1957 - Willie "Ricky" Stokes, Gene Hawkins, Bobby Jackson, Arthur "Boxy" Williams & Robert McGhee
The Magic-Tones (1) (Baltimore, D.C.)
Personnel :
Joe "Rico" Reed (Lead)
Arthur "Boxy" Williams (First Tenor)
James Williams Bbaritone)
Willie "Ricky" Stokes (Bass)
Gene Hawkins (Second Tenor/Guitar)
Discography :
The Magic-Tones were among the myriad Baltimore/D.C. doo wop outfits to emerge in the wake of local heroes and R&B icons the Orioles. According to the profile at Marv Goldberg's R&B Notebooks website, lead tenor Joe "Rice" Reed, first tenor Arthur "Boxy" Williams, second tenor/guitarist Gene Hawkins, and bass Willie Stokes formed the group in Baltimore in 1951. Originally dubbed the Five Kings, they briefly performed as the Dreamers before settling on the Magic-Tones.
After becoming a staple of the Baltimore club circuit, the quartet in 1952 signed a management deal with Bill Robertson and Homer Murray, fresh off their success negotiating an Atlantic Records deal for local act the Tilters -- Robertson and Murray also bequeathed the Magic-Tones a clutch of original songs, among them "When I Kneel Down to Pray," which served as the A-side of the group's 1953 King label debut. "How Can You Treat Me This Way?" followed a few months later, and when neither disc garnered much attention at radio, King halted plans for a third session.