meanings of The Four Tunes encyclopedia of The Four Tunes dictionary of The Four Tunes thesaurus on The Four Tunes books about The Four Tunes dreams about The Four Tunes
 The Four Tunes - Definition 

The Four Tunes were a vocal quartet, consisting of William "Pat" Best, Jimmy Gordon, Jimmie Nabbie, and Danny Owens.

Originally Best, Gordon, and Nabbie, together with Deek Watson (formerly of The Ink Spots) formed a quartet known as Deek Watson & the Brown Dots in the mid-1940s. In 1945 they made a recording for Regis Records, and a year later they recorded for Manor Records without Watson and with Owens, as The Sentimentalists. They then adopted the name "The Four Tunes." They also switched record companies, to RCA Victor Records in 1949, and to Jubilee Records in 1953.

Best and Watson wrote the song "For Sentimental Reasons," a hit for Nat King Cole, and Nabbie's "You Are My Love" was a hit for Joni James. As a singing group, they hit both the rhythm and blues and popular music charts, with "Marie" reaching #2 on R&B and #13 on the pop chart in 1953 and "I Understand (Just How You Feel)" going to #7 on R&B and #6 on pop. They continued as a group until 1963, when Nabbie left to form a new Ink Spots revival group.

External links


Copyright 2008 WordIQ.com - Privacy Policy  ::  Terms of Use  :: Contact Us  :: About Us
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Four Tunes".