• Get the app
  • Concerts
  • Charts
  • Radio Spins
  • Fast Forward 2025
  • Download Shazam
  • Apps
  • Concerts
  • Charts
  • Radio Spins
  • Fast Forward 2025
  • Help
Listen to The Serendipity Singers, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!

The Serendipity Singers

Contemporary Folk

View Artist

Top Songs By The Serendipity Singers

Listen to Don't Let the Rain Come Down (Crooked Little Man) by The Serendipity Singers, see lyrics, music video & more!
Don't Let the Rain Come Down (Crooked Little Man)The Serendipity Singers
Listen to Beans In My Ears by The Serendipity Singers, see lyrics, music video & more!
Beans In My EarsThe Serendipity Singers
Listen to Jimmy-O by The Serendipity Singers, see lyrics, music video & more!
Jimmy-OThe Serendipity Singers
Listen to Cloudy Summer Afternoon by The Serendipity Singers, see lyrics, music video & more!
Cloudy Summer AfternoonThe Serendipity Singers
Listen to Freedom's Star by The Serendipity Singers, see lyrics, music video & more!
Freedom's StarThe Serendipity Singers
Listen to Don't Let the Rain Come Down (Crooked Little Man) [Re-Recorded] by The Serendipity Singers, see lyrics, music video & more!
Don't Let the Rain Come Down (Crooked Little Man) [Re-Recorded]The Serendipity Singers
Listen to Let Me Fly (Zion) by The Serendipity Singers, see lyrics, music video & more!
Let Me Fly (Zion)The Serendipity Singers
Listen to Little Brown Jug by The Serendipity Singers, see lyrics, music video & more!
Little Brown JugThe Serendipity Singers
Listen to Whale of a Tale by The Serendipity Singers, see lyrics, music video & more!
Whale of a TaleThe Serendipity Singers
Listen to Six Wheel Driver (Sunshine Special) by The Serendipity Singers, see lyrics, music video & more!
Six Wheel Driver (Sunshine Special)The Serendipity Singers

Latest Release

Listen to Everybody Loves Saturday Night / Beans in My Ears - Single by The Serendipity Singers
ALBUMEverybody Loves Saturday Night / Beans in My Ears - SingleThe Serendipity Singers

The Serendipity Singers's Popular Music Videos

Watch Every Time I Feel The Spirit (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, December 27, 1964) music video by The Serendipity Singers
Every Time I Feel The Spirit (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, December 27, 1964)
The Serendipity Singers
Watch Hi-Lili, Hi-Lo (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, December 27, 1964) music video by Leslie Uggams & The Serendipity Singers
Hi-Lili, Hi-Lo (Live On The Ed Sullivan Show, December 27, 1964)
Leslie Uggams & The Serendipity Singers

About The Serendipity Singers

Listen to The Serendipity Singers, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
Hometown
Boulder, CO, United States
Formed
1963
Genre
Contemporary Folk
Anyone who thought that Randy Sparks' New Christy Minstrels represented the most well-scrubbed element of the folk revival never reckoned with the Serendipity Singers. This mixed-voice nonet, founded at the University of Colorado by Mike Brovsky, H. Brooks Hatch, and Bryan Sennett, made Sparks' group look like a raw blues band by comparison. They sang magnificently, however, and did sell records; and, like the Christys, in a distantly related form, the name Serendipity Singers is attached to an ensemble that has continued to perform into the 21st century. Sennett founded the group as a trio with Brovsky and Hatch, and they proved popular at the University of Colorado in Boulder, where they were based. By 1963, however, Sennett was inspired to expand the group, partly through the influence of the New Christy Minstrels, who were making a serious name for themselves performing and had released a huge hit that summer and fall called "Green, Green." They added John Madden, a virtuoso on several instruments, guitarist Jon Arbenz, and bassist Bob Young, and Lynne Weintraub came aboard to add a female voice to the ensemble, now a septet. The group moved to New York in the spring of 1963, hoping to land a recording contract, and expanded yet again with the addition of Texas-born folksingers Diane Decker and Tommy Tiemann, who had been performing together as a duo and were already veterans of The Arthur Godfrey Show on television. The nonet, as they were now, performed at the Bitter End, then one of the top clubs in New York's Greenwich Village, and gained the management expertise of its two owners, Fred Weintraub and Bob Bowers. They didn't land a recording contract immediately, but they did pass an audition to appear on Hootenanny, the weekly ABC-TV folk music showcase, where they appeared several times that season, billing themselves as the Serendipity Singers as a reflection of their good luck. Next followed a recording contract with Philips Records, which already had one successful British folk ensemble, the Springfields, on their roster (and which they were about to lose when Dusty Springfield announced her exit). Their debut album, The Serendipity Singers, was a nicely crafted and broad selection of folk and folk-based music, embracing traditional songs and themes and originals based on traditional material by the group members (principally Sennett and Madden with contributions from Hatch and Tiemann) and co-producer and co-manager Bob Bowers. The album was smoother and more diverse than the contemporary work of the New Christy Minstrels and it yielded a number six Billboard hit in the guise of "Don't Let the Rain Come Down (Crooked Little Man)." Propelled by the single's popularity, The Serendipity Singers LP rode the Billboard album chart for 29 weeks in 1964. The Serendipity Singers as a group had a bigger-voiced approach to singing than the Christys, and they featured fewer of the individual members on their songs, at least on record. They were in many ways closer to the Seekers than to the Christys and, in some respects, the group was already in a place that the Christys would be heading in another couple of years, for their repertory included far more than folk material. The Serendipity Singers also rearranged pop standards for six voices and included contemporary Broadway and off-Broadway songs in their sets and on their albums. They broke on the charts just in time, as the folk boom was peaking and the British Invasion was about to sweep a lot of the music landscape before it. A second single, the novelty song "Beans in My Ears," written by Len Chandler, reached the Top 30, and a second album, The Many Sides of the Serendipity Singers, seemed to acknowledged the reality that folk music had lost some of its commercial appeal. Bob Dylan had begun making electric music and took a lot of the younger and more energetic folk listeners with him, and among the artists that he'd come up with, only Joan Baez, Judy Collins, and Peter, Paul & Mary continued to score hits, mostly by modifying their respective sounds. For acts like the Christys and the Serendipity Singers, there was no further significant chart activity, perhaps because their massed vocal sound, fine as it could be arranged, seemed relentlessly upbeat and contrived at a point when the most active part of the folk audience wanted the music to reflect more raw emotion, particularly anger. Included among the second album's 12 songs were gospel and popular songs, off-Broadway material ("Soon It's Gonna Rain" by Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt of The Fantasticks), and even material drawn from Hollywood, in an effort to broaden their listenership. Their third album, Take Your Shoes Off With the Serendipity Singers, charted in early 1965 and the group's bookings on college campuses and in clubs were still very solid, though their days of charting singles were over. Philips released a fourth LP, We Belong Together, that had more of a pop sound and also introduced new member Patty Davis, succeeding Lynne Weintraub. A fifth long-player, The Serendipity Singers Sing of Love, Lies and Flying Festoons, closed out their contract late in 1965. Two years later, the group made its final appearance on vinyl with a one-shot album for the United Artists label with Love Is a State of Mind. The last original members were gone by the end of the 1960s. The Serendipity Singers have continued as a pure commercial enterprise into the 1990s and beyond, however, with a new membership under the aegis of a new manager/owner, performing on cruise ships, at trade shows, and on infomercials and sometimes in association with various religious organizations. In August of 1999, eight of the original nine members of the Serendipity Singers played a reunion concert in Branson, MO, their first performance together by all of the original members since 1966. And in the spring of 2000, Collectables Records released a two-on-one CD reissue of the group's first two Philips albums from 1964.~ Bruce Eder

Similar to: The Serendipity Singers

Discover more music and artists similar to The Serendipity Singers, like The New Christy Minstrels, The Chad Mitchell Trio, The Rooftop Singers
Listen to The New Christy Minstrels, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
The New Christy Minstrels
Listen to The Chad Mitchell Trio, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
The Chad Mitchell Trio
Listen to The Rooftop Singers, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
The Rooftop Singers
Glenn Yarbrough & The Limeliters
Olympics
Listen to Glenn Yarbrough, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
Glenn Yarbrough
Listen to The Highwaymen, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
The Highwaymen
Listen to The Mitchell Trio, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
The Mitchell Trio
Listen to The Kingston Trio, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
The Kingston Trio
Listen to The Limeliters, watch music videos, read bio, see tour dates & more!
The Limeliters

Shazam Footer

Select language:

Company

  • About Us
  • Apps
  • Careers
  • Help for Apple Devices
  • Help for Android Devices
  • ShazamKit for Developers

Legal

  • Terms
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Your Data
  • My Library
Google Play Store
Apple App Store
Chrome Web Store
Galaxy Store

Follow Us

© Copyright 2025 Apple Inc. and its affiliates | Supplier Responsibility
instagramSharePathic_arrow_out
Members of The Serendipity Singers include, or have included, Bob Young, Gamble Rogers, John Madden, Nick Holmes, and Patty Davis.