The postwar-era pop trio the
Three Suns comprised vocalist/organist
Artie Dunn, guitarist
Al Nevins and accordionist Morty Nevins. Although formed in 1939, the group did not achieve widespread success until their 1944 Top 20 rendition of "Twilight Time," co-written by the trio with
Buck Ram, sold over a million copies. In 1947 the
Three Suns topped the charts with "Peg o' My Heart," but by the 1950s line-up shuffles plagued the group -- first
Al Nevins was replaced by
Johnny Buck, who later gave way to
Joe Negri, while brother Morty Nevins was replaced by accordionist and pianist Joe Vento in 1955. After disbanding,
Dunn reformed the trio in 1957 with guitarist
Johnny Romano and accordionist
Tony Lovello; a largely-forgotten curio for several decades, by the 1990s the
Three Suns had accrued hipster cache thanks to the lounge-music revival, and their original recordings resurfaced on any number of exotica and "space-age bachelor pad" reissues.
Al Nevins also etched his name in pop history as the co-founder, with
Don Kirshner, of Aldon Music, the songwriting house which served as the epicenter of the Brill Building music factory.
–
Jason Ankeny, Rovi