Larry Hall (born Lawrence Kendall Hall; June 30, 1940 –
September 24, 1997) was an American singer mostly known for his one-hit wonder
song called "Sandy" in 1959. The disc reached #15 on the Billboard
Hot 100 chart.
Hall was born in Hamlett, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati,
Ohio to Woodrow Burney Hall and Toto Sophia Sizemore Hall. He attended Rancho
Alamitos High School, Garden Grove California in the late 50's.
Hall first attracted attention as a teen when he won a
local talent contest sponsored by country music legend Cliffie Stone. Soon
after, he was approached by songwriter Terry Fell (the author of the country
classic "Truck Driving Man") with the offer to cut a single for
Fell's fledgling Hot Records label.
Fell paid Hall all of 50 dollars to record
"Sandy," recording the track on hand-me-down equipment acquired from
legendary guitarist Les Paul. Hall and his mother drove to record stations
across the U.S., imploring programming directors to add the single to their
radio playlists, but it did not catch fire until the New York City-based Strand
label licensed the song for national distribution, purchasing Hall's contract
in the process.
The re-released "Sandy" hit radio in the fall
of 1959, peaking at number 15 the week ending January 4, 1960. The follow-up
"Rosemary" earned little attention, and is arguably more notable for
its flip side, "A Girl Like You," an early effort from composer Burt
Bacharach.
Hall appeared on the favourite dance show, American Band
Stand in late 1959 and was seen out with a variety of female singers.
Strand spared no expense in its attempts to galvanize
Hall's career, hiring famed producer Jimmie Haskell to helm the majority of the
singer's lone LP, Sandy and Other Larry Hall Hits, but he never again returned
to the charts, cutting a handful of additional singles for Gold Leaf before
exiting show business for good.
He married Sharon Lee Hattensty in 1961 and moved to
Pedee Oregon in 1967. They later divorced. They had three children, Jennifer,
Toto, and Larry Jnr.
He became involved with Barbara Gambetti after his
divorce and they had a son, Jesse born in 1977. He and his family lived in
Pedee, Oregon, as a gentleman farmer of a 120-acre (0.49 km2) ranch called the
Circle H Ranch for the remainder of his life.
He also sang for the rest of his life, joined by his
brother Gene at various night clubs in the Willamette Valley and on the Oregon
coast, and was often noted in the 'Magpie', a local musical news tabloid
published in Salem, Oregon.
Hall continued to sing and play guitar until his death
from cancer on September 24, 1997. He died in Oregon at the age of 57. (Info edited from Wikipedia & All Music)