New beats biography bread and butter song

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  • Bread & Butter (album)

    1964 studio album by The Newbeats

    Bread & Butter is the debut album by The Newbeats and was released in 1964. It reached #56 on the Billboard 200.[3]

    Four singles were released from the album with three of the singles charting in the United States: "Bread and Butter" reached #2,[4] "Everything's Alright" reached #16,[5] and "Thou Shalt Not Steal" reached #128.[6]

    Track listing

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    1. "Bread and Butter" – 1:58 (Larry Parks/Jay Turnbow)
    2. "Bye Bye Love" – 2:53 (Felice and Boudleaux Bryant)
    3. "The Shoop Shoop Song (It's in His Kiss)" – 2:05 (Rudy Clark)
    4. "There Oughta Be a Law (Bout the Stuff I Saw)" – 2:20 (Louis "Dean" Mathias/Marcus F. Mathis/Tress Redmon)
    5. "So Fine" – 2:25 (Johnny Otis)
    6. "Pink Dally Rue" – 1:57 (Don Gant/Norris Wilson)
    7. "Everything's Alright" – 2:10 (John D. Loudermilk)
    8. "A Patent on Love" – 2:03 (Larry Henley)
    9. "I'm Blue (The Gong Gong Song)" – 2:17 (Ike Turner)
    10. "Tough Little Buggy" – 2:23 (Dave Allen)
    11. "Thou Shalt Not Steal" – 1:59 (Loudermilk)
    12. "Ain't That Lovin' You Baby" – 1:50 (Jimmy Reed)

    Charts

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    Chart (1964) Peak
    position
    Billboard Top LPs 56
    Singles

    References

    [edit]

    1. ^Bread & Butter at AllMusic
    2. ^Jopling, Norman (7 Nove

      THE NEWBEATS

      Bread remarkable Butter

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    3. new beats biography bread and butter song
    4. The Newbeats were a 1960s vocal trio from Nashville, Tennessee. Larry Henley provided the striking and highly distinctive falsetto lead vocals while brothers Dean Mathis and Mark Mathis supplied the smooth backing harmonies.

      Dean and Mark started out as a vocal duo in the late 1950s; they had a minor hit with the 1959 song "Tell Him No." Henley briefly collaborated with them in 1962 and had a largely unsuccessful solo career before reuniting with them two years later. The trio called themselves The Newbeats and recorded a string of singles on the Hickory Records label. They scored their biggest and best known hit in 1964 with "Bread and Butter"; the extremely catchy and upbeat ditty peaked at #2 on the Billboard pop charts and sold over one million copies in the US. Their follow-up single, "Everything's Alright", was a Top-20 hit. The Newbeats had a Top-40 chart success with "Break Away (From That Boy)" in the spring of 1965 and their final hit song, "Run Baby Run (Back Into My Arms)", went all the way to #12 on the Billboard pop charts in the fall of 1965. Moreover, the trio appeared as themselves on the TV music variety shows Shindig! (1964), American Bandstand (1952) and Where the Action Is (1965) at the height of th