The “Golden Hits Of The 50s”
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Joan Weber
“LET ME GO LOVER”
(JennyLou Carson, Al Hill)
Columbia 40366
No. 1 January 1, 1955,
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Joan Weber had a five-and-dime voice,” Mitch Miller told Circular’s Harvey Geller. “She sounded
like every girl you ever heard singin’ behind the counter in a five and-dime store.”
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Joan Weber was born in 1936, raised in Paulsboro, New Jersey, and married to a young bandleader.
She was pregnant in 1954 when she hit the streets of New York to audition. She stumbled upon Eddie
Joy, the right man with the right ideas–a manager who brought her around to music publishers in the
famed Brill Building.
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“She was a wide-eyed, virginal, vulnerable, 105 pound waif,” CHARLES RANDOLPH GREAN, Weber’s
discoverer, recalled. One day, Ginny Gibson, one of Grean’s most-used demo singers, was unavailable;
Weber was available. “Joan did a credible job on this song ‘Marionette; but it was no Grammy winner.”
Grean took the tape around to various labels and found Mitch Miller of Columbia Records most interested–
not in “Marionette,” but in that five-and-dime voice.
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