Walker rose to prominence in 1965 as the drummer for the
New Jersey–based group
The Knickerbockers, consisting of brothers John and Beau Charles (guitar and bass), and Buddy Randall (previously of the
Royal Teens fame/lead vocals). He first heard of them after hearing them play at a local fire department for
memorial day With the three-way vocal harmonies by John Charles, Beau Charles, and Buddy Randall, "Lies" stood out due to its Beatles-esque sound. The Knickerbockers would become regulars on
Dick Clark's
Where The Action Is. Their debut album was released a few months later, in early 1966, and was named after the hit, and featured the song on there too. "Lies" entered the Billboard Hot 100 in the final week of December 1965, went to number 20 on the charts in late January 1966, and was, in total, on the Hot 100 for thirteen weeks, before leaving the charts in February 1966, last placed at number 34. "Lies" has since been covered by the likes of
Linda Ronstadt,
Styx,
Nancy Sinatra,
Gary Lewis & the Playboys,
Lulu, and an instrumental version by
The Ventures. Despite appearing daily on
Where the Action Is and constantly releasing new material, such as “One Track Mind”, “My Feet Are Off The Ground”, and a cover of
Tom Jones' “
It's Not Unusual” (which featured Walker on lead vocals), none of them could match the popularity of “Lies”, and Walker left the band in 1967. He reappeared with the group for two reunions in 1983 and 1990. == The Righteous Brothers (1968–1971) ==