Candy & The Kisses

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
The 81 02:33 Tools
Are You Trying to Get Rid of Me Baby 00:00 Tools
The 81 / Candy & the Kisses 00:00 Tools
Out in the Streets Again 00:00 Tools
Sweet and Lovely 00:00 Tools
Two Happy People 00:00 Tools
Shakin' Time 00:00 Tools
Soldier Baby (Of Mine) 00:00 Tools
Soldier Baby Of Mine 00:00 Tools
I'll Settle For You 00:00 Tools
Let Love Win 00:00 Tools
You Did The Best You Could 00:00 Tools
Tonight's The Night 00:00 Tools
Keep On Searchin' 00:00 Tools
Smokey Joe's 00:00 Tools
The Last Time 00:00 Tools
One Sweet Kiss 00:00 Tools
Together 00:00 Tools
Someone Out There 00:00 Tools
Chains of Love 00:00 Tools
All You Gotta Do 00:00 Tools
Lookie, Lookie (What I Got) 00:00 Tools
Mr. Creator 00:00 Tools
Tonight The Night 00:00 Tools
Chains Of Love (Decca Records 1968) 00:00 Tools
Keep On Searching 00:00 Tools
Are You Trying To Get Rid Of Me Baby? 00:00 Tools
Tonights The Night 00:00 Tools
81 00:00 Tools
Someone Out There (Decca Records 1968) 00:00 Tools
Looky, Looky (What I Got) 00:00 Tools
Smokey Joes 00:00 Tools
Are You Trying To Get Rid Of M 00:00 Tools
Chains Of Love (Decca) 00:00 Tools
The 81 (1964) 00:00 Tools
Candy & the Kisses - The 81 00:00 Tools
Let The Good Times Roll 00:00 Tools
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Armed with a fly name and gifted producers and writers, this Port Richmond, NY, USA, group still didn't click. The group consisted of sisters Candy and Suzanne Nelson and their friend Jeanette Johnson. The Nelsons' father was a minister and they developed their singing skills in his church. For a while they were the Symphonettes but never recorded as such; they became Candy and the Kisses with their first release, "After I Cry" b/w "Let the Good Times Roll," issued in 1963 on R&L Records. The hurtin' ballad sold well, where played, but it didn't get played much or in many places. "The 81" b/w "Two Happy People" (Cameo Records, 1964) was their biggest record; Kenny Gamble and Jerry Ross wrote the shuffler about the popular Philly dance. Leon Huff and Cindy Scott wrote the flip; Gamble & Huff later united to become Hall-of-Fame songwriters and producers. "The 81" stopped short of Billboard's pop Top 40 and nested in the 50s. Cameo followed with Phil Spector's "Soldier Baby (of Mine)" b/w "Shakin' Time" (1965), but politics killed the potential two-sided hit and the Cameo deal. They signed with Scepter Records in 1965 and were assigned to the writing team of Josephine (Joshie) Armstead, Valerie Simpson, and Nicholas Ashford. However, excellent material like "Keep on Searchin'," "Sweet and Lovely," "Out in the Streets Again," "I'll Settle for You," "Mr. Creator," and "Are You Trying to Get Rid of Me Baby," fail to chart. Even a remake of the Shirelles' 1960 hit "Tonight's the Night" and "You Did the Best You Could" misfired. In 1968, the final Candy & the Kisses recording appeared on Decca Records; when "Chains of Love" b/w "Someone out There" didn't bust a grape, Candy retired. Suzanne, Jeanette, and new lead Beryl Martin tried again as Sweet Soul on Mercury Records in 1969. Their only single "Oh No, Oh No" b/w "If You Love Him" didn't win, place, or show, and they disbanded. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.