The Cyrkle
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
The Cyrkle was a groovy and engaging 60s folksy pop-rock group from the
East Coast. The band was distinguished by their lovely vocal harmonies
and pleasant melodies. The original line-up was:
Don Dannemann (guitar/vocals),
Tom Dawes (bass/vocals),
Marty Fried (drums), and Earl Pickens
(keyboards). Founding members Dawes and Dannemann first met each other
while attending Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania. The group
started out as a frat rock outfit called "The Rhondells" before
changing their name to the Cyrkle (none other than
John Lennon suggested the unusual
spelling of their moniker). The band scored a big smash hit in 1966
with the infectiously bouncy and upbeat, "Red Rubber Ball"; this song
was co-written by Paul Simon and
peaked at #2 on the Billboard pop charts. The equally charming, but
more mellow follow-up tune, "Turn-Down Day", likewise did well; it
reached #16 on the Billboard pop charts. Moreover, the group performed
as the opening act for The Beatles during
their 1966 summer tour of America. The Cyrkle appear as themselves and
composed the score for the tawdry sexploitation picture,
The Minx (1969). Alas, additional
singles by the group were undeserved commercial flops and the Cyrkle,
subsequently, disbanded in 1968. Tom Dawes and
Don Dannemann went on to successful
careers as commercial jingle writers: Dannemann wrote jingles for both
Swanson Foods and Continental Airlines, while Dawes penned the famous
"plop plop fizz fizz" jingle for Alka Seltzer. The Cyrkle briefly
reunited and performed at a benefit concert at Lafayette College in
Easton, Pennsylvania in 1986. Tom Dawes died at age 64 from a stroke on
October 13, 2007.