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The Sugar Shoppe : ウィキペディア英語版
The Sugar Shoppe

The Sugar Shoppe were a Canadian sunshine pop vocal group who recorded in the late 1960s and featured actor Victor Garber.
==History==
The group was formed in Toronto by lead singer, songwriter and pianist Peter Mann. Born in New York, he grew up in Miami, Florida, before working as an arranger and relocating to Canada in 1965. There, he met University of Toronto School of Music student and singer Laurie Hood, and singers Lee Harris and Victor Garber, an actor and singer who was also studying in Toronto
as well as singing in the city's clubs.〔( The Sugar Shoppe, ''The Canadian Pop Encyclopedia'', 7 December 2004 ). Retrieved 18 August 2013〕〔( The Sugar Shoppe at CanadianBands.com ). Retrieved 18 August 2013〕〔
With two male singers (Mann and Garber) and two female (Hood and Harris), they modeled themselves on the Mamas & the Papas and began working in the studio on a project to mark the Canadian Centennial in 1967. The group's first single was Mann's arrangement of Bobby Gimby's song "Canada"; released on the Yorkville label, it reached no.40 on the ''RPM'' Canadian singles chart. The follow-up, "The Attitude", was less successful.〔( ''Dreams Fantasies & Nightmares'', Borderline Books )〕 However, the group won a recording deal with Capitol Records in Los Angeles, and recorded an album, ''The Sugar Shoppe'', released in 1968.〔(The Sugar Shoppe at Allmusic.com ). Retrieved 18 August 2013〕 It was produced by Al De Lory and arranged by Mort Garson, with session musicians including "The Wrecking Crew" of Hal Blaine, Carol Kaye, Larry Knechtel, Earl Palmer, Mike Deasy, and Plas Johnson. Tracks included versions of Donovan's "Skip-a-Long Sam", which was also released as a single, reaching no. 73 on the Canadian chart;〔 Bobbie Gentry's "Papa, Won’t You Let Me Go to Town"; Mike Leander's theme song for the movie ''Privilege''; and a re-recorded version of "The Attitude".〔( Review of ''The Sugar Shoppe'' by Joe Marchese at TheSecondDisc.com ). Retrieved 18 August 2013〕 However, despite appearances on both Ed Sullivan's and Johnny Carson's TV shows, the group's commercial success was limited.〔
The Sugar Shoppe then joined Epic Records, and in 1969 released a version of Laura Nyro's "Save the Country", which used an arrangement later borrowed by the 5th Dimension. However, it was not a commercial success. The group continued to perform, mainly in Canada, before Mann and Harris left in 1970. Garber and Hood then formed The Shoppe with Sandy Crawley. They recorded the soundtrack for a TV series based on Greek mythology in 1971, and recorded several tracks issued on anthologies.〔(Victor Garber, Music ). Retrieved 18 August 2013〕 By 1973, the group had finally disbanded.〔
Garber became a leading film, stage and television actor. Mann remained active in recording sessions in Canada, and later worked mainly in television. Hood and Harris later worked as session singers and were both part of another group, Shooter, Myles and Lenny, in the 1970s. Harris developed multiple sclerosis, leading to her death in the 1990s.〔〔〔
''The Sugar Shoppe'' was reissued on CD by SunPK records in 2001, and with bonus tracks by Cherry Red Records in 2013.〔〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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