The King Brothers
British musical group From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British musical group From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The King Brothers were a British pop vocal trio popular in the late 1950s and early 1960s. They are best remembered for their cover versions of "Standing on the Corner" and "A White Sport Coat (And A Pink Carnation)".[1]
The group was composed of three brothers who first performed together professionally on the TV show Shop Window in 1952.[2] Initially performing as The King Three, they appeared on the BBC Television early in their career on Six-Five Special,[3] and by 1957 had been named "top vocal group" in the reader's poll for the NME.[2] Their first hit on the UK Singles Chart was their cover of "A White Sport Coat", which hit No. 6 in 1957. In October 1960, they were again voted "top vocal group" in the NME reader's poll.[4] They had a string of successful singles through to 1961, after which time they continued recording, but found their popularity waning.[1]
Group leader Denis King later became an award-winning composer for television, film, and musicals; among other things, he wrote the theme music for The Adventures of Black Beauty and Lovejoy.[1] Michael King was married to the actress Carol White, with whom he had two sons, Sean and Stephen.[5]
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