In the fall of 1955, they hired Five Keys manager Fanny Wolff to oversee their career as well, and almost immediately she won the group a deal with RCA's Groove subsidiary, prompting one last name change to the Avalons. Just days before their first-ever recording session, Crawley's wife fell ill, so he was temporarily replaced by the Cues' Edward Barnes for the studio date -- although two songs were recorded, neither merited official release, and the Avalons returned to Canada in advance of their next session. This time Crawley assumed his rightful place and the gorgeous Chains Around My Heart was released in February 1956 -- It's Funny But It's True followed in October, but neither record was a hit and Groove terminated their contract. The Avalons again decamped to Canada, releasing You Are My Heart's Desire on the tiny Canuck label Sandryon in 1958; a more polished version of the song, abbreviated to simply Heart's Desire, appeared on Unart about six months after the group split in the spring of 1958. Another unreleased session yielded You Can Count on Me, released on Casino in early 1959. In the meantime, Crawley returned to Newport News and joined the Five Keys, while Purdie later signed on with the Platters. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi