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The Peppermint Rainbow was an American sunshine pop [1] group from Baltimore, Maryland, known for their song "Will You Be Staying After Sunday". The group formed in 1967 under the name "New York Times" playing to local gigs in the mid-Atlantic states.
18 sty 2019 · Phipps, an altruistic alto and retired head of St. Agnes HealthCare, sang the lead on the record as a member of a Baltimore-based band called The Peppermint Rainbow. The upbeat “Sunshine...
7 lut 2018 · Baltimore's Peppermint Rainbow had a Top 40 hit in 1969 with their harmony-laden soft rocker "Will You Be Staying After Sunday" -- a nod (both thematically and musically) to the Spanky & Our Gang hits "Sunday Morning" and "Sunday Will Never Be the Same."
Hum, Peppermint Rainbow tries to get heavy ... well about as heavy as a group in matching polyester outfits could get. Doug Lewis handled the lead vocals on 'Run Like the Devil' and I'll give him credit for trying to toughen up their sound.
21 sie 2007 · Peppermint Rainbow. Carole King may have asked “Will you still love me tomorrow?” but Baltimore’s Peppermint Rainbow was a bit more specific.
9 mar 2013 · Peppermint Rainbow released only one album, “Will You Be Staying After Sunday,” which just missed making Billboard’s Top 100 albums chart in 1969. By 1970, Bonnie Lamdin had married and the band members, worn out from touring and feeling a little defeated by the album’s failure to chart, went their separate ways.
11 mar 2013 · Thanks to Johnny Dollar for reminding us of Baltimore’s forgotten 1960s “sunshine pop” band The Peppermint Rainbow (1967-1970). JD scored the group’s lone LP Will You Be Staying After Sunday at a Joppa Road Salvation Army store and posted the cover on Facebook, leading us to scratch our heads as to why we had never heard of them.