Brooklyn-based RB group the Quinns formed on the grounds of the Brownsville Community Center in 1954 -- according to
Marv Goldberg's profile in the February 1998 issue of Discoveries, co-founders
Johnny Dusty Moye (second tenor),
Gerald Johnson (baritone), and
Leon McClain (bass) rotated through a series of leads before finally settling on tenors
Donald Lawrence and
Freddy Brown in mid-1956. Originally dubbed the Quintones, the group cut its teeth at local talent showcases prior to auditioning for Atco Records head
Herb Abramson, who extended a contract offer on the spot --
Abramson first assigned them to serve backing duties on blues legend
Jimmy Witherspoon's Still My Love, but in the weeks following the session it seemed the Quintones slipped through the cracks, and with no other recording opportunities on the horizon, they wriggled out of their Atco deal in the spring of 1957.
Moye left the lineup soon after, and after adding
Brown's brother
Richie as second tenor, the group renamed itself the Quinns to avoid conflict with a pair of rival acts recording under the Quintones banner.
On the advice of fellow Brooklyn act the Paragons, the Quinns approached Winley Records owner Paul Winley, and in the summer of 1957 cut their official debut release, Oh Starlight -- the record barely registered at radio or retail, although the quintet played supper clubs across New York City in support. When Lawrence found himself in hot water with the law in 1958, the remaining Quinns hired lead Francis Frenchie Concepcion as his replacement. Frustrated with their lack of success, McClain exited two years later to take a job as a postal carrier, and with new bass Henry Thomas, the group cut its final studio session in late 1960. Two songs from the date, Unfaithful and Who Stole the Cookies?, finally appeared on vinyl in 1965 via the Relic label -- by that time the Quinns were no more, although in 1974 Freddy and Richie Brown resurfaced as members of Final Touch, which issued the single It's Spinning Love on the Blue Thumb label. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi