What songs did Harold Melvin and the Bluenotes sing?
The Love I LostIf You Don’t Know Me by NowI Miss YouHope That We Can Be Together S…You Know How to Make Me F…Bad Luck
Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes/Songs
Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes had many big-time hits, especially in the early part of the decade. Songs like “The Love I lost,” “Bad Luck,” and “If You Don’t Know Me By Now,” were huge hits on the Billboard top 100.
Is Harold Melvin from the Bluenotes still alive?
March 24, 1997Harold Melvin / Date of death
Was Teddy Pendergrass The lead singer of Harold Melvin & the Bluenotes?
David EboGil Saunders1982 – 1992John Atkins
Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes/Lead singers
How old is Harold Melvin & the Bluenotes?
Saunders left the act in 1992, and Harold Melvin continued to tour with various line-ups of Blue Notes, until suffering a stroke in 1996. Melvin died on March 24, 1997 at the age of 57 and was laid to rest at the Ivy Hill Cemetery in Philadelphia.
Who is the lead singer of Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes?
What is a blue third?
The blue third is the third degree (note) of the scale bent down around a quarter tone. In 2nd position this corresponds to the 3 hole draw. The reason this sounds really tasty is because the third-degree of the scale is the note which determines whether it is major or minor.
Who originally wrote Wake up everybody?
Gene McFaddenVictor CarstarphenJohn Whitehead
Wake Up Everybody/Composers
What year was the song Wake Up Everybody released?
2010Wake Up Everybody / Released
How long did Teddy Pendergrass Live after his accident?
After seven months, he died of respiratory failure on January 13, 2010, with his wife Joan by his side, at Bryn Mawr Hospital in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.
Who was the lead singer of Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes?
Who were the original Blue Notes?
Teddy Pendergra…Harold MelvinSharon PaigeLloyd ParksBernard WilsonDavid EboLead Vocals
Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes/Members
What note is the blue note?
b5
The Blue note is the Flat 5 (b5) Scale degree which sounds great in the blues, especially when mixed in with the Minor Pentatonic Scale.