LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jim Pike, co-founder and lead singer of The Lettermen, has died at age 82.
He was died from complications of Parkinson’s Disease. Pike and Bob Engemann, a college buddy from Brigham Young University, formed The Lettermen in Los Angeles in 1961 with fellow singer Tony Butala.
They were looking for a name that would resonate with young people, Pike’s younger brother, Gary, said Wednesday, when Engemann suggested The Lettermen. Butala noted that he’d briefly sung with a group using that name and he’d have to ask its leader for permission.
Tony called him up and he said he wasn’t using it, so they said, ’Yay. We’re going to use it,” Gary Pike recalled with a laugh.
Later that year the group had its first hit with the Grammy-nominated “The Way You Look Tonight,” which peaked at No. 13 on Billboard’s Hot 100.
The Lettermen would place 19 more songs on Billboard charts over the next 10 years.
Two made the Top 10, 1962′s “When I Fall in Love” and the Grammy-nominated 1968 medley “Goin’ Out of My Head/Can’t Take My Eyes Off Of You.” Their last hit was 1971′s “Everything is Good About You.”
The Lettermen also earned Grammy nominations for best new artist of 1961 and for 1962′s “A Song For Young Love.”
(Agencies)
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