Then without warning, second tenor Bill Gains ran off to Canada with a woman and hasn't been seen nor heard from since. This occurred while the Genies were playing their first big engagement at New York's Apollo Theater; three days into the gig, and poof -- Gains vanished. The Genies answered their debut with No More Knockin' on Hollywood Records, then the Warwick label released three singles after the group became history: There Goes That Train b/w Crazy Love, Just Like the Bluebird b/w Twistin' Pneumonia, and the best Crazy Feeling, in 1961. By the end of 1959, the Genies were a memory. Hammond cut a string of solo records as Roy C, his biggest was Shotgun Wedding, a number 14 RB hit. Claude hooked with Roland Trone and enjoyed a monster number seven pop hit with What's Your Name as Don Juan. Johnson also became a songwriter of note, composing the Genies' debut, the Don Juan hit, and 57 other titles registered with B.M.I. ~ Andrew Hamilton, Rovi