The Monotones (1957-1962)

February 21, 2022 
/ Contributed By: Anna Christian

The Monotones Album Cover

The Monotones Album Cover

The Monotones were a six-member American doo-wop group in the 1950s. Though they recorded other songs, they had only one hit single, “The Book of Love,” which reached No. 5 on the Billboard 100 chart in 1958.

The teenagers lived in Baxter Housing Project and attended high school in Newark, New Jersey. They sang in the choir at New Hope Baptist Church along with Dionne and Dee Dee Warwick. The choir director was Cissy Houston. In 1955, they formed the Monotones. The six members of the group consisted of: 17-year-old Charles Howard Patrick who sang lead; 16-year-old Warren Davis, first tenor; 15-year-old George Malone, second tenor; 17-year-old Frankie Smith, bass singer; 15-year-old John Ryanes, second bass singer and his older brother 18-year-old Warren Ryanes, baritone; Charles’s brother James, an original member, left soon after the group was formed. In 1956, inspired by the popular R&B artists of the day like the Heartbeats, the Spaniels, the Moonglows and the Cadillacs, the Monotones appeared on Ted Mack’s Original Amateur Hour and won first prize for their version of the Cadillacs’ single, “Zoom.”

The song “Book of Love” shortened from “Who Wrote the Book of Love” was written by Charles Patrick, Warren Davis, and George Malone. Recorded in 1957 by Ascot Records, the small record label was unable to keep up with distribution. Consequently, they sold the single to Chess Records, a subsidiary of Argon. The song became a hit in the US, Europe, and Australia. It peaked at No. 3 on the R&B Billboard Chart, No. 5 on the Pop Chart, No. 5 in Australia, and sold over one million copies. The group toured with Sam Cooke, Jackie Wilson, and Frankie Lymon among others, and appeared on stage at the Apollo Theatre in Harlem and on TV well into the 1960s.

The Monotones recorded a few follow-up songs, but none made the charts. They left Argo and signed with Hull Records; however, they had little success. As the original members left the group, they were replaced by Carl Foushee, Bernard Ransom, and Victor Hartsfield. Finally, the group disbanded in 1962 though the surviving members continued to perform. In the 1990s Malone and the Monotones got together to perform on the oldies circuit.

By 1972, the first of the original Monotones, John Ryanes, died in Newark, New Jersey at the age of 31. His brother, Warren Ryanes died in 1982 at age 45. That same year, Warren Davis died at age 43. Frankie Smith passed away in 2000 at age 62. George Malone, died in 2007 at age 67 in Phoenix, Arizona. The last member of the original Monotones, Charles Howard Patrick, died in 2020 at age 82. With the exception of Malone, the others all died in Newark, New Jersey.

The song “Book of Love” continued to be covered by 50 different artists including Doo Wop revivalist Sha Na Na and was used as the theme song for The Newlywed Game.

About the Author

Author Profile

Anna Christian was born in New York, but has spent most of her adult life in California. For over twenty years, she taught high school and community college in Los Angeles and Moreno Valley. Her first book, published in 1999, is titled Meet it, Greet it, and Defeat it! the Biography of Frances E. Williams, Actress/Activist. It was Mrs. Williams’s inspiring life and her motto, “Just Do It!” which motivated the author to keep this unsung hero’s memory alive.

Christian has since written and published six more books, Mrs. Griffin is Missing and Other Stories, The Newcomer, and Mr. Moore’s Menagerie, Bobby and Sonny Mystery for preteens; The Big Table, a children’s picture book; and two adult contemporary women’s fiction, Daniel’s Wife and Then Sings My Soul.

She has two biographical entries in the 2008 African American National Biography Project published by Oxford University Press; one of Frances E. Williams and one of Rupert Crosse, actor. And two articles in Black Past.org.

She has edited and published three anthologies, Aged to Perfection 1, 2, and 3, a collection of essays, short stories and poems written by the Moreno Valley Senior Scribes.

Christian is the recipient of the 1999 research and Status of Black Women in the Arts award from the Southern California Conference Branch, Women’s Missionary society of the AME Church. Presently she facilitates a Creative Writing/Life Story class at the Moreno Valley Senior Center.

She has traveled to several countries in Australia, Fiji, China, Spain, Africa, Mexico, Canada, Great Britain, France, Brazil, Cuba, Turkey, Greece and several Caribbean countries including Tobago, Antigua, Grand Bahama Island and the Virgin Islands.

Contact information – http://anachristian.com. and http://francesplace.org.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Christian, A. (2022, February 21). The Monotones (1957-1962). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/the-monotones-1957-1962/

Source of the Author's Information:

Bryan Thomas, The Monotones Biography, https://www.allmusic.com/artist/the-monotones-mn0000406898/biography; “The Monotones Page,” http://www.soulwalking.co.uk/Monotones.html; George Malone, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/22154127/george-malone; The Monotones Biography, https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2238297/.

Further Reading