|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Mary Weiss

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (6 ratings)
  • Born: Queens, NY
  • Years Active: 1960s, 2000s

Albums

Biography All Music GuideWikipedia

All Music Guide:

Mary Weiss was just a teenager when she recorded some of the most iconic singles of the 1960s as a member of the legendary girl group the Shangri-Las, but it was nearly four decades after their run of hits had come to a close that Weiss launched a solo career, making one of the most talked-about comebacks of 2007. The Shangri-Las were famous as the "tough girls" of the '60s pop scene, and Weiss came by her tough side honestly; born in Queens, NY, in 1948, Weiss' father passed away when she was only six weeks old, and her mother struggled to support the family working odd jobs. While growing up, Weiss developed a passion for music and discovered she loved to sing. In 1963, she formed a vocal group with two of her friends, twins Mary Ann Ganser and Marguerite Ganser (aka Marge Ganser), who she'd known since grammar school. Weiss handled the lion's share of the lead vocals, and after playing the usual rounds of high school dances and talent shows, they caught the attention of Artie Ripp, a producer who signed them to record deal.

The Shangri-Las made their recorded debut in late 1963 with a single on Smash, "Simon Says," but the record was a flop, and their second 45, "Wishing Well," appeared on the tiny Spokane Records label. However, the Shangri-Las' luck took a turn for the better in 1964, when they were signed to Red Bird Records, a label run by legendary record man George Goldner and ace songwriters Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller. Red Bird paired the Shangri-Las with producer and songwriter Shadow Morton, who created a masterpiece of teenage melodrama for the group, "Remember (Walking in the Sand)." The single was a major hit, and the follow-up, a tale of one girl's doomed love with a sensitive biker called "Leader of the Pack," was even bigger, leading to a string of teen tragedy discs produced by Morton that kept the Shangri-Las on the charts and on the road for most of the next two years. (Mary's sister Betty Weiss also sang with the group on-stage and in the studio once they became successful.) However, in mid-1966 Red Bird went out of business, and the Shangri-Las signed with Mercury.

Despite Mercury's greater promotional muscle, the two singles they cut for the label in 1967 came and went without notice, and their only album for Mercury found them re-recording their old Red Bird hits. In 1968, the Shangri-Las called it quits in the wake of legal problems resulting from bad contracts, and Mary Ann Ganser died in 1971. The Shangri-Las briefly reunited in 1977 -- featuring Mary Weiss, Betty Weiss, and Marge Ganser -- and cut an album for Sire Records (Sire prexy Seymour Stein was briefly the group's road manager back in the day), with Andy Paley producing. The Shangri-Las even played a one-off gig at punk shrine CBGB, but Stein and the Shangri-Las were unhappy with the finished album, and it was never released. The group made infrequent appearances on the oldies circuit, and performed together for the last time in 1989, though this didn't stop a group of impostors from touring using the name the Shangri-Las, forcing Weiss and her bandmates to turn to the courts to stop them.

By this time, Weiss had married and after working as a secretary for an architectural firm entered into a successful career doing interior design and commercial furniture installation; by her own word, she didn't even sing around the house for the better part of 20 years. However, in 2006 Weiss got the itch to make music again, and after meeting longtime fan Billy Miller of Norton Records, she agreed to cut a new record for the label. In the spring of 2007, Weiss released her first solo album, Dangerous Game, produced by Miller and Greg Cartwright (the latter of the group the Reigning Sound, who also backed up Weiss on most of the tracks and helped write the tunes), and she began making the rounds of radio and television shows promoting the record, sounding strong and enthusiastic despite her long layoff.

Wikipedia:

Mary Weiss, born on December 28, 1948 in Queens, New York, found fame in the 1960s as the lead singer of The Shangri-Las. She then vanished from the music scene for decades, returning in 2007 to record her first solo album with Norton Records.

Growing up in Queens, Mary, her older sister Elizabeth and her older brother George lived in Cambria Heights, where Mary sang in school plays and church choirs. She listened to her brother and his friends perform popular songs of the day; George was an Elvis Presley fan. Mary appreciated such performers as Neil Sedaka and the Everly Brothers; she attended her first concert of the Everly Brothers in 1963.

Early recordings [edit]

After Mary, Betty, Mary Ann and Margie became good friends in grammar school, they sang at local dances and hops. That brought them to the attention of local producer Artie Ripp, who later signed them on to Kama Sutra Productions. After recording demos and making it to the Brill Building in 1964 (and signing with Red Bird Records), they recorded songs: "Remember (Walking in the Sand)", which was their first hit, and "Leader of the Pack", which went to #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 charts in 1964.

With their growing popularity, the Shangri-Las became a leading girl group in the 1960s. After several years of the grind, they split in 1968 and went their separate ways. Mary went to San Francisco to try a different lifestyle. She later came back to New York and occasionally gave shows with the Shangri-Las during the 1970s which led to a comeback attempt with Sire Records in 1977. In 1989, the Shangri-Las reunited one last time for a concert in Palisades Park, New Jersey.

New career [edit]

Mary took a job as purchasing agent in Manhattan, as she recalled, "I went to work for an architectural firm, and I was seriously into it. Then I got into commercial interiors, huge projects, buildings."

Going solo [edit]

In 2005, Mary left her job in Commercial Interiors to get back to music. In March 2007, Norton Records released Dangerous Game, a critically acclaimed solo album, on which she is backed by The Reigning Sound. She has been performing in the United States, Spain and France and is working on a new album.

more »

eMusic Features

0

The Groups of Girl

By Lenny Kaye, eMusic Contributor

It was a moment of perfect chanteusic convergence: These songs and those who sang them, those who produced them and, most important, those who would hear them late at night on a car radio where there was only the AM dial to light the lover's lane. Three wishes of attraction, infatuation and eternal belief in the power of adoration to conquer all, captured in the three minutes of the classic pop single. A soaring chorus, a… more »