After one more top 10 R&B hit, "
It's Love Baby (24 Hours a Day)", in 1955, the Midnighters had no more hit songs for three and a half years. During this time, members came and went: Lawson Smith returned from the U.S. armed forces after having been drafted, replacing Henry Booth, and Norman Thrasher eventually replaced Sonny Woods. The guitarist Cal Green replaced Arthur Porter, who had earlier taken the place of original member Alonzo Tucker. Tucker went on to become a successful independent songwriter, writing hits for
Jackie Wilson "
Baby Workout", "No Pity (In the Naked City)", "Squeeze Her, Tease Her (But Love Her)", "You Don't Know What It Means", "
Years from Now", the
Chi-Lites "Marriage License",
Gladys Knight & the Pips "
Every Beat of My Heart" (originally recorded by the Midnighters), the
Animals, and others. He also wrote but was not credited with Wilson's hit song "
Doggin' Around"; Nat Tarnopol, the president of Wilson's record label,
Brunswick Records, placed the name of his as-yet-unborn son Paul Tarnopol on the record as a writer in Tucker's place. The Midnighters released records during this time, but none were hits. In the meantime, the group's record company, King, had become more interested in a powerful new vocal group from Georgia: the
Famous Flames, featuring the singers
James Brown and
Bobby Byrd, who had been influenced by the Midnighters. In 1959, the group, now called Hank Ballard & the Midnighters, had been switched to the parent label, King Records, and released their first hit in 4 years, "Teardrops on Your Letter". It was a top 10 hit on the
Billboard R&B chart, peaking at number 4 (it also reached number 87 on the
Billboard pop chart), and re-established the Midnighters as a hit-making force. Even more significant was the song's flip side, a song about a dance, "
The Twist". It was also a hit, reaching number 16 on the R&B chart. It was an even bigger hit for the group when it was re-released a year later. According to
The Twist, by Jim Dawson,
Dave Appell, working for
Kal Mann and
Bernie Lowe's Cameo-Parkway Records of
Philadelphia, wanted to record a version of the Midnighters' hit, "The Twist." Although Ballard was credited as the sole writer of the song, its origins allegedly went back further than that. In the summer of 1960, while serving as bandleader of Cameo-Parkway's house band, Appell wanted to re-record the song, as he saw the song as having hit potential. In the meantime,
Dick Clark, the host of
ABC's American Bandstand, also noticed how local white teens in Philly were dancing to Hank and the Midnighters' original and felt the same as Appell. But, having no literal or financial connection to the Midnighters' record label,
King Records, Clark had no way to capitalize on the Midnighters' song. Clark gave promotion and airplay to two of the Midnighters records, "Finger Poppin' Time", and "Let's Go, Let's Go, Let's Go" on
American Bandstand in exchange for King Records president Syd Nathan giving Clark licensing rights for one of his artists on Cameo Parkway, one Ernest Evans, later to be known as
Chubby Checker, to record "The Twist". Clark was part owner of Cameo-Parkway and several other record companies at the time. ==2012 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction==