Ronny & The Daytonas

G.T.O. Best Of The Mala Recordings

Ronny & The Daytonas

20 SONGS • 47 MINUTES • NOV 26 1964

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
G.T.O.
02:29
2
California Bound
02:15
3
Bucket T
02:37
4
Hot Rod City
02:03
5
Hey Little Girl
02:13
6
Little Rail Job
02:16
7
Antique '32 Studebaker Dictator Coupe
02:03
8
Little Scrambler
01:50
9
No Wheels
01:45
10
Beach Boy
02:03
11
Tiger-a-Go-Go
01:56
12
Sandy
02:45
13
I'll Think of Summer
02:56
14
If I Had My Way
02:55
15
When Stars Shine Bright
02:42
16
Nanci
03:12
17
Then the Rains Came
02:40
18
Somebody to Love Me
02:32
19
Goodbye Baby
02:18
20
Teenage Years
02:24
(P) 2005 Arista Records LLC

Artist bios

Nashville's greatest contribution to the hot rod and surfing craze of the early '60s came in the form of Ronny & the Daytonas. Centered around singer-guitarist-songwriter John "Bucky" Wilkin (son of country tunesmith Marijohn Wilkin, best known for composing "Long Black Veil" and "One Day at a Time"), their big moment in the sun came with their debut disc, the Wilkin-penned "G.T.O." After writing the song in physics class as a senior in high school, Wilkin's mom pulled a few strings, landed him a publishing deal, and had a session set up with Nashville producer (and former Sun session man) Bill Justis. Justis cut the tune with various Nashville session players who had a feel for rock & roll and instructed Bucky to come up with a group name to put on the record. Wilkin became Ronny Dayton with the anonymous backing group becoming the Daytonas. The record sprang to number four on the national charts, and an album was cut in two weeks using more or less the same personnel. Wilkin seems to have cared little about playing live and, after a short time fronting a thrown-together combo for selected dates (including a USO tour), simply put together a phantom group to go out and honor tour commitments. After the USO tour, Buzz Cason joined the group, becoming Wilkin's main writing partner. A shift away from the Beach Boys-styled hot rod and surf tunes came with the group's second hit, the ballad "Sandy." Another album, exploring the ballad side of the band, was recorded in Germany with Cason and various session players, including a full string section, then an innovative idea for a rock & roll record. The hits soon dried up, however, and the band moved on to RCA Victor with some success before Wilkin left to pursue a solo career with albums on United Artists and Liberty. He remains active today on the oldies circuit. ~ Cub Koda

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