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Summer Song Favorites: 'Ting-A-Ling'

NPR's Melissa Block has been asking musicians about songs that conjure up memories of summer. For legendary New Orleans singer Aaron Neville, that song is "Ting-a-Ling," by the rhythm-and-blues group The Clovers.

Neville says he used to harmonize to the doo-wop group's record together with his brothers.

"I didn't know anything about love or nothing like that," Neville says. "I was still a little boy. But this song was cool."

At the Calliope housing project in New Orleans, where Neville grew up, there was a big oval parkway with benches. Kids would skate and ride bicycles. Neville and his brothers would sit out on the benches and sing.

"For me, I didn't care what else was happening in the world, as long as I could sing along with these doo-wop guys," Neville says. "It was like medicine to me. It made everything all right."

"Ting-A-Ling" was released in June of 1952 and spent the summer working its way to Number 1 on the Billboard R&B Chart. It was the last number one hit by The Clovers, a wildly popular vocal group from Washington, D.C. Music historian Marv Goldberg argues that The Clovers were the most popular group of the early 1950s.

Aaron Neville was eleven years old when he heard the song. One of his older brothers' friends invited him to sing along.

"He used to call me Kevin for some reason," says Neville. "He'd say come here, Kevin, you hit this note. So, they started letting me sing on a lot of stuff and it's history from there."

The last surviving original member of the Clovers, Harold Winley, tells NPR that "Ting-a-Ling" was one of many Clovers hits credited to a songwriter known as "Nugetre". Try spelling that backwards. It was a pen-name belonging to none other than the co-founder of Atlantic Records, Ahmet Ertegun. Winley says the pen name was a joke. "He'd laugh at it," Winley says. "Nugetre! Yeah! That's me."

Need more summertime songs? NPR's music series It's Time to Party features five-song playlists that celebrate the season every Wednesday.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Federal funding is gone.

Congress has eliminated all funding for public media.

That means $2.1 million per year that Connecticut Public relied on to deliver you news, information, and entertainment programs you enjoyed is gone.

The future of public media is in your hands.

All donations are appreciated, but we ask in this moment you consider starting a monthly gift as a Sustainer to help replace what’s been lost.