Tune Twisters

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tune_Twisters an entity of type: Thing

The Tune Twisters was an American jazz vocal trio founded in 1934 as The Freshmen by Andy Love, Robert "Bob" Wacker, and Jack Lathrop, who also played guitar. They were featured on radio broadcasts and recorded with jazz artists that included (i) Ray Noble in 1935 (with Noble, the Tune Twisters were initially known as "The Freshmen"), (ii) Bob Crosby in 1935, (iii) Glenn Miller in 1937, and (iv) Adrian Rollini in 1938. The Tune Twisters performed in the 1937 Broadway production, Between the Devil, singing "Triplets." The production ran from December 22, 1937, to March 12, 1938 (93 performances). During the audition, the Tune Twisters were known as the Savoy Club Boys. Lathrop was a member of the Tune Twisters in 1939 when they recorded the first radio jingle of its kind for Pepsi – "Pepsi- rdf:langString
rdf:langString Tune Twisters
rdf:langString The Tune Twisters
rdf:langString The Tune Twisters
xsd:integer 62140899
xsd:integer 1078546385
rdf:langString Andy Love – Manhattan Greenacres City, Florida Robert Wacker – Manhattan Carlsbad, California Jack Lathrop – Sherburne, New York Stonington, Connecticut Gene Lantham – Lawrence, Kansas Los Angeles Johnny Smedberg – Coos Bay, Oregon Kaneohe, Hawaii
rdf:langString Vocal jazz
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Swing
rdf:langString Manhattan, New York, U.S.
xsd:integer 1934
rdf:langString The Tune Twisters was an American jazz vocal trio founded in 1934 as The Freshmen by Andy Love, Robert "Bob" Wacker, and Jack Lathrop, who also played guitar. They were featured on radio broadcasts and recorded with jazz artists that included (i) Ray Noble in 1935 (with Noble, the Tune Twisters were initially known as "The Freshmen"), (ii) Bob Crosby in 1935, (iii) Glenn Miller in 1937, and (iv) Adrian Rollini in 1938. The Tune Twisters performed in the 1937 Broadway production, Between the Devil, singing "Triplets." The production ran from December 22, 1937, to March 12, 1938 (93 performances). During the audition, the Tune Twisters were known as the Savoy Club Boys. Lathrop was a member of the Tune Twisters in 1939 when they recorded the first radio jingle of its kind for Pepsi – "Pepsi-Cola Hits the Spot" (aka "Nickel, Nickel"). The trio also performed in two 1935 films, Sweet Surrender and Melody Magic, the latter directed by Fred Waller. Gene Lantham, in 1940, replaced Lathrop, who went on to become guitarist and vocalist with Glenn Miller.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 24892
xsd:gYear 1946
xsd:gYear 1934

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