Biography of The Chantels
One of the very first girl groups, the Chantels are best-known for their 1957 hit "Maybe." Between 1957 and 1963, the trio racked up a number of hit singles, but none of them were ever as popular as "Maybe," which came to be regarded as one of the definitive singles of the genre. All five members of the Chantels -- Arlene Smith, Lois Harris, Sonia Goring, Jackie Landry, and Rene Minus -- met as children, when they sang in the choir of Saint Anthony of Padua, a Bronx-area school. Arlene Smith was the leader of the quintet, who took their name from the name of a rival school, Saint Francis de Chantelle School. Smith wrote all of the group's early material and she was the one who convinced the other girls -- whose age ranged between 14 and 17 at the time -- to audition for Richard Barrett, a record producer and a member of the doo-wop group the Valentines. Barrett signed the band to End Records and produced the Chantels' first single, a Smith song called "He's Gone." Released in the summer of 1957, the single scraped the charts, peaking at number 71. However, the group's second single -- another Smith composition called "Maybe" -- was a smash hit, peaking at number two on the R&B charts and number 15 on the pop charts in early 1958. "Maybe" sold more copies than its chart position suggests -- the single was pirated by several other small record labels and none of those sales were tallied for the final chart position. Taking into account the sales from all the labels the single appeared on, "Maybe" sold over a million copies. For the next year, the Chantels tried in vain to deliver a follow-up as successful as "Maybe." Two hit singles -- "Every Night (I Pray)" (number 29 pop and number 16 R&B, spring of 1958) and "I Love You So" (number 42 pop and number 14 R&B, summer of 1958) -- followed on End Records, but the label dropped them after a handful of other records failed to make an impact. Around that time time, Smith left the group to pursue a solo career (her initial solo recordings were produced by Phil Spector) and Harris had left the group. The Chantels didn't replace either singer and continued as a trio.In the summer of 1959, the group supported Richard Barrett on his single, "Summer's Love," which peaked at number 29 on the R&B charts. In 1961, the Chantels signed with Carlton Records, where they had two minor pop hits: "Look In My Eyes" (number 14) and "Well, I Told You" (number 29). Carlton dropped the group the following year and the band moved to Ludix, where they had a minor hit with "Eternally" in the spring of 1963.The Chantels continued performing until the end of the decade; they officially disbanded in 1970. A few years later, Arlene Smith -- who attended the Julliard School of Music during the '60s -- re-formed the Chantels, recruiting four new members; the other original members all retired from the entertainment business. Smith continued to lead various incarnations of the Chantels into the '90s. When she wasn't touring the oldies circuit with the Chantels, Smith worked as a schoolteacher. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine