Biography
The Bop-Chords
Effective period / Period of releases: 1956 - 1981
Members: Peggy Jones (2), William Dailey (2), Morris "Mickey" Smarr, Leon Ivey, Skip Boyd, Ken "Butch" Hamilton, Ernest Harriston
Group from Harlem, NYConsisted of; Ernest Harriston (d. 1970's) (lead), William "Sheik" Dailey (a) (1st tenor), Butch Hamilton (d. Sep, 2002) (Second Tenor), Morris Smarr (u) (Baritone), Leon Ivey (d. 1993) (Bass)
Harlem's the Bop Chords formed in 1955 in the same building where the Ladders, Channels, and Willows got their start. Lead vocalist Ernest Harriston, William Dailey, Butch Hamilton, Leon Ivey, and Morris Smarr had all sung with other neighborhood groups, and Hamilton had recorded with the Five Wings earlier in the year on a tribute to Johnny Ace that was issued by King. The Bop Chords recorded for Holiday in 1956, and the mid-tempo "Castle in the Sky" was a local and regional hit. Their second single, "When I Woke Up This Morning," also did well on the East Coast, but internal clashes over song content and wardrobe soon caused lineup defections and changes.
Dailey and Smarr left and were replaced by Skip Boyd and Peggy Jones, their first female vocalist. They recorded "Why" in 1957, then disbanded. Harriston did background vocals for Shep & the Limelites and recorded "We Need Love" for Asnes in 1962 as Ernie Johnson. A new edition of the Bop Chords resurfaced in 1971, with lead vocalist Johnson, Hamilton, Boyd, and Ivey. They never recorded, but were a popular attraction at various New York locations and oldies shows in the '70s.
Sadly, Ernest Harriston was murdered in Harlem in the mid-1970s. Leon Ivey, ravaged by years of alcohol abuse, died in 1993 at age 56. William Dailey eventually returned to the Norfolk, Va area where he resides today. Danny Robinson died in the Bronx on April 17, 1996, at age 66.