Welcome to our Request Form for
Golden Oldies Juke Box Saturday Night!
Please use the following form to submit a request for our Golden Oldies Juke Box Saturday Night, which is held on the juke box in the Daily Doo Wop Rec Room each Saturday, beginning at 5:00 Eastern Time.
The form has an interactive search function with information from our site that might help you narrow down your choices or perhaps be inspired to make a choice. You are free to ignore the selections presented and just make your own for song or artist. Or you can choose The Daily Doo Wop featured song of the week.
Your name, song, artist, and any dedication or message will appear on that Saturday’s Golden Oldies Juke Box Saturday Night Facebook post and on one of this website’s blogs. Any e-mail will be used for special promotions, events, and news, to which you can always unsubscribe.
How does the form work?
- After you enter your name, you can choose to begin the process with a Song Title or an artist. (Or skip this and just choose The Daily Doo Wop choice (in red). Then in the field, start typing a request and wait a few seconds. You will see an auto-populated list of what is already in our database that matches the first few letters you type. If your choice appears, select it and then press the TAB key on your keyboard. If none of those are what you want, then just type in your choice.
- If you chose Song Title, then a field for the Artist appears — and if you chose Artist, then Song Title appears. Begin typing, make a selection, or type what you want.
- Please add a dedication or message (optional).
- Send.
You are welcome to repeat the process and submit another request.
The Daily Doo Wop song and artist choice for this upcoming Saturday’s Golden Oldies Juke Box Saturday Night is “Hearts of Stone” by The Charms. Always nice to reminisce with a bit of doo wop.
This song was written by Eddie Ray and Rudy Jackson, who was a member of the Jewels, a West Coast gospel and then R&B vocal group that became The Marbles. They recorded it in 1954.The Charms, an East Coast R&B group, had a version in 1954 that went to #1 on the R&B Best Sellers Chart and #15 on the U.S. Pop Chart. It sold more than one million copies and was awarded an RIAA gold record.
Lots of history here! The Charms formed in the early 1950s (and later became Otis Williams and The Charms). The other original members were Bob Smith (later replaced by Donald Peak), Rolland Bradley, Joe Penn, and Richard Parker. They had other charting success with “Ling, Ting, Tong,” “Two Hearts,” and “Ivory Tower.” Williams co-produced and arranged Hank Ballard’s version of “The Twist.” He also helped to arrange Little Willie John’s “Fever.” Williams was drafted in 1960, and the group broke up. He performed solo and with other groups over the years.
For the lyrics and more about the song: “Hearts of Stone.”
A little bit about the tradition of Juke Box Saturday Nights:
The song “Juke Box Saturday Night” was written by Al Stillman and Paul McGrane and first recorded by Glenn Miller & His Orchestra. This song told the story of kids having fun when cash is in short supply; they made a soda last all night and listened to their favorite hits. In the era we cover, there is a version by Nino & The Ebb Tides. This song is the epitome of a golden oldie, as it contains references to golden oldies within it. Both versions feature parody clips of the current generation’s popular artists. The Glenn Miller version lampoons Harry James and The Ink Spots. The version by Nino & The Ebb Tides updates the “swingaroo” references to the newer doo wop, rock and roll artists. They have parodies The Monotones and The Silhouettes. Although the record reached only #57 nationally for Nino & The Ebb Tides, it was a hit in regional areas, including New York City, and is considered by many to be a doo wop classic.
Welcome to our Request Form for
Golden Oldies Juke Box Saturday Night!
Please use the following form to submit a request for our Golden Oldies Juke Box Saturday Night, which is held on the juke box in the Daily Doo Wop Rec Room each Saturday, beginning at 5:00 Eastern Time.
The form has an interactive search function with information from our site that might help you narrow down your choices or perhaps be inspired to make a choice. You are free to ignore the selections presented and just make your own for song or artist. Or you can choose The Daily Doo Wop featured song of the week.
Your name, song, artist, and any dedication or message will appear on that Saturday’s Golden Oldies Juke Box Saturday Night Facebook post and on one of this website’s blogs. Any e-mail will be used for special promotions, events, and news, to which you can always unsubscribe.
How does the form work?
- After you enter your name, you can choose to begin the process with a Song Title or an artist. (Or skip this and just choose The Daily Doo Wop choice (in red). Then in the field, start typing a request and wait a few seconds. You will see an auto-populated list of what is already in our database that matches the first few letters you type. If your choice appears, select it and then press the TAB key on your keyboard. If none of those are what you want, then just type in your choice.
- If you chose Song Title, then a field for the Artist appears — and if you chose Artist, then Song Title appears. Begin typing, make a selection, or type what you want.
- Please add a dedication or message (optional).
- Send.
You are welcome to repeat the process and submit another request.
The Daily Doo Wop song and artist choice for this upcoming Saturday’s Golden Oldies Juke Box Saturday Night is “Hearts of Stone” by The Charms. Always nice to reminisce with a bit of doo wop.
This song was written by Eddie Ray and Rudy Jackson, who was a member of the Jewels, a West Coast gospel and then R&B vocal group that became The Marbles. They recorded it in 1954.The Charms, an East Coast R&B group, had a version in 1954 that went to #1 on the R&B Best Sellers Chart and #15 on the U.S. Pop Chart. It sold more than one million copies and was awarded an RIAA gold record.
Lots of history here! The Charms formed in the early 1950s (and later became Otis Williams and The Charms). The other original members were Bob Smith (later replaced by Donald Peak), Rolland Bradley, Joe Penn, and Richard Parker. They had other charting success with “Ling, Ting, Tong,” “Two Hearts,” and “Ivory Tower.” Williams co-produced and arranged Hank Ballard’s version of “The Twist.” He also helped to arrange Little Willie John’s “Fever.” Williams was drafted in 1960, and the group broke up. He performed solo and with other groups over the years.
For the lyrics and more about the song: “Hearts of Stone.”
A little bit about the tradition of Juke Box Saturday Nights:
The song “Juke Box Saturday Night” was written by Al Stillman and Paul McGrane and first recorded by Glenn Miller & His Orchestra. This song told the story of kids having fun when cash is in short supply; they made a soda last all night and listened to their favorite hits. In the era we cover, there is a version by Nino & The Ebb Tides. This song is the epitome of a golden oldie, as it contains references to golden oldies within it. Both versions feature parody clips of the current generation’s popular artists. The Glenn Miller version lampoons Harry James and The Ink Spots. The version by Nino & The Ebb Tides updates the “swingaroo” references to the newer doo wop, rock and roll artists. They have parodies The Monotones and The Silhouettes. Although the record reached only #57 nationally for Nino & The Ebb Tides, it was a hit in regional areas, including New York City, and is considered by many to be a doo wop classic.