The Five Americans

简介: by Richie Unterberger & Bruce Eder
In 1966-1967, this Dallas group enjoyed some modest national success with the number five hit Weste 更多>

by Richie Unterberger & Bruce Eder
In 1966-1967, this Dallas group enjoyed some modest national success with the number five hit Western Union, as well as a few other Top 40 entries, I See the Light, Zip Code, and Sound of Love. Dominated by high bubbling organ lines and clean harmony vocals, the group favored high-energy pop/rock far more than British Invasion or R&B-inspired sounds, although a bit of garage/frat rock raunch could be detected in their stomping rhythms — and their guitar-dominated tracks offered something else again, the harmonies and texture of The Train (which was very nearly their debut single) recalling the punchier work of Gene Clark with the Gosdin Brothers from the same period. Recording prolifically throughout the last half of the 60s (often with ex-rockabilly star Dale Hawkins as producer) and writing much of their own material, they were ultimately too lightweight and bubblegum-ish to measure up to either the eras better pop/rock or garage bands. Their 1966 hit I See the Light is their toughest and best performance.
Though they officially hailed from Dallas, the Five Americans had their origins in Oklahoma. Mike Rabon grew up in Hugo, the county seat of Choctaw County, in southeastern Oklahoma, founded in 1902 (and named after Victor Hugo, the novelist), 25 miles north of Paris, Texas, and 15 miles west of Fort Towson, site of the last Confederate surrender of the Civil War. He became interested in playing the guitar when he was eight years old, and saved up to buy a homemade instrument at a local pawn shop. He got a start on a few chords learned from his grandmother and quickly got the hang of the instrument. When rock & roll broke nationally, he was swept right in, and became a big fan of Elvis Presley and Carl Perkins, and later added singers such as Frankie Ford to his list of influences. He joined a local high-school band called the Rhythm Rebels, who played mostly instrumentals and whose gigs included some local radio appearances. While Rabon was honing his guitar skills and learning what he could from the playing of Carl Perkins, Scotty Moore, et al., John Durrill, who was a few years older, was living Bartlesville, OK — near the Kansas border, originally part of Indian Territory, and the birthplace of Phillips Petroleum — and already learning a lot by listening to Jerry Lee Lewis, whose playing inspired him to dress up his already freewheeling approach to the piano even more flamboyantly. Durrill entered Southeastern Oklahoma State College in the early 60s as an English major, and played frat parties and the like in his spare time. It was at one such event, playing for Sigma Tau Gamma, that he crossed paths with Rabon, who had started attending the school in 1962.
By that time, Rabon had in his mind the idea of putting together a group, and he approached Durrill. The others — Norman Ezell (guitar), Johnny Coble (drums), and Jim Grant (maracas and later bass) — fell into place quickly. The quintet, named the Mutineers, had a repertory built on the music of Duane Eddy and Bo Diddley, and played events around campus, including a regular Monday night gig at the student union. They were good enough to take a chance on recording, cutting their debut in Dallas in 1963 with Jackin Around, an instrumental that got some play on their college station. The British Invasion caused them to add some Beatles numbers to their set list and change their look slightly, as well as emphasize their singing a little bit more. Durrill also added a Wurlitzer electric piano — purchased by Rabons father, Smiley (who had also financed their first recording sessions) — to their sound, though the big change came later, when he acquired a Vox organ, which became part of the groups signature sound when the band started recording.
By the summer of 1964, they felt ready to try competing in Dallas, but Coble backed out at the last minute, and they recruited drummer Jimmy Wright on a couple of hours notice. The bandmembers spent a few weeks crashing at the pad of Durrills girlfriend, and picked up their first serious gig — appropriately enough, for a band called the Mutineers — at a club called The Pirates Nook, where they bumped an established band out of their spot there, mostly with their stage antics. They did well enough so that they decided to stick it out for a while longer, past the end of the summer. The Mutineers were booked into a club called Lou Anns, where they chanced to be heard by John Abdnor, Jr., whose multimillionaire father owned a record label. He invited them to audition, and they were duly signed up to his Abnak label. The latter also involved a name change, and that was how the Five Americans got their new name, at Abdnors insistence.
Their first single, I See the Light, cut in late 1965 in Dallas, showed just how powerful a performing unit theyd become in the previous year, their instrumental attack resembling the best elements of such much-vaunted British bands as the Yardbirds and the Nashville Teens, with Durrills singing supported by Rabon and Ezell. The single, which was leased to the HBR label — a unit of Hanna-Barbera Studios, the cartoon producers — reached number 26 nationally, and the group got the go-ahead to work on a debut LP. Equally important, the licensing deal got the Five Americans a trip to Los Angeles to meet the executives of the national label. That in itself was highly instructive to five Oklahoma boys who hadnt been anywhere more sophisticated than Dallas — where their long hair (not nearly to the shoulders) made them freaks — and their musical ambitions as well as the quintets visual presentation advanced by leaps and bounds across early 1966, even as they made the rounds of venues such as the Whisky a Go Go and various TV music showcases such as Shivaree and The Woody Woodbury Show, turning into a national-level act in a matter of weeks. Oddly enough, at the time of its release, the band and its label hadnt been certain of I See the Lights appeal, especially as its other side, The Train, had some merit of its own.
Not too many bands coming off the college circuit by scarcely a year could have led with that kind of strength. There were similarly high expectations for their follow-up single, Evol — Not Love, a harmony-based rocker that seemed to carry them to the next step. Alas, it didnt do nearly as well, essentially dying in the womb in Dallas, owing to a local business-related political dispute involving Abdnor. But their next single, Western Union, soared from the moment it reached the public, reaching the Top Ten. It also marked the beginning of Dale Hawkins, the guitarist/singer/composer of Susie Q fame, working as their producer. This should have been the beginning of a new phase in the groups history, and a leap in their fortunes and prospects, but differences with Abdnor and the limitations inherent in not being signed to a major label combined to sap whatever momentum the song generated. This was all especially tragic, as the Five Americans were generating music that was not only superb AM bubblegum pop, but also credible garage rock on occasion, and excellent pop/rock overall, with killer harmonies and excellent playing, filled with the kinds of hooks that most bands would kill for on their records.
Indeed, there are moments on Now That Its Over and If I Could where their mix of nicely woven harmonies and clean, sophisticated playing recall the work of the Beatles or the Searchers. Sound of Love and Zip Code — issued in 1967 — charted far lower than the records that had preceded them, despite hooks and harmonies that made them eminently hummable and memorable (especially Zip Code). They were doing work of at least the caliber of the Monkees without the Screen Gems publishing/arranging/producing factory backing them up, and if some of it was a bit derivative — Sympathy did seem to recall the Beatles You Like Me Too Much at times — the music was presented with enough fresh twists to easily justify the purchase and the listening time.
The differences with Abdnor were worsening, however, and the members felt he was now compromising the music and any chance for growth by his insistence that they continue to record in Dallas. By 1968 Durrill and Ezell were both gone, replaced by Lenny Goldsmith and Bobby Rambo. The group continued on through 1969, but by then even their name was starting to sound quaintly out of date amid the burgeoning influence of the counterculture; they could probably have gone on indefinitely in Dallas, but their chances for national exposure were receding by the week. Among their last efforts was a double LP (credited to Michael Rabon & the Five Americans), before the remaining members went their separate ways. The band has mostly been remembered across the decades for its two biggest hits, Western Union and I See the Light. In the 21st century, however, Sundazed Records reissued a big chunk of their catalog, giving the Five Americans their biggest exposure in decades, and revealing an astonishingly fine legacy, far beyond their best-known hits and all well worth hearing.

The Five Americans的歌

推荐资讯

如何建立自己的选题素材库?让素材库成为你的第二大脑 - 第五AI

如何建立自己的选题素材库?让素材库成为你的第二大脑 - 第五AI

如何建立自己的选题素材库?让素材库成为你的第二大脑 📝 为什么每个创作者都需要专属选题素材库?做内容创作的人,大概都遇到过这种情况:灵感来了的时候文思泉涌,可没灵感的时候盯着屏幕半天写不出一个字。更...

290 2025-10-06
公众号注册的“蝴蝶效应”:一个选择,可能影响未来三年的运营 - 前沿AIGC资讯

公众号注册的“蝴蝶效应”:一个选择,可能影响未来三年的运营 - 前沿AIGC资讯

你可能觉得公众号注册就是填几个信息的事,殊不知,这里面的每个选择都像蝴蝶扇动翅膀,未来三年的运营轨迹可能就被悄悄改变了。很多人刚开始没当回事,等到后面想调整,才发现处处受限,那叫一个后悔。今天就跟你好好聊聊,注册时那些看似不起眼的选择,到底能给未来的运营带来多大影响。​📌账号类型选不对,三年运营路难

800 2025-10-06
2025公众号托管服务方案,赚钱技巧与内容代运营全面升级 - 第五AI

2025公众号托管服务方案,赚钱技巧与内容代运营全面升级 - 第五AI

📌 2025 公众号托管服务的底层逻辑:不是代运营,是 “结果交付” 这年头做公众号托管,还只停留在帮客户发文章、改排版?趁早别干了。2025 年的托管服务早就变了味儿 —— 客户要的不是 “做了什...

292 2025-10-06
AI写作如何进行事实核查?确保头条文章信息准确,避免误导读者 - AI创作资讯

AI写作如何进行事实核查?确保头条文章信息准确,避免误导读者 - AI创作资讯

上周帮同事核查一篇AI写的行业报告,发现里面把2023年的用户增长率写成了2025年的预测数据。更离谱的是,引用的政策文件号都是错的。现在AI生成内容速度快是快,但这种硬伤要是直接发出去,读者信了才真叫坑人。今天就掰开揉碎了说,AI写作怎么做好事实核查,别让你的头条文章变成 误导重灾区 。​📌AI写

591 2025-10-06
10w+阅读量爆文案例拆解分析:高手都从这5个维度入手 - AI创作资讯

10w+阅读量爆文案例拆解分析:高手都从这5个维度入手 - AI创作资讯

🎯维度一:选题像打靶,靶心必须是「用户情绪储蓄罐」做内容的都清楚,10w+爆文的第一步不是写,是选。选题选不对,后面写得再好都是白搭。高手选选题,就像往用户的「情绪储蓄罐」里投硬币,投对了立刻就能听到回响。怎么判断选题有没有击中情绪?看三个指标:是不是高频讨论的「街头话题」?是不是藏在心里没说的「抽

325 2025-10-06
135编辑器会员值得买吗?它的AI模板库和秀米H5比哪个更丰富? - AI创作资讯

135编辑器会员值得买吗?它的AI模板库和秀米H5比哪个更丰富? - AI创作资讯

📌135编辑器会员值不值得买?AI模板库和秀米H5谁更胜一筹?🔍135编辑器会员的核心价值解析企业级商用保障与效率提升135编辑器的企业会员堪称新媒体运营的「合规保险箱」。根据实际案例,某团队通过企业会员节省了大量设计费用,完成多篇内容创作,单篇成本从千元降至百元内。这得益于其海量正版模板和素材库,

255 2025-10-06
新公众号被限流怎么办?粉丝增长影响分析及 2025 恢复指南 - AI创作资讯

新公众号被限流怎么办?粉丝增长影响分析及 2025 恢复指南 - AI创作资讯

新公众号被限流怎么办?粉丝增长影响分析及2025恢复指南🔍新公众号限流的核心原因解析新公众号被限流,往往是多个因素叠加的结果。根据2025年最新数据,超过70%的限流案例与内容质量直接相关。比如,有些新手喜欢用“震惊体”标题,像“惊!某公众号三天涨粉十万”,这类标题在2025年的算法里已经被明确标记

662 2025-10-06
AI内容重复率太高怎么办?掌握这些技巧轻松通过AIGC检测 - AI创作资讯

AI内容重复率太高怎么办?掌握这些技巧轻松通过AIGC检测 - AI创作资讯

⚠️AI内容重复率高的3大核心原因现在用AI写东西的人越来越多,但很多人都会遇到同一个问题——重复率太高。明明是自己用工具生成的内容,一检测却显示和网上某些文章高度相似,这到底是为什么?最主要的原因是AI训练数据的重叠性。不管是ChatGPT还是国内的大模型,训练数据来源其实大同小异,都是爬取的互联

550 2025-10-06
135编辑器让排版更简单 | 专为公众号运营者设计的效率工具 - AI创作资讯

135编辑器让排版更简单 | 专为公众号运营者设计的效率工具 - AI创作资讯

🌟135编辑器:公众号运营者的效率革命做公众号运营的朋友都知道,排版是个费时费力的活。一篇文章从内容到排版,没几个小时根本搞不定。不过现在好了,135编辑器的出现,彻底改变了这一现状。135编辑器是提子科技旗下的在线图文排版工具,2014年上线至今,已经成为国内新媒体运营的主流工具之一。它的功能非常

827 2025-10-06