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Influenced by the late Buddy Holly, Elvis, Little Richard
and many more of the early rockers, Shondell
began his singing career while still in high school in Fort
Wayne, Indiana. His first recording (made under his birth name (
Gary Shelton), was "My Hero" on the Smash label, followed a year
later by "Kissing' At The Drive-In" on Mercury Records, which
became a big regional hit that did gain him national attention.
His fame soon spread to the Chicagoland area where he and his
band made history by becoming the first rock band to ever appear
at the then famous Brass Rail blues and jazz club in downtown
Chicago. For four solid months he and his band had fans standing
in line to watch rock 'n' roll for the first time in downtown
Chicago. During the next couple of years he left Mercury Records
and recorded a couple more songs for two independent labels.
"Goodbye Little Darlin' on the "Mark Label" and another self
penned song called "The Trance" on the "Regis Label". Both
records did well, but lacked proper marketing to get very high
in the national charts. In 1959 he got a chance for his band to
back a GAC "Shower of Stars" tour. Not only would his band back
the stars, but he would actually get to open the show. This
proved to be a big break for Troy. Following him on the show was
Chuck Berry, Frankie Ford, Rod Bernard, The Skyliners, The
Impalas, and Frankie Avalon. The newspaper critiques gave Troy
great reviews, which helped draw more attention to this young
new artist from the midwest.
One cold Sunday night on February 1, 1959, Troy and his band was
entertaining at a club in Davenport, Iowa when just before
closing a group walked in, set down, and sent a note to the
stage. The note asked Troy to acknowledge them and do a song
from their show. A young nervous Troy was very familiar with the
artists and sang the request, "That'll Be The Day". The request
was from the now famous show that appeared in Clear Lake, Iowa
February 2, 1959 starring Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and the
Big Bopper, in which the three famous stars were killed when
their plane crashed following the show at the Surf Ballroom.
Troy believes he was probably the last performer they ever saw
perform outside of their own group.
Ten months later, October 31, 1960,
Troy's father died of a heart attack. He had been a great
influence in Troy's life and had taught him to play trumpet at
age four, piano at age eight and pretty much handled all of
Troy's musical affairs. His dad left a small business to Troy's
mother to run and now she needed Troy to stay home and help her,
which he did. He temporarily disbanded his band and gave up
music to help with the immediate crisis. In February 1961 his
mother saw an ad in the local paper for extras in a movie and
encouraged Troy to audition. At the audition a man familiar with
Troys musical past asked him if he would consider recording
again if he financed the session. Happily, Troy agreed and had
already picked out the song he wanted to record if ever he had
another chance. It was a song "Al Russell" a local disc jockey
in Fort Wayne had called to Troy's attention. The day of the
session, April 1, 1961 in Batavia, IL there was a tremendous
snow blizzard and only three musicians were able to show up. A
guitar, sax, and drummer. Troy played piano, vibes and tried to
get a bass type sound out of his guitar, because the bass player
never made it. The song was "This Time Were Really Breaking Up".
Every record company in Chicago turned down the song.
So Troy and his new partner started their own
label called Goldcrest. Visiting WJJD in Chicago, Troy was bound
and determined he would get the record played no matter how much
he had to beg. Luckily, that night the DJ was Stan Major, a DJ
that he had befriended during the Shower of Stars tour in 1959.
Jim Lounsbury the musical director finally agreed to let Stan
play it one time on his Rate the Record Show, later that night.
Troy won against a strong opponent and the record began to sell
the very next day. In fact, 10 thousand records were sold the
very first week. The song topped the charts for an unprecedented
16 weeks during the summer of '61. Although other successes
would follow, none of the others might ever have happened
without "This Time Were Really Breaking Up." The song went on to
sell over 3 million that first year. It reached number 1 in
Chicago by the end of July and went to number one at just about
every major station in the USA. It took from June until December
for the record to play out.
The record has been referred to as a swamp rock sound
that quickly rose to the top of the charts,
making the Shondell name synonymous with 60's rock ever since.
Rock & Roll historian Wayne Jancik wrote: "Troy's impact on
aspiring young rockers was apparently very significant. A young
Detroit guitarist named Tommy James named his "Hanky Panky"
group after Troy, whom Troy first met at Shuler's Supper Club in
Niles, Michigan, Tommy's home town. Jim Peterik, of "The Ides of
March" and "Survivor" did the same with his first Chicago group;
and when Rod Bernard and rockabilly legend Warren Storm teamed
up to record for the La Louisianne label, they also called
themselves the Shondell's. Critic David Swift wrote; "He sings
Rock & Roll, mostly from the 50's and 60's, but he's not
necessarily a nostalgia act.
Troy's popularity has flourished in the past few years
to the point that he once again devotes most all
his time to music. He resides in Nashville, where he continues
to write, produce records and entertain at rock 'n' roll reunion
shows, Casino's and Conventions around the country. He is a
recording legend who continues to record new product and has
released 6 albums and sold over 8 million records since 1961.
His most recent albums are "Vintage Gold," featuring hits from
'50s and '60s with all new arrangements, and "Rock & Roll Rebel"
featuring 16 of his original recordings from '59 to '74, with
new cuts of "Rockin' Pneumonia" and "Slow Down". "Slow Down" the
first single from the CD is currently being played in 22
countries around the world. A new CD to be released later this
year, will feature his now famous "SwampRock" sound along with
"Still Loving You", a number 1 country single for the late Bob
Luman, that Troy wrote about the feelings his mother went
through after his father's death |