About Bob Kuban & The In-Men
Formed
1965
Genre
Pop
This eight-piece rock & roll band came from St. Louis, Missouri. The members were Bob Kuban (born August 1940, St. Louis, Missouri; drums), Walter Scott (born Walter S. Notheis, Jr., February 7, 1943; lead vocals), John Michael Krenski (bass), Greg Hoeltzel (keyboards), Roy Schult (guitar), Skip Weisser (trombone), Harry Simon (saxophone), and Pat Hixon (trumpet). Bob Kuban and the In-Men were a classic one-hit-wonder Top 40 group, with "The Cheater," which reached number 12 in the U.S. pop charts in 1966. Also in 1966, the group scraped the bottom of the charts with two follow-ups, "The Tease" (number 70) and a cover of the Beatles' "Drive My Car" (number 93). "The Cheater" had something of a blue-eyed soul flavor with the vibrant horn arrangements and Scott's gutsy vocal approach. The In-Men were formed in 1964 and made their first record in 1965. Scott left the group in 1967. He had planned to rejoin the band in 1983, but he was murdered by his wife and her lover, which rendered ironical his success with "The Cheater" and its hook line "look out for the cheater." Kuban continued to perform in St. Louis for weddings and other social affairs with his band the Bob Kuban Brass. Kuban died on January 20, 2025, at the age of 84. ~ TiVo Staff
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