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Wednesday, November 26, 2025

 UNDERACHIEVERS! 
 The 50 Most Underrated 
 Records of the 1960s, Pt. 2 






 Hi! I'm 
 Shady Blue... 

one of the founding fathers
of the Shady Bunch DJ team
on S-P-M-M Retrosonic Radio.
I host an oldies show called

 STUCK LIKE GLUE  
 on SHADY BLUE  




 And I'm 
 Shady Green... 

one of the other original
Shady Bunch DJs here
at Shady's Place and
your Host with the Most
on a magic carpet ride back
to the Swingin' Sixties called



 SHADY GREEN 
 AND HIS 
 WAYBACK MACHINE 


Blue and Green are mixing together, joining forces to bring you
a 5-part, 50-song series dedicated to great records of the 1960s
that shoulda been, coulda been and woulda been major hits
but, for one reason or another, failed to get the attention
they deserved at the time of their release.


 Along with the records we're playing, we've hung cool vintage
pictures and art illustrations on the walls to enhance the mood.


  So listen to the next 10 songs and then let me know.


How many of these long lost relics you remember?


Tell me which songs you like as I present Part 2 of

 UNDERACHIEVERS! 
 The 50 Most Underrated 
 Records of the 1960s 


The first Underachiever of this volume is the
warm weather ditty "Summer Means Fun."  


The original was recorded by Bruce & Terry, a duo
formed by a pair of producers at Columbia Records. 


Bruce was Bruce Johnston, a member of The Beach Boys.
Terry was Terry Melcher, son of actress/singer Doris Day. 


 Another gnarly version of "Summer Means Fun" was
waxed by the surf/hot rod group The Fantastic Baggys,
a studio creation of P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri, two of
the leading songwriters and producers of the 1960s,
and released on their 1964 album Tell 'Em I'm Surfin'


Surf-rock kings Jan & Dean laid down their own version
of the song and released it on their 1964 album
The Little Old Lady From Pasadena.


"Summer Means Fun" is a groovy song - too cool for school -
and with three great recorded versions, at least one
of them should have been a top 40 hit.
  

Instead, only one version was released as a single, the original
by Bruce & Terry, and it performed poorly, halting at #72 on
the Billboard chart in August, 1964, a genuine Underachiever.


Let's listen now to all three versions of this underrated,
underachieving surf-rock anthem-- "Summer Means Fun!"


"Summer Means Fun" - Bruce & Terry
(Aug. 1964, highest chart pos. #72 Hot 100)


"Summer Means Fun" - The Fantastic Baggys
(from 1964 album Tell 'Em I'm Surfin')


"Summer Means Fun" - Jan & Dean
(from 1964 album The Little Old Lady From Pasadena)



"Boy meets girl and love begins."  So sang Little Anthony
And The Imperials on their dreamy doo-wop ballad
"(Just) Two (Kinds Of) People In The World."


Another great ballad about young love was recorded by a duo
that consisted of two Pennsylvania vocalists, Marcy Jo (aka
Marcy Joe) of Pittsburgh and Eddie Rambeau of Hazleton.


Their single, "Lover's Medley," combines "When I Fall In Love,"
a 1952 hit recorded by Doris Day, and "The More I See You,"
a song introduced by Dick Haymes in the 1945
movie musical Diamond Horseshoe


Throughout the summer of 1963, this record by Marcy Jo and
Eddie Rambeau was big in WSBA-Land (York and Central PA),
but nationally, it never broke free of the Bubbling Under chart
and never rose above position #132, making it one of the
most notable Underachievers of all time! 


"Lover's Medley (The More I See You And When I Fall In Love)"
- Marcy Jo And Eddie Rambeau (July/August 1963,
highest chart pos. #132 Bubbling Under)


"Bus Stop" by The Hollies was a huge hit, and therefore it is not
my next featured song. I posted this vintage pinup illustration
of a "bus stop bim" because I like it 😀😀😀 and because
it actually does help illustrate the theme of the next song. 


In Part 1 of this series, published in January of this year, a single
by Marvin Gaye, "Stubborn Kind Of Fellow," was the first of the
50 Underachievers on my list to be unveiled.  Today, in Part 2,
I present "Hitch Hike," the single Marvin and Motown released
immediately after "Stubborn."  This up tempo ditty is such a joy
and such a treasured gem today that it seems a crime it stopped
at #30 on the pop chart, never reached the top 40 on Cash Box
and even fell short of the R&B top 10!  Here's Marvin Gaye
on Hollywood A Go-Go performing-- "Hitch Hike!"


"Hitch Hike" - Marvin Gaye
(Feb./Mar. 1963, highest chart pos. #30 Hot 100/#41 Cash Box,
#12 R&B, perf. on Nov. 27, 1965, ep. of Hollywood A Go-Go)


The pop girl group The Angels is best known for
their 1963 smash hit "My Boyfriend's Back"
featuring Peggy Santiglia on lead vocals.


The previous year, with Linda Jansen as lead singer,
the group recorded "Cry Baby Cry," a song that
stood the test of time to become a genre classic.


 Released in January, 1962, the weepy ballad peaked just
inside the top 40 on the Billboard and Cash Box charts.


  I say "Cry Baby Cry" is an Underachiever, because it deserved
to finish in the top 10, the top 5 or even go all the way to #1! 


"Cry Baby Cry" - The Angels
(March/Apr. 1962, highest chart pos. #35 Cash Box/#38 Hot 100)


Now let me shine the spotlight on one of the Shady Dell's greatest hits...


... and one of the biggest misses nationally.  The song in question is
"Take Some Time Out For Love" by The Isley Brothers, ranked #17
 on my list of The 200 Greatest Hits of the Shady Dell. Yet, it fizzled
on the national charts, reaching its zenith at #66 on the Hot 100 and
#72 on Cash Box.  Even more shocking, this Northern stormer,
this dance-friendly Motown soul song, did not even appear
on the R&B chart!  Can you say "Underachiever"? 


"Take Some Time Out For Love" - The Isley Brothers
(June 1966, highest chart pos. #66 Hot 100/#72 Cash Box)


The Chicago-based band New Colony Six was responsible for two
of the most memorable soft-rock love song recordings of the 1960s.
One of them is cued up on my turntable and ready to go for a spin.


This beautiful song deserved to finish in the top 5 winner's circle,
but it stopped short of the top 20.  Listen now to New Colony Six
and the moody and mellow-- "I Will Always Think About You."


"I Will Always Think About You" -  New Colony Six
(Apr./May 1968, highest chart pos. #22 Hot 100,
#22 Cash Box/#14 Canada)


Notice how many of the Underachievers on my list have long titles?
 I believe that songs with one, two or three word titles typically out-
 perform songs with long cumbersome, hard to remember titles.


 Here's another long title Underachiever, another song
written and first waxed by P.F. Sloan and Steve Barri,
the writers/record producers who called themselves
The Fantastic Baggys during the surf-rock craze.  


In 1965, Sloan and Barri along with exec producer Lou Adler,
founder of Dunhill Records, jumped into the folk-rock genre,
forming The Grass Roots, and act that drew members
from a San Francisco band called The Bedouins.


Willie Fulton, lead singer and guitarist for The Bedouins,
sang lead on "Where Were You When I Needed You," the
Grass Roots' first charting single. It's a gem of the genre,
yet it stalled around the top 30 on the U.S. chart when it
should have cracked the top 10 as it nearly did in Canada!


"Where Were You When I Needed You" - The Grass Roots
 (July/Aug. 1966, highest chart pos. #28 Hot 100,
#33 Cash Box/#12 Canada)


Now here's a rough and tumble song by the bad boys of British rock
The Rolling Stones. Today, "Street Fighting Man" is recognized as one
of the band's most popular and controversial songs. Yet, at the time of
its release as a single in the U.S. in the summer of 1968, the rowdy
ditty ran out of steam halfway up the Billboard chart.  The single
performed better on Cash Box, hitting the top 30 mark but,
even so, it never broke through as it should have to
become one of band's major hits. 


 Incidentally, the original picture sleeve issued with the single is
extremely rare nowadays and can fetch more than $10,000 on eBay.
Listen now as The Stones tell the tale of a-- "Street Fighting Man!"


"Street Fighting Man" - The Rolling Stones
(Sept./Oct. 1968, highest chart pos. #30 Cash Box/#48 Hot 100)


Future's so bright, he gotta wear shades, and he wears his sunglasses at night!
This next number is hip, happenin' and clean outta sight. It's the best known
song by Mickey Lee Lane, a Brill Building songwriter of the 1950s
who evolved into a rock & roll recording artist of the 60s.


Mickey's only charting single is an Underachiever because
it's such a catchy, danceworthy song that it should have
made the top 10. Instead it barely broke into the top 40.  


Put your dancin' shoes on.  Here comes R&R wildman
Mickey Lee Lane with his claim to fame-- "Shaggy Dog!"


"Shaggy Dog" - Mickey Lee Lane
(Nov./Dec. 1964, highest chart pos. #38 Hot 100 & Cash Box)


Speaking of cool sounds, this last irresistible ditty
is off the chart. (Unfortunately, I mean that literally,
as in "uncharted.") It's the big bold sound of
April Young, a little known singer from
Philadelphia who shoulda been a star. 
  

April burned up the boss lines on radio stations
up and down the East Coast with her single
"Gonna Make Him My Baby."


Produced by Jerry Ross, April's record is a prime example of
the so-called East Coast Wall-of-Sound, a production technique
that imitated what Phil Spector was doing on the West Coast. 


Released in the spring of 1965, April's platter caught fire on
radio stations across the region.  It reached #27 on WARM
Wilkes-Barre, #36 on WSBA-910 serving York, Lancaster
and Harrisburg, #53 on WMCA New York and was ranked
way up there at #3 on Portugal's list of the Top 10
Girlpop/Girlgroup Songs of the 1960's.


Back home in Philly, April's record made the top 20
on the market's AM radio giant WIBG. In the words
of producer Jerry Ross who, incidentally, fell in love
with April Young and married her, the local success
of her single earned her the nickname
"The Daughter of Wibbage-land"


Yet, April's single was an epic fail on the national chart,
a textbook example of an Underachiever!  Here now
is one of the most exciting records ever made in
girl pop, girl group or any other category.


 Listen to the husky voice of April Young sounding like
Cher on steroids engulfed in a towering wave of
 sound as she sings her signature song-- 
"Gonna Make Him My Baby!"


"Gonna Make Him My Baby" - April Young
(May/June 1965, uncharted nationally, Top 20 WIBG Philly,
#36 WSBA Mighty 910 Lancaster-York-Harrisburg,
#27 WARM Wilkes-Barre, #53 WMCA New York,
#3 Portugal's list of the Top 10 Girlpop -
Girlgroup Songs of the Sixties)



Okay, how many of these
underappreciated and
underachieving records
of the 1960s do you
remember? Do you
like any of them
so much that you're

 STUCK 
 LIKE GLUE?  






Did these moldy oldies
make you feel like you
just took a trip in my

 WAYBACK 
 MACHINE? 



Stick around!
 There are 3 more parts of this series...


30 more songs that need your love and
a forever home on your record player.


See you soon on the next edition of

 UNDERACHIEVERS! 
 The 50 Most Underrated 
 Records of the 1960s 


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