The Shangri-Las
Late entrants in the early '60's school of girl groups,
the Shangri-Las comprised two pairs of sisters, Mary-Ann and
Margie Ganser and Betty and Mary Weiss. During 1963 they were
discovered by George "Shadow" Morton and recorded two
singles under the name Bon Bons before signing to the newly
formed Red Bird label. Relaunched as the Shangri-Las, they
secured a worldwide hit with Remember (Walkin' In The Sand), a
delightful arrangement complete with the sound of crashing waves
and crying seagulls. It was the sound-effect of a revving
motorbike engine which opened their distinctive follow-up, Leader
Of The Pack, which was even more successful and a prime candidate
for the death disc genre with its narrative of
teenage love cut short because of a motorcycle accident. By 1966,
Margie Ganser had left the group, though this had little effect
on their popularity or output. They had already found a perfect
niche, specializing in the doomed romanticism of American teenage
life and unfolding a landscape filled with misunderstood
adolescents, rebel boyfriends, disapproving parents, the
foreboding threat of pregnancy and, inevitably, tragic death.
This hit formula occasionally wore thin but Shadow Morton could
always be relied upon to engineer a gripping production. During
their closing hit phase in 1966/67, the group recorded two songs,
I Can Never Go Home Anymore and Past Present And Future which saw
the old teenage angst transmogrified into an almost tragic,
sexual neuroticism. The enduring commercial quality of their best
work was underlined by consistent repackaging and the successive
chart reappearances of the biker anthem, Leader Of The Pack.
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