The Archies You Know I Love You

Fictional music group

The Archies

The Archie Show.jpg
Background data
Origin New York City, U.S.
Genres Bubblegum pop, stone and whorl, garage rock
Years active
  • 1968–1973
  • 2008
  • 2020
Labels Calendar / Kirshner / RCA / WaterTower Music
Associated acts Ron Dante, Andy Kim
Past members
  • Fictional:
  • Archie Andrews
  • Jughead Jones
  • Reggie Mantle
  • Veronica Guild
  • Betty Cooper
  • Kevin Keller (Riverdale only)
  • Bodily:
  • Ron Dante
  • Toni Wine
  • Jeff Barry
  • Donna Marie
  • Bobby Blossom
  • Chuck Rainey
  • Gary Chester
  • Dave Appell
  • Joey Manlike
  • Ron Frangipane
  • Andy Kim
  • Sal DiTroia
  • Sue Logan
  • Paul Manoogian
  • KJ Apa
  • Cole Sprouse
  • Lili Reinhart
  • Camila Mendes
  • Casey Cott

The Archies is a fictional American ring that features in media produced by, and related to, Archie Comics. They are best remembered for their appearance in the animated Idiot box serial The Archie Show. In the context of the serial, the band was founded by vocalist/guitarist Archie Andrews, bassist Reggie Drape, drummer Forsythe "Jughead" Jones, vocaliser/keyboardist Veronica Guild and vocalizer/percussionist Betty Cooper. In the cartoons, Veronica is shown playing a large keyboard instrument styled after the X-66, a and then-electric current top-of-the-line organ made by the Hammond Organ Company.

The music featured in the series was recorded by session musicians, including Ron Dante on pb vocals and Toni Wine on duet and bankroll vocals.[ane] The recordings were released as a serial of singles and albums that achieved worldwide chart success. Their most successful song, "Saccharide, Sugar", became one of the biggest hits of the bubblegum pop genre that flourished from 1968 to 1973.[2]

In 2020, a new version of the ring was introduced in the tv series Riverdale, with Kevin Keller replacing Reggie Drapery. All the same, the band continues to appear with the five original members in the comic books published by Archie Comics.[3]

History [edit]

The Archies first appeared in a comic volume, Life with Archie #60 (April 1967). The fictional band was inspired by the success of the 1966 TV series The Monkees;[four] in item, Don Kirshner, who had managed the initially-fictional band, wanted a musical human activity that he could fully command: every bit The Monkees were fictional but still used the real musicians' names, the musicians themselves became increasingly irritated at being micromanaged, leading to a dispute that culminated in Kirshner being fired. To avoid a repeat of the Monkees fiasco while still allowing himself total control, Kirshner commissioned a band based on cartoon characters—if the session musicians tried to rebel or go out, they could be replaced seamlessly.[5] The early stories copied the TV show'due south fast cuts and action: "there were pages that had no panel-to-panel continuity at all, simply pure strings of nonsense, fantasy, fourth-wall breaking, and exasperated commentary from Betty and Veronica."[4] The feature concluded in upshot #66.

Fictional line-upwards [edit]

The Archies play a variety of contemporary pop music, consistent with the era in which the comic is drawn. Every member sings vocals, with Jughead handling the bass vox on a few tracks. Though their singing voices were soft and appropriate for pop vocals, their speaking voices are much different. The roles the teens played in the fictional band were:

  • Archie Andrews – guitars, vocals
  • Reggie Mantle – bass
  • Forsythe "Jughead" Jones – drums
  • Betty Cooper – vocals, percussion
  • Veronica Order – keyboards, vocals
  • Kevin Keller – bass (Riverdale)

One distribution fashion for the Archies' music was embossing paper-thin records directly onto the back of cereal boxes, which were cut out and played on a turntable (although their music was also available on standard result LPs and 45s).[6] [seven]

Though the group no longer appears in animation, they are still oftentimes used in stories published past Archie Comics. In 2020, the group made its second live action appearance on Riverdale, with Kevin Keller replacing Reggie Mantle as the new bassist of the ring.

Product [edit]

A set of studio musicians was assembled by Don Kirshner in 1968 to perform diverse songs. The nearly famous is "Saccharide, Sugar", written by Jeff Barry and Andy Kim,[one] which went to number one on the pop chart in 1969, sold over six one thousand thousand copies, and was awarded a gold disc.[8] In the Billboard Hot 100, it was ranked as the No. 1 song of that year, the only time a fictional band has ever claimed Billboard 's almanac Hot 100 top spot. Other Elevation forty songs recorded by the Archies include "Who'due south Your Infant?" (U.S. No. xl), "Bang-Shang-A-Lang" (U.Southward. No. 22), and "Jingle Jangle" (U.S. No. 10).[1] "Jingle Jangle" also sold over ane million copies, garnering a second gilded disc award.[8]

Male vocals for the fictional Archies group were provided by The Cuff Links' lead singer Ron Dante and female person duet vocals were provided by Toni Vino.[1] Wine, who was simply paid for the recording session and quit the grouping when the song became a huge hit, was succeeded in 1970 by Donna Marie, who in turn was replaced on the final recordings by Merle Miller. The just Archies vocal not to characteristic Ron Dante on lead was 1971's "Love Is Living In You", sung by Bob Levine (co-author of the song) and produced by Ritchie Adams. The concluding single, released 1972, was "Strangers in the Morning"; its B-side song was "Plum Crazy".

Jeff Barry, Andy Kim, Ellie Greenwich, Susan Morse, Ritchie Adams, Maeretha Stewart, Bobby Flower and Lesley Miller, contributed background vocals at various times, with Barry contributing his trademark bass voice (portrayed as being sung by Jughead in the cartoon) on cuts such as "Jingle Jangle", "Rock 'n' Roll Music", "A Summer Prayer For Peace" (which hit number one in Due south Africa and Scandinavia in 1971), and "You Little Angel, You lot". Musicians on Archies' records included guitarists Hugh McCracken and Dave Appell, bassists Chuck Rainey and Joey Macho, keyboard player Ron Frangipane, and drummers Buddy Saltzman and Gary Chester.

The Archies' records were initially released on the Calendar Records label,[i] just the name was soon thereafter changed to Kirshner Records.

The sound engineer was Fred Weinberg, who was Jeff Barry'due south and Andy Kim's favorite, and who also recorded Barry's other hits "Be My Infant", "Baby, I Love You", and Kim'southward "Rock Me Gently". Fred Weinberg is a composer and producer in his own right. However, the music for The U.Southward. of Archie which aired in 1974, was produced past Jackie Mills, a Hollywood producer, who also produced Bobby Sherman and the Brady Kids. The vocaliser for these shows was Tom McKenzie, who also sang on some Groovie Goolies segments, and was a regular fellow member of the popular singing grouping, Doodletown Pipers.

Legendary animator Don Bluth worked on the bear witness, providing layouts for the series.

Some of the group songs have appeared on episodes of The CW televisions series Riverdale.[9] The grouping fabricated its debut in Riverdale, in the musical episode "Chapter Seventy-Four: Wicked Little Boondocks", for only the second time in an live action adaptation afterward the idiot box picture show Archie: To Riverdale and Dorsum Over again in 1990.[10] It includes KJ Apa as Archie, Cole Sprouse as Jughead, Lili Reinhart as Betty, Camila Mendes as Veronica and Casey Cott equally Kevin Keller.[11] For the kickoff time, Kevin Keller is part of the group, replacing Reggie Mantle (played by Charles Melton) as the bassist. The song "Midnight Radio" is appeared in the series' musical episode soundtrack released by WaterTower Music, on Apr fifteen, 2020.

Netflix announced the Indian characteristic film adaptation of The Archies. The film will be produced past Tiger Baby Films and Graphic India with Zoya Akhtar every bit director.[12]

Discography [edit]

  • The Archies (1968)
  • Everything'due south Archie (1969)
  • Jingle Jangle (1969)
  • Sunshine (1970)
  • This Is Love (1971)
  • The Archies Christmas Album (2008)

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d eastward Colin Larkin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. p. 49. ISBNane-85227-745-ix.
  2. ^ Cooper, Kim; Smay, David, eds. (2001). Bubblegum Music is the Naked Truth: The Dark History of Prepubescent Pop, From the Assistant Splits to Britney Spears . Feral House. ISBN0-922915-69-5.
  3. ^ Bell, Crystal, ed. (2017). The Archies Become band back together for new ongoing series. MYV.
  4. ^ a b Wells, John (2014). American Comic Book Chronicles: 1965-1969. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 158. ISBN978-1605490557.
  5. ^ Schudel, Matt (eighteen Jan 2012). "Don Kirshner, striking-making rock impresario of the 1960s, dies at 76". The Washington Mail . Retrieved 21 January 2012.
  6. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Vintage Old 1970'southward Post Blastoff Bits and Honeycombs Cereal Commercial with free record". YouTube. Retrieved October xix, 2019.
  7. ^ "YouTube". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2017-02-19. Retrieved October nineteen, 2019.
  8. ^ a b Murrells, Joseph (1978). The Book of Aureate Discs (2nd ed.). London: Barrie and Jenkins Ltd. pp. 252–253. ISBN0-214-20512-6.
  9. ^ "Music from The Archies". Tunefind . Retrieved November 26, 2019.
  10. ^ Swift, Andy (January 28, 2020). "Riverdale Sizes Upwards Hedwig for Flavor iv Musical Episode — Run into Who'southward Singing". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  11. ^ Archie Comics (April 17, 2020). "Meet #TheArchies". Twitter . Retrieved April 19, 2020.
  12. ^ Ramachandran, Naman (November 10, 2021). "Zoya Akhtar to Direct 'The Archies' Comic Book Adaptation for Netflix (EXCLUSIVE)". Multifariousness.

External links [edit]

  • The Archies
  • Ron Dante Online

tallmanourst1977.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Archies

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