How We Began
A Brooklyn street corner group formed in 1959, they originally called themselves the Capris until they found out that friends of theirs from
In 1960 the group went into the studio and recorded a demo of "Once In Awhile", attracting the interest of the engineer. While The Chimes were in the studio the engineer called a friend at Tag Records and within an hour Andy Leonetti was there listening to the group's first recording.
By the fall of 1960 "Once In Awhile", was hitting the Billboards’ national charts. It finished one spot shy of the top 10, spent 18 weeks on the charts, and sold over one million copies. Although they had a white doo-wop sound by today's standards, in 1960 The Chimes were thought by many to be an African American group.
Their first major bookings were in African American theatres such as the Howard in
In 1964 The Chimes wound up on Vee-Jay Records but again with not much success as Vee-Jay records was putting all their energy into releases by the Beatles and The Four Seasons. With that kind of competition, the Chimes release of "Two Times Two" was virtually ignored. By 1965, the group had separated only to reunite for some rock and roll revival shows in the early 1970's.
In 1973, the group had split again, lacking any real recording opportunities. In the early 80's Lenny wanted to reunite the group and hired 3 singers to perform as the Chimes. In 1986 the group went contemporary with "New York City Lady”, on Freedom records (their own label).
2008, Lenny has joined voices again with the original second tenor and close friend, Richard Mercado. The two have never sounded more beautiful together! The harmony and synchronization has never parted after all the years gone by.
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Feel free to contact us at 631-431-2674 or E-mail us at: Chimesinfo@aol.com






