Pure Magic - the Shady Dell Attic: 100+ Years of History and Mystery!

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Monday, May 25, 2026

 Yum Yum Dynasty 
 A Taste oBubblegum Pop 

 Vol. 1: Meet Joey Levine - 
 "The Bubblegum King" 

 Alabaster Charm - Yum Yum Dynasty 

Hello to you.
My name is Alabaster Charm.
I am leader of Yum Yum Dynastya group of young Chinese,
Thai and Korean women brought to life in artwork and used
on the covers of YA romance novels. We were hand picked
by Shady's Place CEO Shady Del Knight to host our own
show here on S-P-M-M Retrosonic Radio. Pop music is
big in our countries. My friends and I also love U.S. pop,
especially Bubblegum and Nursery Rhyme Rock, styles
that were most popular from the mid 60s to mid 70s.
We are here today to bring you a special report on a
man who was responsible for many hit recordings
in those two American music categories.

 IT'S TIME FOR YOU TO MEET 

 THE KING OF BUBBLEGUM POP 

 J O E Y  L E V I N E !  




 REUNION 

Memories of Myrtle Beach, SC, fill
Shady's mind whenever he hears the
novelty 45 "Life Is a Rock (But The
Radio Rolled Me)." The single is
credited to a group called Reunion,
but it was actually performed by
Joey Levine aka "The Bubble-
gum King" accompanied by
studio session musicians
and backup singers.




"Life is a Rock” is one of the most unique
recordings ever produced. By means of
a rapid fire monotone that makes him
sound very much like an auctioneer,
Joey rattles off a seemingly endless
list of the who’s who and what’s
what of popular music and
cultural phenomena.
Heeeeeeeeeeer's
Joey!


 "Life is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)" 
 Reunion  (Oct./Nov. 1974, highest chart 
 position #7 Cash Box/#8 Hot 100) 



 Cyan Lime - Yum Yum Dynasty 

Joey Levine is a prolific songwriter, producer and performer. He sang lead
on singles released by several groups, some of them real, others merely
kiddie pop fabrications that existed only in the studio. Here are some
of Joey's bubblegum pop and nursery rhyme rock hits of the late 60s.


 THE 
 THIRD RAIL 

The Third Rail consisted of Brill Building
pop veteran Artie Resnick, his wife Kris
and Joey Levine backed by session
musicians. A one hit wonder group,
The Third Rail is remembered for
the 1967 single "Run, Run, Run"
which offered social commentary
on the hectic pace of the
modern rat race.


 "Run, Run, Run" - The Third Rail 
 (Aug./Sept. 1967, highest chart pos. 
 #53 Hot 100/#54 Cash Box



 Zing Zest - Yum Yum Dynasty 



 THE 
 OHIO EXPRESS 

The following year, Joey Levine fronted the
latest incarnation of The Ohio Express, one
of the groups established by producers
Jerry Kasenetz and Jeffrey Katz and their
Bubblegum factory Super K Productions.
Levine gave The Ohio Express its biggest hit  
with the top 5 single "Yummy Yummy Yummy," 
a recording that, over the years, found its way 
onto lists of greatest bad songs of all time 
and has been used as commercial jingles.


 "Yummy Yummy Yummy" - The Ohio Express 
 (June 1968, highest chart pos. #4 Hot 100 & Cash Box



 KASENETZ-KATZ 
 SINGING 
 ORCHESTRAL CIRCUS 





 Wind Chime - 
 Yum Yum 
 Dynasty 

A few months after he hit big with
"Yummy Yummy Yummy," Joey Levine
was back on the chart as lead vocalist
of a pseudo group called Kasenetz-Katz
Singing Orchestral Circus. The Super K
act made the top 20 on Cash Box with
this gummy goody- "Quick Joey Small."



 "Quick Joey Small (Run Joey Run)" 
 Kasenetz-Katz Singing Orchestral Circus 
 (Nov. 1968, highest chart pos. #18 Cash Box/#25 Hot 100



 Indigo Pink - Yum Yum Dynasty 



 OHIO  EXPRESS 

In November 1968 Joey Levine staged a
one man battle of the bands. While his
Kasenetz-Katz "Quick Joey Small"
single was climbing the chart, Joey
put another Ohio Express record
in play. "Chewy Chewy" enjoyed
a substantial 13 week chart run
and reached the top 10 on
Cash Box in December.


 "Chewy Chewy" - Ohio Express 
 (Nov./Dec. 1968, highest chart pos. 
 #8 Cash Box/#15 Hot 100



  Panda Silk - Yum Yum Dynasty 


 THE BANANA SPLITS 


In 1969, Joey Levine lent his voice to The Banana Splits,
(Fleegle, Bingo, Drooper and Snorky), a Hanna-Barbera
creation that became a kids TV sensation.  Levine sang
two Banana Splits songs, "It's a Good Day For A Parade"
and "I Enjoy Being a Boy (In Love With You)," both
issued on an EP 45 by series sponsor Kellogg's.

 "I Enjoy Being a Boy (In Love With You)" 
 The Banana Splits (winter/spring 1969) 



 OHIO EXPRESS 





  Coco Been 
 Yum Yum   Dynasty 

Now, I have for you a third song
by Joey Levine and his studio
band Ohio Express. Session
musicians played on the
group's recordings, but an
entirely different lineup was
used for live performances.
Here is a rare video of Joey
and his Ohio Express touring
band appearing live on the
German music TV show
Beat-Club and begging
for-- "Mercy!"




 "Mercy" - Ohio Express 
 (Apr./May 1969, highest chart pos. #26 Cash Box, 
 #30 Hot 100/#24 Canada/#23 Australia, 
 live perf. on German TV show Beat-Club



 SHADOWS OF KNIGHT 

When he wasn't singing lead or background vocals on bubblegum
records, Joey Levine was busy writing and producing them.

 Joy Luck - Yum Yum Dynasty 

Joey wrote "Shake" and "From Way Out To Way Under," the two
songs on a psychedelic rock single by the Chicago-based band
Shadows Of Knight.  Led by the late great Jim Sohns,
SOK made the top 40 with the A side-- "Shake!"

 "Shake" - Shadows Of Knight" 
 (Nov./Dec. 1968, highest chart pos. 
 #39 Cash Box/#46 Hot 100) 



 CRAZY ELEPHANT 


Another hit on Joey Levine's list of credits is the infectious
"Gimme Gimme Good Lovin'" by Crazy Elephant,
a song he co-wrote with Ritchie Cordell.

 Zenith Zodiac - 
 Yum Yum Dynasty 

The peppy pachyderm platter approached the
top 5 spot on Cash Box in the spring of 1969.

 "Gimme Gimme Good Lovin'" - Crazy Elephant 
(Apr. 1969, highest chart pos. #6 Cash Box/#12 Hot 100



 Ming Song - Yum Yum Dynasty 

Bubblegum pop recordings, along with those in the related nursery rhyme rock
category, were innocent, family friendly ditties that served as an antidote to
the harder and heavier styles of music that became popular in the 60s.


Taken as directed (in moderation), these sugar sweet sing-alongs
put a smile on your face and a bounce in your step, but beware
of an overdose! Get "Yummy Yummy Yummy" or one of
these other sappy Simple Simon songs stuck in your
head and it'll take the jaws of life to pry it out.



Alabaster Charm back with you.
If you liked what you saw and
heard today, I hope you will
join us next time for more
classic sounds of bubblegum
pop, nursery rhyme rock,
sunshine pop and soft rock
of the 60s and early 70s
when we return with
the next edition of
our series



 Yum Yum Dynasty
 A Taste of Bubblegum Pop 

 

here on S-P-M-M Retro Radio... the station with personality!


 "The Tra La La Song (One Banana, Two Banana)" 
 - The Banana Splits (Dec. 1968/Jan. 1969, 
 highest chart pos. #96 Hot 100/#96 Canada), 
 theme  of TV series The Banana Splits based 
 on the melody of  "Shortnin' Bread") 


 Bunny Snow - Yum Yum Dynasty 

19 comments:

  1. Hi, Shady! I knew several of these songs! (I can't imagine anyone NOT knowing Yummy, Yummy, Yummy)
    I don't know if I actually remember Life is a Rock or if it just reminds me of I Want You by Savage Garden. Clearly whoever wrote the Savage Garden song was inspired by it.
    Pat and I hope you and Mrs. Shady enjoy your Memorial Day.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Kelly & Pat!

      Welcome to Shady's Place and my May post, dear friends! You guys take second place this time, and I appreciate your hustle. Why 2nd place? Because friend of the Dell Jim Sieling, who prefers to comment via email, got his remarks on the record 19 minutes ahead of you. I simply haven't had time to get his comment published yet. :)

      I'm happy to know that you actually remember a few of these 10 bubblegum and nursery rhyme songs. Yessum, it helps the recall factor that "Yummy Yummy Yummy" has been used over the years as a commercial jingle. I just now listened to the Australian band Savage Garden doing their 1996 song "I Want You" and agree that it was obviously inspired by the 1974 Reunion song. The lead zinger even sounds a lot like Joey Levine. Thanks for the tip on that one.

      Thank you again for coming early and for bringing along my little buddy Pat. Have a safe and restful holiday, dear friend Kelly, and I'll see you next month!

      Delete
  2. Tom -- You never forget the really great songs and now I realize you never forget the really bad ones. I never heard of Joey Levine; but, apparently I'll not forget Yummy, Yummy, Yummy or Chewy, Chewy!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Jim!

      Sorry I'm late getting your comment pubbed on the blog, my friend. You do indeed take the Early Bird prize this month. Thanks for checking out this special post dedicated to Bubblegum Pop and Nursery Rhyme Rock, two categories that rose in popularity in the mid and late 60s as an "antidote" to the acid rock and hard rock that was flooding the chart. Sorry if you have any unwanted earworms stuck in your noggin after listening to these songs. I have the Banana Splits' "Tra La La" ditty playing in my head on repeat. HELP!!! :)

      Thanks again for joining the fun, Jim. Have a restful holiday and look for my next post, another edition of Saved, coming up around June 20. See you then, my friend!

      Delete
  3. Dear Shady, first of all, I want to wish you and Mrs. Shady a Happy Memorial Day!
    There is so much in your post, I will definitely be back later today to absorb the wonderful things you are sharing, dear friend. I have forgotten some of the music you are sharing, and I want to be able to listen to the videos to be able to provide some feedback.
    I do remember Life is a Rock (but the radio rolled me).
    I will be back to listen to the other videos and let you know what I think! Perhaps they are somewhere in the back of my mind, but until I listen to them I just can't honestly provide feedback.
    Thank you so much for all you share, dear friend Shady!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Linda! Thanks for scurrying over to take third place in the race to Shady's Place, dear friend! I also thank you for the wishes regarding the Memorial Day holiday. Your kind thoughts are much appreciated.

      Hooray for you for recalling the lightning-paced "Life Is A Rock" ditty sung by Joey Levine and credited on the single to a studio band named Reunion. In September, 1974, the song was vaulting up the charts and playing in heavy rotation on the radio as Mrs. Shady #1 and I vacationed in Myrtle Beach, SC.

      Thank you for this initial visit and for vowing to return and absorb the content more fully. I hope you find some favorite songs, old or new.

      Enjoy your Monday, dear friend Linda!

      Delete
  4. Hi there friend! I do remember some of these bubblegum classics. Yummy, Yummy, Yummy is probably the one I remember most. I had to look up the members of Crazy Elephant because I thought the lead singer sounded like Bob Seger.
    Hope you and the Mrs. are having a nice relaxing Memorial Day. I am in the studio getting some more goodies ready to go in the Etsy shop. Soon it will be time to watch my Giants on TV. Hope they can pull out another win. I don't remember, are you a baseball fan?
    Thanks again for stopping by my place the other day. I can see that it was out of your 3 day window. I appreciate that. I will be posting about our Alaska cruise next week sometime. Have a great month!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Janet!

      I'm delighted that you could come, dear friend. Thank you!

      Yessum, "Yummy Yummy Yummy" is probably the one song in this batch that most people know. R&R/R&B singer Robert Spencer, formerly of the Harlem-based Cadillacs doo-wop vocal group, sang lead on "Gimme Gimme Good Lovin'" for Crazy Elephant.

      Thanks for wishing us a nice holiday. Same to you and Bill. As for baseball, I haven't gone to a game or even watched one on TV for many years. As a boy and as a teen, I played in youth leagues as a left-handed pitcher and as a first baseman. In my teens and 20s, I enjoyed following the nearby Phillies along with the "O's" that I watched on the Baltimore station.

      Even though I will technically be on hiatus, I will make every effort to stop by to read the post about your Alaskan cruise. I'd hate to miss it.

      Thanks again for dropping in, dear friend Janet. Please take care of yourself and my buddy Benny and I hope to see you back here around June 20 when I unveil my next post!

      Delete
  5. I usually know at least one of the songs you post but not this time. I sure hope you are your wife are well. I'm still healing and am not online as much right now but wanted to pop in and say hello.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Mary!

      Thanks for coming over, dear friend, and for bringing my buddy Falcor along with you!

      Yessum, it comes as no surprise to me that you are not familiar with any of these ten Bubblegum and Nursery Rhyme Rock songs. Innocent, sugar sweet and decidedly cringe, they are the polar opposite of the serious, hard and heavy music you like. Strangely, I enjoy music on both ends of the spectrum and most that's in between.

      I've been thinking about you and your daughter, Mary, and so sorry you both have so much to deal with in terms of medical matters. Rest up and heal and I hope to see you again when I reemerge with my next post on June 20!

      Delete
  6. Hi dear Shady, I just listened 🎶 to the first Banana Splits song. I enjoy being a boy in love with you. I don't remember this one, but I enjoyed it as well as the images. I will be back tomorrow to check out more.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Hi, Linda!

    Thank you for returning as promised to dig deeper into my May content, dear friend! That Banana Splits song you referred to was brand new to me when I discovered it on Y/T a few years ago. I do not remember it from my teens, only the popular theme song "Tra La La., the last song in the post. For a hoot, I watched The Banana Splits Show on TV every Saturday with my girlfriend, the future Mrs. Shady #1.

    By the way, the Yum Yum girls neglected to mention an interesting tidbit about "Shake," the most rocking song in this set of ten. I confirmed with my AI assistant that the melody of that psychedelic rock single by Shadows Of Knight, released in September, 1968, is identical to that of a R&B dance record by a soul/R&B group called The Showstoppers that was released a few months earlier in March, 1968, and became a major regional hit in my neck of the woods. Here's exactly what thew AI told me: << The 1968 single "Shake" by The Shadows of Knight shares the exact same melody as "Ain't Nothin' But A House Party" by The Showstoppers. The Shadows of Knight's rendition was heavily influenced by the style of popular dance hits from that era, echoing the rhythm and melody of The Showstoppers' original soul anthem. >>

    Thanks again for your interest, Linda!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Hi dear friend Shady, the other songs are very interesting, and I honestly don't recall hearing them! I love all the illustrations you are sharing!
    In reference to the comment you left on my blog about Echo Park by Keith Barbour, a song that I had posted, you had mentioned another song, so I did go to YouTube to find the song. It is indeed a very nice song. I am more deeply touched by Echo Park, probably because I have heard this song hundreds of times over the years and probably as well because of the video with the old man in it. As well, not sure if you are aware, but both these singers were born in 1941! Interesting, isn't it?
    Getting back to the songs you are sharing here, the radio stations here in Montreal, as far as I remember, didn't play any of those songs. I do remember them playing Echo Park, and of course another song that you and I have discussed in one of your previous posts...1-2-3 Red Light by the 1910 Fruitgum Company.
    I think as well that your music knowledge is much more widespread than mine.
    Thank you so much for sharing, dear friend Shady, and I hope you have a wonderful week, along with Mrs. Shady!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Linda!

      Welcome back again, dear friend!

      Thank you for checking out "Old Man's Song." I was not aware of the D.O.B. for Tom Rush, nor did I realize that Keith Barbour, formerly a member of the New Christy Minstrels, the folk group that launched the careers of Kenny Rogers, Kim Carnes and Barry McGuire, was born the same year as Rush and that their birthdays are only two-and-a-half weeks apart!

      It's interesting that your local Montreal radio station did not play the songs in this post. Maybe they did, but you were too young at the time to pay very much attention. Or, it could be that you were tuned to an "Easy Listening" or "Soft Adult Contemporary" station rather than a pop and rock station. I say that because one of these songs, "Yummy Yummy Yummy" by the Ohio Express, went all the way to #1 on the Canadian chart. "Mercy," another tune featured in this post by the same band, reached #24 in Canada, making it an even bigger hit in your country than in mine.

      Thank you again for your interest in my posts and for all your return visits and comments, my delightful friend. Take care up there, Linda, and I will meet-up with you again around the 20th of June when I publish my next post!

      Delete
  9. Hi Shady! I hope you had a nice Memorial day weekend. These songs took me back to my Freshman year in high school. Yummy really gave me a flash back. This is a weird memory but I had a friend who had a horse who was pregnant and they were naming the foal Love something or other. She was constantly singing that song about love in her horses tummy. I told you it was weird! Anyway, I did know a few of these songs. 68/69 was a time in my life that marked getting into high school which was exciting but also worrying about my brothers who were in Vietnam. Thankfully both came home safe. So these songs and memories of those years fit this Memorial day weekend. Thanks Shady and God Bless America!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, YaYa!

      It's great to see you, dear friend! Welcome in as I present the first installment of Yum Yum Dynasty, a series that I have been "sitting on" for at least five years. Why? Because other ideas for series kept cropping up and great song material in other genres kept becoming available on YouTube, compelling me to put a hold on this series.

      I'm excited to learn that you remember most of these innocent Bubblegum and Nursery Rhyme Rock ditties. The genres are discussed in a book I have owned since the 1970s. The book places The Monkees in the Bubblegum Pop category, making them arguably the most famous band in that classification. There are many other well known acts in these categories and they and their songs will be featured in future volumes. They include The Partridge Family, Cowsills, Archies, Lemon Pipers, the Osmonds and even the Jackson 5.

      I enjoyed your anecdote about the mama horse having "Love" in her tummy. :) Yessum, I remember you telling us about your brave brothers surviving their service in Vietnam, and I have not forgotten your great father. What a proud and wonderful family you have!

      Thank you again for your kind visit and comment, dear friend YaYa. I hope you and Jordan are both in much better shape today than you were a few weeks ago. Thinking about you often. I'll get together with you again when I return to blogging around June 20. See you then!

      Delete
  10. This post was so much fun, Shady! These songs were the perfect soundtrack to my morning coffee and craft time. I'll be adding a few of these to my playlist for sure.

    I obviously wasn't around when they first came out, but I remember the Banana Splits from when I was a kid. In that last song you shared especially, they reminded me of Fall Out Boy. I'm not sure that FOB would appreciate the comparison though, ha!

    I hope your summer is off to a wonderful start, my friend. We're in week one, and so far it has rained every. single. day. Hopefully the sun will come back out soon so we can get some pool time in.

    Until next time!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Ashton!

      It's a pleasure to have you over, dear friend! Thanks for coming to Shady's Place where this month I am officially introducing the young Asian women who are members of The Yum Yum Dynasty and cleansing the palate with a post for those with a taste for Bubblegum and Nursery Rhyme Rock. I'm happy to know that you actually enjoyed this set of innocent ditties and will be adding a few of these shamelessly catchy and commercial earworms to your personal playlist.

      I was in my late teens when The Banana Splits Show was on the boob tube. It was a guilty pleasure watching their goofy antics every Saturday morning at my girlfriend's house. I was not familiar with the band Fall Out Boy, so I went to YouTube and sampled several of their songs. Now, thanks to you, I've got the theme from The Munsters stuck in my noggin! :)

      Yessum, the summer of '26 is getting underway. As it was when I lived in central Florida, too little rain is an ongoing concern up north where I now live. Like you, we have been getting rain for several days now. For us, it is a welcome outcome, because it keeps our lawn and shrubs healthy and green.

      I hope you and Alexis are having a great month and I wish you both a fun summer, although I don't envy you having to deal with the rising heat and humidity. Thank you again for your kind visit and comment, dear friend Ashton. Look for me to resurface with my next post on June 20!

      Delete
  11. I am so very, very late here. My humblest apologies. I did listen to all of these on my last day of work before my vacation, but was busy and not busy...just veggin' and watching movies. That first song is actually quite cool. I never can understand how they can say all these words, names, etc.. and not goof up. I think I have heard this one before. I have heard of Yummy and the other one which, the name escapes me. I had no idea he did that last song which is of the hippie movement.
    Then we have the kids show which I do faintly remember. I think I turned it off because I thought it was too corny
    I hope you are doing well. Harley is a true sausage and I wish I could walk him he's a true suck. My featured film star for this month is, of course, Marilyn Monroe. She would have been 100 yrs old! Crazy

    ReplyDelete

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