Sunny & the Sunglows
American musical group
Sunny & the Sunglows (formed by songwriters Jimmie Lewing and Sunny Ozuna in Palacios, Texas ) was an American musical group started 1959, and later known as Sunny & the Sunliners in 1963 after moving to San Antonio , Texas .
Career
The group's members were all Chicano -born with the exception of Amos Johnson Jr., and their style was a blend of rhythm and blues , tejano , blues , and mariachi .[ 1] They first recorded in 1962 for their own label, Sunglow. Okeh Records picked up their single "Golly Gee" for national distribution that year, and in 1963, Huey P Meaux , a producer from Louisiana and owner of Tear Drop Records , had them record a remake of Little Willie John 's 1958 hit, "Talk to Me, Talk to Me ".[ 2] The single "Talk to Me" (b/w "Every Week, Every Month, Every Year"), released on Tear Drop Records , went to No. 4 on the Adult Contemporary chart , No. 12 on the US Billboard R&B chart , and No. 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 in October 1963.[ 3] [ 4]
Members
Sunny Ozuna – lead vocals
Vincent Chente Montez – vocals (Bass)
Manuel Guerra – leader
Rudy Guerra – tenor sax
Gregg Ramirez – bass
Henry Nanez – guitar
Manuel Martinez – guitar
Tommy Luna – tenor sax
Andy Ortiz – piano (Sunglows era)
Arthur Gonzalez – electric piano
Martin Liñan – alto sax
Gilbert Fernandez – tenor sax
Amos Johnson Jr. – trumpet
Bobby Solis – drums
Joel Dilley – bass
Joe Cortez III – keyboards, vocals (1977–78)
Johnny Guerra – guitar, vocals
Carlos Hernandez – alto sax, vocals
Jimmy Solis – tenor sax, vocals
Bobby Gutierrez – tenor and bari sax
David Silva – trumpet
Roger Rivera – trombone
David DeLaGarza – keyboards
Frank Ardila – guitar
Arturo Alderete - bass (1973-75)
Charlie Sandoval - percussion
Discography
Talk to Me (Tear Drop Records , LP2000 1964)
All Night Worker (Tear Drop, LP2019 1964)
Las Vegas Welcomes (Tear Drop, 1964)
Adelante (Key-Loc, 1964)
The Original Peanuts (Sunglow Records, LP103 1965)
Smile Now Cry Later (Key-Loc 3001 1966)
Live in Hollywood (Key-Loc 3003 1966)
Little Brown Eyed Soul (Key-Loc, 1968)
The Versatile (Key-Loc, 1969)
Young, Gifted and Brown (Key-Loc, 1971)
El Orgullo de Texas (Key-Loc, 1974)
El Preferido (Key-Loc, 1974)
Yesterday...& Sunny (Teardrop Records, 1976)
Siempre (Key-Loc, 1976)
Palabritas (Key-Loc, 1976)
Andale Mi Amor (Key-Loc, 1977)
This Is My Band (Key-Loc 3006 1977)
Live in Las Vegas (Key-Loc, 1978)
Yesterday and Sunny Vol. II (Key-Loc, 1978)
Grande Grande Grande (Key-Loc, 1978)
Vengo a Verte (Key-Loc, 1979)
Cry (Key-Loc, 1980)
El Amante : Sunny & The Sunliners (Freddie Records – LP-026 1981)
References
^ Hogan, Ed. "Sunny & the Sunglows Biography" . AllMusic . Retrieved 2022-10-27 .
^ Larkin, Colin, ed. (1995). The Guinness Encyclopedia of Popular Music . Vol. 5 (2nd ed.). Middlesex, England: Guinness Publishing. p. 4032. ISBN 9781561591763 . OCLC 1037434657 .
^ Martinez, Norma (September 29, 2017). "Sunny Ozuna: San Antonio's Tejano Music Legend" . Texas Public Radio . San Antonio. Retrieved 2022-10-27 .
^ Cano, Jr., Ray (May 27, 2015). "Sunny and the Sunliners" . Texas State Historical Association . Austin, TX. Retrieved 2022-10-27 .
External links
Official website