy Crandall had to leave the group because his parents would not allow him to leave school (Crandall was only fourteen years old at the time).[3] Tommy had just graduated from Fort Lee High School, Bob Gaudio's parents decided to allow their son to “temporarily” drop out of school to pursue his dream, and Billy Dalton took a leave of absence from All Hallows High in Manhattan.[3]
Larry Qualiano, an outstanding 17-year-old sax player from North Bergen, New Jersey, took Billy Crandall’s place and The Royal Teens became whole again, touring with greats like Buddy Holly, Sam Cooke, Jackie Wilson, Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry, and Frankie Avalon.[3]
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Bob Gaudio later became a member of The Four Seasons. Fourteen-year-old member Al Kooper sometimes appeared with them on the road in 1959, and later founded the groups "The Blues Project" and "Blood Sweat & Tears" (originally known as "Al Kooper's Blood, Sweat and Tears"). Kooper also performed as a session musician on several of Bob Dylan's albums in the mid-60's. Vocalist Joe Francovilla (also known as Joey Villa) joined them in late 1958. He previously sang with the Three Friends who had a minor hit with "Blanche". With several briefly tenured members of the Royal Teens, he went on to form Joey and the Twisters which released a few minor hits ("Do You Want to Dance," "Bony Maronie") in 1961-1962 and frequently played the Peppermint Lounge in New York City as contemporaries of Joey Dee and the Starlighters.
The song "Short Shorts" was used in commercials for Nair in the 1970s, sparking interest in the group, and is now used in Japan for the opening tune of "Tamori Club" on TV Asahi Corporation.
When the show Jersey Boys came to Broadway, Bob Gaudio told Tommy that "Short Shorts" was being featured in the show. When the two original Royal Teens reunited at the August Wilson Theater the night of the premiere of Jersey Boys, Tommy said he was so proud to have traveled the first leg of Bobby’s historical musical journey with him.[3]
Billy Dalton passed away due to an apparent heart attack on Saturday, Oct. 8, 2011. After his funeral Mass, Billy was interred in St. Patrick Cemetery in Rochelle, Illinois, on Thursday, October 13, 2011 -- what would have been his 71st birthday. (4)
The song "Short Shorts" has been played or mentioned multiple times on The Simpsons, notably in the episodes "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Homer" and "Homer the Heretic."
4. http://ungerhorner.com/fh/obituaries/obituary.cfm?o_id=1282020&fh_id=10462