Thomas Alva Edison certainly doesn't need credits as a record company A&R rep to have made history, but it was his decision to put out sides by the pair on his fledgling Edison recording enterprise. Soon the hits rolled, including In the Little Red School House, Mr. Gallagher and Mr. Shean, and Barney Google. Rising to the ranks of the most highly compensated people in radio to open their mouths and let a song ring forth, Hare was pulling in a big $1,250 a week. It was a lot more than he had pulled in back in 1919 and 1920 when he was Al Jolson's understudy in +Sinbad. Hare's career continued taking twists and turns through various vocal groups such as the Crescent Trio and the Premier Quartet, in which he replaced Billy Murray. On his own, Hare recorded under a mind-boggling list of pseudonyms. Records by Bob Thomas, Wallace Daniels, Arthur Grant, Henry Jones, Robert Judson, Walter Lang, Walter Leslie, Roy Roberts, Bob Thompson, Hobo Jack Turner, and Frank Mann are actually just a little bit of the Hare off the dog that bit the recording stylus. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, Rovi