In June 1952 the Top Notes signed to the Jubilee label to record their debut single, For Love of All -- a minor regional hit; it was followed that November by To Be Yours Forever. As the year drew to a close the Top Notes added vocalist Beulah Frazier, late of Beulah and the Mellow Fellows, in time for an extended headline run at Philadelphia's Red Rooster; in the spring of 1953 the group moved on to the nearby Chateau, soon releasing its third Jubilee single I'll Always Love You Some. I'm Still in Love With You was their final Jubilee effort, and here the Top Notes' story becomes murky -- while this iteration of the group continued performing throughout the northeastern U.S. through at least 1957, as of this writing it remains unknown whether there is any connection to another RB group called the Top Notes that signed to Atlantic in 1960. Featuring vocalists Derek Ray and Guy Howard, this lineup made its Atlantic debut with A Wonderful Time, soon followed by Say Man. In 1961, they released their reading of Bert Berns and Phil Medley's composition Twist and Shout -- although the record inspired the Isley Brothers to cut a cover version a year later, and the Beatles to wax their own definitive rendition a year after that, the original was not a hit and Atlantic terminated the Top Notes' contract. After two final singles -- 1962's Festival release Wait for Me Baby, and the following year's ABC-Paramount effort I Love You So Much -- the Top Notes finally faded from sight. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi