Seals and Crofts

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Seals and Crofts are Jim Seals (born James Seals, 17 October 1941, Sidney, Texas) and Dash Crofts (born Darrell Crofts, 14 August 1940, Cisco, Texas), a popular soft rock duo in the early 1970s, best-known for their hits "Summer Breeze" and "Diamond Girl." They were also the most famous Bahá'ís of 1970s in the United States. Seals' younger brother, Dan Seals is also well known as one half of the successful soft rock band in the same time period, England Dan and John Ford Coley.

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[edit] Career

Jim Seals and Dash Crofts were both born in Texas. They first met when Crofts was a drummer for a local band. Later, Seals joined a band called Dean Beard and the Crew Cuts where he played guitar; later on Crofts joined the band. With Beard, they moved to Los Angeles to join The Champs. In 1958, Seals and Crofts toured with The Champs.

In 1962, Jimmy Seals, Dash Crofts, Glen Campbell, and Jerry Cole left The Champs to form a band named "Glen Campbell and the GCs" which played at The Crossbow in Van Nuys, CA. The band only lasted a couple of years before the members went their separate ways. Crofts returned to Texas and Seals joined a band named The Dawnbreakers (a reference to a book by the same name). Crofts eventually returned to California to join The Dawnbreakers. However, The Dawnbreakers turned out to be unsuccessful. Crofts married fellow Dawnbreaker Billie Lee Day in 1969, and both Seals and Crofts were introduced and became members of the Bahá'í Faith.

After the failure with The Dawnbreakers, the two decided to play as a duo, with Seals on guitar, saxophone and violin, and Crofts on guitar and mandolin. They signed a contract with Talent Associates and released two LPs, which were largely ignored. The pair signed a new contract with Warner Bros. Records in 1971. Their first album with their new label was also unsuccessful, but their second album, Summer Breeze charted at #7 in 1972.

After a long and successful run of recordings in the 1970s, the two lost their contract with Warner Brothers and set aside music for a while. They held a short reunion tour in 1991–1992 and appeared at several Bahá'í gatherings. Crofts lived in Mexico, Australia and then Nashville, playing country music and making occasional hit singles. Seals moved to Costa Rica and has lived on a coffee farm since 1980.

In 2003, Seals and Crofts reunited and recorded a new album (Traces) for the first time since 1998.

[edit] Discography

[edit] Albums

[edit] Singles

  • "Summer Breeze", 1972, charted at #6 Pop / #4 AC
  • "Hummingbird", 1972, #20 Pop / #12 AC
  • "Diamond Girl", 1973, #6 Pop / #4 AC
  • "We May Never Pass This Way (Again)", 1973, #21 Pop / #2 AC
  • "Unborn Child", 1974, #66 Pop
  • "King Of Nothing", 1974, #60 Pop / #26 AC
  • "I'll Play For You", 1975, #18 Pop / #4 AC
  • "Castles In The Sand", 1975, #21 AC
  • "Baby, I'll Give It To You", 1976, #58 Pop / #14 AC
  • "Get Closer" (featuring Carolyn Willis of Honey Cone), 1976, #6 Pop / #2 AC
  • "Goodbye Old Buddies", 1977, #10 AC
  • "My Fair Share" (from the Robby Benson movie "One on One"), 1977, #28 Pop / #11 AC
  • "You're the Love", 1978, #18 Pop / #2 AC
  • "Takin' It Easy", 1978, #79 Pop
  • "First Love", 1980, #37 AC

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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