The group had a distinctive, almost
doo-wop sound, especially at the start featuring Payton's sweet occasionally rough-edged vocals with background male
harmonies. The line-up changed around 1971 with the original three men departing. Two female
backing singers (Pat Mercer and Deborah Martin) were brought into the group. Brenda and the Tabulations had two major
US hits: "Dry Your Eyes", which hit number 20 in 1967, and "
Right on the Tip of My Tongue", which hit number 23 in 1971. The latter was produced by
Van McCoy. Several other songs became hits or moderate hits on the US
soul singles chart from the late 1960s to the late 1970s. The group released three albums:
Dry Your Eyes on Dionn Records (1967),
Brenda and the Tabulations on Top & Bottom Records (1970), and
I Keep Coming Back For More on Chocolate City/
Casablanca (1977), although by the time of the last album, Brenda Payton was relatively a solo act while keeping the group name. The group signed with
Epic Records in 1972 and released four singles. One of the Epic singles, "
One Girl Too Late", charted on the soul chart. Brenda and the Tabulations are one of many recording artists referenced in the song "
Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)" by the studio group Reunion. Payton, born on October 24, 1945, died on June 14, 1992, aged 46. Eddie L. Jackson died on May 3, 2010, from a
brain aneurysm at the age of 63. The group's music had a revival in 2011, when the song "The Wash" from the album
Dry Your Eyes was licensed by
Unilever for use in an
Axe body wash commercial. Their version of "
Who's Lovin' You" was one of the
Desert Island Discs chosen by
Keith Richards for
Pulse! magazine (now defunct) and reprinted for a 1999 satirical piece in
The New Yorker. ==Discography==