The twins were born in
Port Jervis, New York, but the family later moved to
Washington, D.C. While working in a Washington nightclub in November 1957, they pooled their funds to make a demonstration record and try to sell it in New York. "We were pretty discouraged," said Hal in 1958, "because every indie record label we went to turned us down. What could we do? Things were tough. We got back to Washington, took up daytime jobs, and worked club dates whenever we could." One of Hal's jobs was delivering singing telegrams for
Western Union. A few weeks later they met
Clint Ballard Jr., the writer of many hit records such as "
Good Timin'" for
Jimmy Jones, and "
I'm Alive" for
The Hollies. Ballard offered to help them. "We got an appointment with the Decca people," Herbie recalled, "and Jack Pleis signed us up. We had a record session right away but the first record was a bomb, and it seemed an awful long time till the next." In 1958, after listening to piles of writers' demo tapes, Clint Ballard (now the Kalins' manager) discovered the song "When", written by
Paul Evans and Jack Reardon. The track remained in the UK listings for eighteen weeks, five of which were at number one.{{cite book The Kalins were the first set of twins to reach number one in the
UK as a duo, followed in 2007, almost 50 years later, by
The Proclaimers with a single with
Peter Kay and
Matt Lucas for
Comic Relief. The Kalins were supported by
Cliff Richard on their only UK tour. Their second single, "Forget Me Not", reached number 12 in the US Billboard chart later in 1958. After two further low-ranking entries in 1959, they never reached the charts again. They continued working as a headline nightclub attraction into the 1960s, but without current records to promote them their exposure was limited. == Post-music career ==