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JERRY KELLER
“HERE COMES SUMMER
“
(JERRY KELLER)
Kapp 277
No.
14
August 17, 1959
.
.,
Jerry Keller was born in Fort Smith, Arkansas, on June 20, 1937. When he was seven, he and the
family moved to Tulsa, Oklahoma, where he became a member of the Tulsa Boy Singers, a choral
group that toured the Midwest. In high school, he formed a secular quartet called the Lads of Note.
Singing solo, Jerry won a talent test organized by bandleader Horace Heidt (the claimed “discoverer” of ED
TOWNSEND), and he fronted Jack Dalton’s Orchestra for a while.
.
In 1956, Jerry moved to the city of glitz and other stuff, New York. While dreaming of fame and fortune,
he worked as a clerk for an oil company; he also studied singing, cut demos when he could, and
appeared occasionally on local TV shows. But it was a Sunday meeting with Pat Boone on the stops
of a church that opened that big door to secular stardom. Pat gave Jerry a list of individuals that
might be able to help him. One of them, Marty Mills, was to be Keller’s manager and his connection
to Kapp Records.
;
Jerry’s self-penned “Here Comes Summer” was apparently the 22·year·old’s first official waxing.
For years afterward, whenever summertime was approaching, Jerry’s joyous single would ride the
turntables; ah, that’s record players. Despite a massive tour of tho U.K.–replacing the recently
deceased Eddie Cochran–none of Keller’s subsequent outings ever received much airplay; without
hits, he was to move from Kapp, to Capitol, to Coral, to Reprise, to RCA Records before chucking
his career.
.
No Jerry Keller recordings are currently in print. Keller did continue penning tunes, though: his
” Turn Down Day ” was a sizable hit for the folkie-pop Cyrkle in 1966, and his ” Almost There “
appeared in the 1964 flick
I’d Rather Be Rich
(a version by Andy Williams reached number 67
the
s
ame year). Keller made film appearances in
You
Light Up My
Lift
(1977) and
If Ever I See You
Again
(1978).
COPYRIGHT 1997 Wayne Jancik