Bobby Sheen (May 17, 1941 – November 23, 2000) was an American rhythm and blues singer. Though he made a handful of records under his given name, singer Bobby Sheen was far better known to audiences as Bob B. Soxx, the nominal leader of the Blue Jeans, themselves a studio creation of the legendary pop producer and svengali Phil Spector.
Born Robert Joseph Sheen in St. Louis, Missouri, Sheen was
raised
in West Hollywood, CA. A tall young man who dressed his hair in a
fashionable pompadour, he sang in a high voice heavily influenced by Clyde
McPhatter, who was the Drifters' first important lead singer in the early 50s.
Sheen recorded with Robins, The Ding Dongs, and the Loveables before
making his solo debut with the Liberty Records single "How Many Nights." In 1962, Sheen hooked up with Spector through a recommendation from
Lester Sill, a prominent Hollywood music business figure who had just gone into
partnership with the 21-year-old producer to form the Philles label.
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The Ding Dongs |
Spector was also briefly employed as head of A & R for
Liberty Records, and his first venture with Sheen was a single for that label
titled 'How Many Days', a copy of McPhatter's solo records, recorded in New York.
A few months later Spector moved his recording operation to Los Angeles, where
he booked time at a studio, Gold Star, located at the corner of Santa Monica
Boulevard and Vine Street. The site of many hit recordings, Gold Star was noted
for its exceptionally resonant echo chamber, located in the bathroom. It also
employed a young engineer, Larry Levine, who was eager to collaborate in
Spector's more unorthodox notions. Their first session together produced 'He's
A Rebel', released under the name of the Crystals, even though all the singing
was done by session singers - one of whom was Sheen.
It was at a second Gold Star session, in the autumn of 1962,
that Sheen found himself singing the lead part on a version of
'Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah', a children's song from a 1940 Walt Disney film, 'Song of the
South', which Spector had re-styled. At the session,
Spector had assembled
three guitarists, three bass players, at least two pianists, four saxophonists,
a drummer and a percussionist. Levine spent almost three hours trying vainly to
capture the correct sound balance on the studio's primitive three-track
desk. In frustration, he turned off all
the microphones. One by one he turned them back on, until Spector shouted:
'That's it! That's the sound!'

However, one microphone had been inadvertently left off, and
the distant, metallic sound of Billy Strange's electric guitar solo leaking
into the microphones of the other musicians became the signature. A top 10 hit
over the Christmas of 1962, it helped prepare the way for the records by the
Crystals and the Ronettes which established Philles as the last great
phenomenon before the arrival of the Beatles ended pop's age of innocence.


He would later join Bobby Nunn's group of The Coasters and
recorded an album with the group called Coasting in 1979, which was released on
Sheen's own record label, Salsa Picante Records. When Bobby Nunn died in 1986,
Nunn's group of The Coasters still toured with Sheen and Billy Richards, Jr. as
members.
Sheen died of pneumonia in Los Angeles, California on November 23, 2000, at the age of 59. His son Charles has become the custodian of his father’s legacy.
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Bobby Nunn´s Coasters in Germany 1982
(Nunn, Richards, Sheen; and top left unknown).
|
Sheen died of pneumonia in Los Angeles, California on November 23, 2000, at the age of 59. His son Charles has become the custodian of his father’s legacy.
(Edited from Soulwalking
& AllMusic)