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・ The Cry of Reason
・ The Cry of the Children
・ The Cry of the Children (poem)
・ The Cry of the Halidon
・ The Cry of the Icemark
・ The Cry of the Onlies
・ The Cry of the Owl
・ The Cry of the Owl (1987 film)
・ The Cry of the Owl (2009 film)
・ The Cry of the Owl (disambiguation)
・ The Cry of the Wild Goose
・ The Cry of the Wolf
・ The Cry!
・ The Cryan' Shames
・ The Crybaby
The Cryin' Shames
・ The Crying Boy
・ The Crying Game
・ The Crying Game (disambiguation)
・ The Crying Game (novel)
・ The Crying Game (song)
・ The Crying Light
・ The Crying of Lot 49
・ The Crying Spell
・ The Crying Woman (1933 film)
・ The Cryonic Woman
・ The Cryosphere
・ The Crypt (album)
・ The Crypt (film)
・ The Crypt (Kings Dominion)


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The Cryin' Shames : ウィキペディア英語版
The Cryin' Shames

The Cryin' Shames were a mid-1960s pop/beat group, produced by Joe Meek. They had one UK hit single in 1966 with a cover of The Drifters' 1961 "Please Stay", written by Burt Bacharach and Bob Hilliard.
==Career==
The sextet was initially renamed from 'The Bumblies' which founded in 1963 in Liverpool, and was managed by Norman Eastwood. The Bumblies name came from a television programme starring Michael Bentine. The Bumblies comprised Charlie Crane (vocals), Joey Kneen (vocals), John Bennett (guitar), Phil Roberts (keyboards), George Robinson (bass guitar) and Charlie Gallagher (drums)
Roberts and Kneen came from 'The Calderstones' that also featured Tom Evans (Badfinger). After recording their first single, The Bumblies' Bennett was replaced in early December 1965 by the then 16-year-old Ritchie Routledge from 'The Aztecs'; a semi-professional musician who was working as a junior reporter for ''Music Echo'', a music paper owned by Brian Epstein. The band changed their name to 'The Cryin' Shames' and started working under the new name just before Christmas 1965. The Cryin' Shames first single, "Please Stay" was released on the Decca label on 18 February 1966. It was destined to be Joe Meek's final chart hit before he committed suicide in 1967 .〔
"Please Stay" was a minor hit, peaking at #26 in the UK Singles Chart, and the band was approached by Epstein, who wanted to manage them, but they refused. The band had met Epstein in the Adelphi Hotel in Liverpool and turned down his offer.
The line-up changed in May 1966, when Robinson was replaced by Derek Cleary on bass, who played on their second single release, "Nobody Waved Goodbye", which was released the following month.
Crane and Routledge left The Cryin' Shames and formed a new band with a new name. With a line-up of Charlie () Crane, Ritchie Routledge (both vocals), Brian Norris (bass), Mike Espie (guitar), Pete Byrne (organ) and Paul Commerford (drums), they recorded one more single with Meek, "September in the Rain" / "Come On Back", which was released on 1 September 1966. It was issued under their new name of Paul and Ritchie and The Crying Shames.
Routledge later led Blackwater Park, an English-German band in the early 1970s, and was part of Grimms. He also worked as a session singer for The Scaffold and appeared on the recording of the 1974 song "Liverpool Lou" (UK Number 7 - produced by Paul McCartney). Crane went on to be the lead singer of 'Gary Walker and The Rain'.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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