Are they the pop group of “Sh-Boom” fame or a different bunch of Crew-Cuts?
– Kevin Dunbar, Evansville, Ind. A. They are the same Crew-Cuts. And if you think they found an improbable label for their music, imagine how discomfited they must have been sporting those crew cuts in a Beatles-haircut era. That 1964 single is in fact a Beatles spoof, titled “Yea, Yea, She Wants Me” (Chess 1892). The Crew-Cuts broke up the same year. Q.In the 1970s, there was a popular song about a football player of limited skills who never got to play in the school’s games. Although he didn’t leave his team’s bench, his blind father attended every game in hopes his son would one day get in the game. Finally, due to many injuries to the starters, the coach puts the boy in the game. But, for the first time, the boy notices his dad is not in his usual place in the stands. He then learns of his father’s death, meaning he never lived long enough to “see” his son play. What is the name of this song? Who sang it? – Steve Teichert, Matthews, N.C. A. Each question has two answers, and the ve
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