Booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters


Bill Pinkney's Drifters

Bill Pinkney's Drifters Booking Pricing & Availablity

Genre:

Price: Under $25,000

Availability: Generally Availability

Demographics: 50 +

Songs

The Drifters Song List
  • "Save The Last Dance For Me"
  • "There Goes My Baby"
  • "This Magic Moment"
  • "Up On The Roof"
  • "On Broadway"
  • "I Count The Tears"
  • "Under The Boardwalk"
  • "When My Little Girl Is Smiling"
  • "Dance With Me"
     

Request Fee

 

Hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters For Corporate Events, Private Parties And Weddings Is Easy With Booking Entertainment

Booking Entertainment makes it easy to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters or any other entertainer for corporate events, private parties and weddings worldwide. For many of our clients, we provide an all inclusive service which has us providing everything necessary for the entertainment portion of your event.

Start by filling out our no-obligation entertainment request form to check pricing and availability for Bill Pinkney's Drifters or whoever else you may want.

IF WE DON'T BOOK AN ACT FOR YOU, OUR SERVICE IS FREE.

Want to talk about your event now? Give us a call at (212) 645-0555 and one of our booking agents will be happy to help you immediately.

Our office hours are Monday - Friday 10:00 AM - 6:00 PM EST



 

GET STARTED.

 

Get A Free Quote... No Obligation...

Bill Pinkney's Drifters Booking Agency
Pricing & Availability Information

Genre:

Price: Under $25,000

Availability: Generally Availability

Demographics: 50 +

Songs

The Drifters Song List
  • "Save The Last Dance For Me"
  • "There Goes My Baby"
  • "This Magic Moment"
  • "Up On The Roof"
  • "On Broadway"
  • "I Count The Tears"
  • "Under The Boardwalk"
  • "When My Little Girl Is Smiling"
  • "Dance With Me"
     

Request Fee

 

Wondering how to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for your event? Let Booking Entertainment be Your entertainment booking agency for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for events worldwide.

Our Bill Pinkney's Drifters agent will be happy to help you get Bill Pinkney's Drifters's availability and booking fee, or the price and availability for any other A-List entertainer, band, comedian or celebrity you may want for your corporate event, private party, wedding, birthday party or public show.

At Booking Entertainment, we put our 27 years years in business behind you to help you get the best price for any entertainer, comedian, or celebrity for your event.

Our team of seasoned industry professionals can also handle every aspect of the entertainment portion of your event to make sure the entertainment runs flawlessly.

Find out why Fortune 500 companies, high net worth individuals, promoters and fundraising organizations come back to Booking Entertainment year after year for their entertainment buying needs. We can book any act for you anywhere in the world.

Bill Pinkney's Drifters Biography

The history of rhythm and blues is filled with vocal groups whose names -- the Orioles, the Cadillacs,the Crows, the Flamingos, the Moonglows, the Coasters, the Penguins -- are held in reverence by fanatics and devotees. The Drifters are part of an even more exclusive fraternity, as a group that managed to carve out a place for themselves in the R&B firmament and also define that music, not only at its inception as a national chart phenomenon in the early '50s but also in the decade that followed. Their place in history is as complex as their role in it, by virtue of the fact that there are two distinct phases to their music and the continuity of their membership, and their extraordinary longevity -- only the Platters could claim as great a span of years as an active recording unit, though the latter group, due to major differences in the way they were organized, were far more stable in their membership and output. The Drifters can also claim a unique place in popular music history, as a major R&B group founded at the instigation of a record-label chief.

Their story began in early 1953, when Clyde McPhatter, the soaring high-tenor lead singer in the Dominoes, a vocal quintet formed by Billy Ward three years earlier, quit that group. The Dominoes were playing a scheduled gig at the New York club Birdland, one of their first performances without McPhatter, when one of the audience members present asked after the singer backstage. That fan was Ahmet Ertegun, a one-time record collector who had started Atlantic Records in the late '40s; as soon as he learned of McPhatter's having left the Dominoes, he contacted the singer and signed him to Atlantic.


It was Ertegun who gave McPhatter the impetus, as part of his contract, to start a group of his own, which came to be called the Drifters. The origins of the name and credit for thinking of it are obscure, although no one at Atlantic liked "the Drifters" at first, thinking it sounded too country & western -- the explanation sometimes offered by those present was that the members simply drifted in from other groups.


The main source for McPhatter's backing singers was among the ranks of former members of the Mount Lebanon Singers, the gospel group with which McPhatter had sung in the '40s. He went through several attempts at assembling a group that would be acceptable to Ertegun and producer Jerry Wexler, going through as many as a dozen friends and acquaintances, a handful of whom actually made it to formal recording sessions. The initial, unsuccessful lineup, featuring William Anderson, David Baughn, Dave Baldwin (the brother of author James Baldwin), and James Johnson, recorded four songs on June 28, 1953, of which only "Lucille," a McPhatter-authored song, was ever released. In August, a second Drifters lineup was put together, with Gerhart Thrasher, Andrew Thrasher, two very experienced gospel singers on tenor and baritone, respectively, bass singer Willie Ferbee, and Walter Adams on the guitar. From the beginning, the group was unusual among R&B vocal ensembles in that a guitarist was part of their core lineup and the electric guitar central to their arrangements; Jimmy Oliver, who would soon take that spot as his own, also proved to be an important songwriter for the Drifters, especially for tenor Gerhart Thrasher. The new edition of the group cut five numbers on August 9, 1953, one of which was "Money Honey," written by arranger/pianist Jesse Stone. Released within a few weeks, it hit the number one spot on the R&B chart by mid-fall of that year, and it was occasionally cited in later years as the first rock & roll record, and later entered the repertory of Elvis Presley and dozens of lesser talents. The group's career was made after that, at least as long as Clyde McPhatter was singing lead with them.

This success didn't stop the regular lineup changes that would characterize the Drifters' history. By the time the Drifters were enjoying their breakthrough hit, a reconstituted lineup, with bass singer Bill Pinkney and guitarist Jimmy Oliver joining Gerhart Thrasher and Andrew Thrasher, cut their first session. This was the lineup that lasted for the year that followed, and cut "Such a Night," a number two R&B hit, and a second R&B chart-topper with "Honey Love" in early 1954. By that time, the charts and radio play, along with audience sensibilities, had opened up and "Honey Love" also made number 21 on the pop charts late that spring. Not for the last time, it seemed as though the Drifters were headed for big things together, but a key member had developed other ideas by the fall of 1954.

Although he'd been assured of a considerable amount of musical control, McPhatter found that Ertegun and Wexler were, as the producers, always trying to push the group into directions of their own choosing. McPhatter didn't begrudge them their efforts at finding new sounds that might sell records to white as well as black audiences, but he didn't feel like participating. His goal was to cross over to pop audiences as a balladeer, and saw himself as having the potential to become another Nat "King" Cole, or perhaps a black answer to Frank Sinatra or Perry Como. By October of 1954, he had parted company with the group in favor of a solo career that would make him a success for the rest of the 1950s.

Rather than see the group in which they'd invested 18 months of their time go out of existence, Ertegun and Wexler were still interested in recording the Drifters, but that group's internal circumstances were vastly different once McPhatter was gone.McPhatter had organized the Drifters under the auspices of his own business entity, Drifters Incorporated, so that he would have a share of their earnings, something that he'd been denied in the Dominoes; his own willingness to share those earnings with the other members has never been broached or questioned. He was half-owner of the group with his manager, George Treadwell, a former jazz musician who had masterminded the solo career of his first wife, Sarah Vaughan; when McPhatter left the group, rather than making a provision for the other members and his eventual successor to get his share, he sold out his interest in Drifters Incorporated to Treadwell.

This basically doomed the group to a permanent revolving-door lineup. From that day forward, all of the members of the Drifters were salaried employees, earning as little as $100 a week even into the early '60s, and getting no share of royalties from record sales, no benefits from the concert fees they commanded, nor any claim to the use of the name "the Drifters" if they left, no matter how successful the group became through their efforts. It thus became impossible for the group to hold on to anyone with serious talent or aspirations for a long-term career in music. This made the Drifters, for those present after McPhatter's exit, little more inviting than McPhatter's own tenure with the Dominoes, and he later regretted making the decision, recognizing not only what he had cheated himself of out by not hanging on to his share of the ownership but also what he had done to his fellow musicians.

The immediate problem facing all concerned in 1954, however, was finding a replacement for Clyde McPhatter, and some would argue that they never did. David Baughn, who had sung with a very early version of the Drifters, came in as a temporary replacement, singing at one recording session and serving as lead vocalist for six months' worth of live engagements (which was how the group generated most of its income). Baughn's singing was good enough, but the group sounded like an imitation of the McPhatter-era Drifters, and Atlantic declined to release any of these sides at the time, possibly due to their potential to interfere with McPhatter's solo releases, which were selling well. The label didn't know whether to shoot for an entirely new sound or to try to find a replacement who sounded like the former lead singer who, by 1956, was a major R&B star in his own right. Additionally, Baughn soon demonstrated an erratic personality, sufficiently unnerving to force Treadwell to recruit a second lead vocalist in Bobby Hendricks, who had previously sung with the Five Crowns and the Swallows. Attempts were made to record this lineup, and even bass singer Bill Pinkney was cut doing a lead vocal, but none of it was considered acceptable.

The lineup itself began to shift as Baughn quit, but the group soldiered on, drawing good crowds at their shows based on the quality of their earlier recordings. In 1955, however, they auditioned a young man who approached the group after a show in Cleveland. Johnny Moore had been a member of a group called the Hornets, who had done a little bit of recording without making any more than a local reputation for themselves. He sounded enough like McPhatter, however, with his pleasing high tenor, and was offered a spot in the Drifters the next day. Moore would prove to be a mainstay of the group in two different decades.

The Drifters resumed recording in September of 1955, with Nesuhi Ertegun and songwriter Jerry Leiber producing and with Moore singing lead. The result was a number one R&B chart single, "Adorable," which went a long way toward establishing their post-Clyde McPhatter reputation. This proved to be one of the very few major chart records they would enjoy during this era, however -- the Drifters were still absent from the top of the pop charts, where the real money and huge sales figures lay. Their records during the late '50s were overlooked by most young white listeners, despite the presence of future rock & roll standards such as "Ruby Baby" in their output.

Dion would enjoy a much bigger hit with the latter song in the early '60s, but it was an important recording for the Drifters, marking their introduction to the talents of songwriters Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller, who would later take over the job of producing the group. The Drifters' lineup was also stabilized for the first time in over a year. The original Drifters now entered their "silver age" behind Moore's cool high tenor, ably supported by the bass singing (and occasional lead spot) from Bill Pinkney and Bobby Hendricks' tenor. "I Gotta Get Myself a Woman," written by Jesse Stone and cut during the summer of 1956, brought the group a number 11 R&B hit and the group's fortunes once again seemed to be on a consistent upswing.

As it turned out, the black record-buying public wasn't prepared to fully accept a new Drifters, without McPhatter -- black audiences practically worshipped the singer, who commanded a passionate loyalty that anticipated the future success of Sam Cooke. Additionally, the music was changing -- white teenagers were now a much bigger part of the market than they had been in 1953-54, and Atlantic set its sights on that potentially much richer vein of listeners.

The end of 1956 saw the release of the first album by group, entitled Clyde McPhatter & the Drifters. Such was the popularity of McPhatter at the time, and the tracks that he'd done with the Drifters, versus their recent work, that those 14 songs rated inclusion on an LP well over a year after his exit from the lineup in an effort to sell the music once more to his fans -- in that regard, Atlantic was very forward-looking; very few labels in 1956 were releasing LPs aimed at black R&B listeners (apart from Elvis Presley's albums, very little white rock & roll made an impression on the album charts).


Late 1956 was also the point when the consequences of the Drifters' business organization caught up with the group. Their recent hits had led to more bookings than at any time since 1954, which was good for Treadwell and his partners, but difficult for the members, who were still working on straight salary and, by Bill Pinkney's estimation, very low salaries. He approached Treadwell for a new arrangement, or at least more money for the group members, and he was fired. His dismissal drove fellow founding member Andrew Thrasher out of the lineup as well, and out of music altogether. Pinkney and ex-Drifter Bobby Hendricks became the core of a new Atlantic group called the Flyers, who released one single that failed to attract much attention.

The new Drifters lineup was filled by bass singer Jimmy Ricks and then, more permanently, by Tom Evans, late of the Dominoes, and baritone Charlie Hughes. The group's fortunes now took a new turn as Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller began producing their sessions in late 1956 -- unfortunately, their arrival on the scene coincided with Johnny Moore's receiving his draft notice in early 1957. The group was (no joke intended) adrift once again, in terms of its sound and lineup. Bobby Hendricks was brought back in, and Jimmy Millender took over the baritone chores, but there wasn't a lot of good material that came from those sessions. For a time, in the absence of an ability to create a successful Drifters sound, it seemed as though Atlantic was trying to turn them into another version of the Coasters, doing light-hearted versions of pop standards. In a way, this was understandable -- black listeners held this era's Drifters at arm's length, while white teenagers were dominating the pop charts and they seemed, at least potentially, open to new records by anyone, so Atlantic decided to cater to them, hoping for a breakthrough.

By late 1958, Hendricks had announced his exit, and even guitarist Jimmy Oliver, who had managed to get several of his songs recorded during his four-year tenure with the group and was an unheralded mainstay of their sound, finally quit. The remaining members, such as they were, were working as hard as ever and wanted more money and, when Treadwell refused their request, they all walked out (or were fired en masse).

Treadwell was about to find himself without a group and faced with upcoming engagements to fulfill at the Apollo Theater in New York. He spotted his way out of this impasse at the Apollo, way down on a bill on May 30, 1958 on which the about-to-be-fired Drifters were headlining. The Five Crowns, or the Crowns, as they were then known, had been a fixture in Harlem for most of the 1950s, predating the Drifters without ever making a mark as a recording act, and enjoying precious little reputation as performers.

Treadwell approached their manager, Lover Patterson, explaining that he was dumping the existing Drifters and needed a new group to fulfill their performing obligations. Patterson agreed and the group followed suit, and all of the individual members' contracts, except for that of one of the group's two baritones, were sold to Treadwell. In later years, this kind of arrangement would become a little more familiar in the business -- the Grass Roots essentially evolved this way, as did the performing version of the group Steam -- but it was unusual in those days, and difficult to pull off, and mostly served to keep Treadwell from ending up in court.

The new Drifters lineup consisted of Charlie Thomas on lead, baritone Benjamin Earl Nelson, later known as Ben E. King, Dock Green (who had held the Crowns together) (baritone), and Elsbeary Hobbs singing bass. They did as they were required under the agreement and, for ten months, worked in the shadow of the old group, playing live gigs characterized by the awkwardness of performing the old songs as though they were their own, to mostly black audiences who knew that these weren't the Drifters. Atlantic still hoped to profit from the group, however, and a second Drifters LP, Rockin' & Driftin', was released in late 1958, comprised entirely of single tracks recorded by the 1955-58 lineup. Ironically, in all of their 19-year history with Atlantic Records, the Drifters, in any incarnation, never recorded an actual "album" session; every one of their LPs was compiled from existing single tracks and B-sides and, except for the first album, all have a mix-and-match element to the memberships and, especially, the singers represented.

The group still had a recording contract with Atlantic Records and, despite the fact that the old Drifters' recent releases had done little business, the label decided to try once more with the new lineup and get a record out. On March 6, 1959, they went into the studio with Leiber & Stoller producing, to cut four songs. Charlie Thomas was supposed to sing lead but he developed mic-fright in the studio, and so Nelson was deputized for "There Goes My Baby," which he had co-written, along with "Hey Senorita," and "Oh My Love." "There Goes My Baby," co-written by Nelson and orchestrated by Stan Applebaum, was as much a landmark in the history of R&B and soul as "Money Honey" had been six years earlier. At the time, nobody present was sure of what they had because it sounded so chaotic, strange, and complicated -- no one had ever used a string section, much less one recorded as prominently as this one was, on an R&B record, and no R&B record up until that time had ever dared sound so complex, overlaying Latin percussion, violins, and a fiercely passionate performance by the singer. It not only didn't sound anything like the old Drifters, but it didn't sound like anything else that had ever been heard on a commercial recording before. And it was a complete mess in the eyes of some observers, including Jerry Wexler, who said the song sounded like a radio picking up two different stations at once.

"There Goes My Baby" peaked at number two, their biggest hit to that date on the pop charts and their biggest seller up to that time, winning over both R&B and pop audiences and transforming the group and its image. Moreover, it marked the group's first impact on audiences overseas -- the earlier Drifters, for all of their impact on rock & roll, never got a record released in Europe, but this new group and their sound would soon find a very important mass audience in England. The group seemed headed for a huge future when the problem of their business set-up came into play again. They'd cut other songs at that same session, including "Baltimore," which sounded like an update of the Cadillacs' "Speedo," but the strings-percussion-echo timbres of "There Goes My Baby," hung around long melodic lines, became the Drifters' trademark sound for the ten years that followed.


This seemed to be a new lease on life to the group, and then more troubles arose from within, owing to the way the Drifters were organized as a business. Ben Nelson wasn't happy working for $100 a week; not with the hundreds of miles of travel between some shows, and as many as six days of shows each week. He was so poor working for the group that he felt compelled to sell off his share of the songwriting on "There Goes My Baby," Accounts differ as to precisely what happened on this issue -- some say that he sold the share off to Treadwell and his accountant, while Jerry Wexler claims that he accepted a document from the singer assigning him the copyright, in exchange for $200; Wexler held on to the document, and gave it back to the singer once the song was a hit so he could tear it up.

After approaching Treadwell for more money and being turned down, Nelson saw that there was no future as a member of the Drifters and announced his exit almost as soon as it came time to cut a follow-up. At the same moment, Lover Patterson played his trump card, a separate contract that he'd signed with the singer, as a solo artist, dated before Treadwell's offer. It all could have ended up in court but luckily for the singer and fans of the Drifters, cooler heads prevailed. He remained with Atlantic Records on their Atco subsidiary as a solo artist, and agreed to record with the group until a suitable replacement could be found, singing on "Dance With Me," "This Magic Moment," "I Count the Tears," and "Save the Last Dance for Me," the latter their only number one hit, among other songs, through the spring of 1960. By the time his exit had been arranged, Nelson had changed his name to the more memorable Ben E. King, which was how he emerged in his own right.

The post-1959 Drifters (which also included guitarist Billy Davis) are usually thought of as the "Ben E. King Drifters," but the reality was that King had left the group by the end of that same year. King's first successor was Johnny Williams, who exited suddenly in late 1960, but the Drifters quickly found a replacement in Rudy Lewis. An ex-member of the Clara Ward Singers, Lewis was the singer on "Some Kind of Wonderful," "Up on the Roof" (a Top Five hit), "Please Stay," "What to Do," and "On Broadway" (a Top Ten hit), among numerous other classic tracks by the group. Lewis, tragically, wasn't the longest lasting of the group's lead vocalists but his tenure with the group, following King's, arguably constituted the second half of a second golden age in their history.

Whoever was involved on a particular record, this lineup of the group was once again at a peak of influence in those years. "There Goes My Baby" anticipated the shift to a more pop-oriented brand of soul music, embraced by Sam Cooke and, even more so, by Berry Gordy at his fledgling Motown label. Indeed, the sound of "There Goes My Baby" was practically the prototype for Smokey Robinson & the Miracles' landmark single "Way Over There." Others also learned from them, most notably a young producer named Phil Spector, who was working at Atlantic as a session guitarist in the early '60s and ran with the sound he heard in Stan Applebaum's arrangements, expanding it into something new and turning it into his own trademark, imprinted on the work of a dozen top recording acts. And it was during the recording of his own "Please Stay" by the group that Burt Bacharach first encountered a vocalist named Dionne Warwick, who was part of the backing trio for the Drifters.

Between 1960 and 1964, the Drifters achieved a level of stability that was unprecedented in their history, and it was matched by their success. Not that they didn't make mistakes -- they turned down "This Diamond Ring," and Atlantic never released their version of "Only in America," both of which became huge hits, in the hands of Gary Lewis & the Playboys and Jay & the Americans, respectively. Still, luck was with them even as essential personnel around them moved on -- in late 1963, as Leiber & Stoller shifted their attention to their own record label, Red Bird, the Drifters got a new producer in Bert Berns, a songwriter with a feel for commercial soul music. "Vaya Con Dios," from their first session with the new producer (and which reflected his love of Latin themes), was a moderate pop chart hit. And in the spring of 1964, with Leiber & Stoller no longer writing the way they had been, the group was offered a new song by composers Art Resnick and Kenny Young, called "Under the Boardwalk."

It was scheduled for recording on May 21 of 1964. Then, on the night of May 20, just hours before the recording session, Rudy Lewis was found dead in his apartment under circumstances that are still in dispute -- the police suspected a drug overdose, but people who knew Lewis insisted that his only vice was binge-eating, and that he had choked to death. Without any time to reschedule the session, Johnny Moore, who had rejoined the group as second tenor in early 1963, stepped into the breach. Moore, who had previously held the thankless task of leading the late-'50s Drifters, achieved a special magnificence at that session singing "Under the Boardwalk," which became the group's last Top Ten hit in 1964, peaking at number four. He became the longest lasting of the Drifters' various lead singers, lasting into the 1970s and beyond their time as a serious recording act.

By late 1964, Berns was moving on to other projects including the early releases of his new independent label, Bang Records, and the group found itself working with producer Tom Dowd in what were very unproductive sessions. They still had lots of bookings, and enough hits behind them to remain a thoroughly established act, but by that time the whole notion of soul music was changing around them, due in some measure to a vast array of other acts associated with Atlantic Records, including Wilson Pickett, Otis Redding, Sam & Dave, and Don Covay. The Drifters were never able to make the jump comfortably to this harder brand of soul music, and the loss of Berns as a producer after 1965 seemed to seal their fate. Their own sessions began to show a lack of urgency and organization, exemplified by the fact that one of the very best tracks of Moore's era, "In the Park," was left unfinished (without the group recorded behind him) and in the can for years. The death of George Treadwell in 1967 removed another layer of impetus behind the Drifters' continuation as a going concern.

They continued recording for Atlantic with a succession of producers until 1972. By that time, the company itself was part of a huge corporate conglomerate, far removed from its origins -- Led Zeppelin, Yes, and Emerson, Lake & Palmer were the stars of the Atlantic roster then, and scarcely anyone at the company except Ertegun and Wexler likely even remembered who the Drifters were or how they'd started. Johnny Moore still sang lead, but there were no more hits after the mid-'60s. They tried altering their sound to mainstream adult pop, cutting old-style standards in an effort to capture older listeners. As the hits faded away and the bookings dried up, the group broke up yet again -- in the end, Johnny Moore was the only recognizable Drifter and he did most of the singing on the records as well.

The 1970s saw a proliferation of acts trading on the Drifters name as the rock & roll revival suddenly made the group's classic repertory profitable again. Founding member Bill Pinkney led a group sometimes called "the Original Drifters" while Charlie Thomas led another version and Johnny Moore kept the fully authorized group under the auspices of Treadwell's widow Faye.

The result was a series of lawsuits that ultimately saw the various claimants divide different territories within the United States between them, while the Faye Treadwell-authorized group, led by Johnny Moore, moved to England, where they enjoyed a Top Ten hit in 1972 ("Come on Over to My Place"), falling under the influence of the Roger Cook/Roger Greenaway songwriting team. This incarnation of the group, no longer signed to Atlantic after 1972, was signed to Bell Records. The British-based version of the Drifters became a dance-disco outfit for a time in the late '70s, virtually irrelevant to the group's history, while Pinkney and Thomas maintained contact with the Drifters' roots, and even Jimmy Ricks, who was only in the group for a few months, turned up at some point leading a combo using the name. Ben E. King even returned to the lineup for a tour in the late '80s.

In the 1990s, after decades of conflicting and contradictory claims, a new court ruling determined that Faye Treadwell owned the trademark of the Drifters' name. The death of Johnny Moore in the 1990s brought the end of the era in the group's history, though Bill Pinkney -- the last active original member from the early '50s -- continued to front a group of Drifters up until his death on July 4th, 2007. The late '80s and early '90s also saw a full revival of the group's entire catalog; for decades, from the 1960s through the 1980s, fans and collectors in America had to content themselves with a single LP, the 1968 Golden Hits album, consisting of a selection of the group's early-'60s hits -- none of the McPhatter-era cuts were around, nor were any other tracks from the '60s era. A pair of Rhino Records-inspired double-CD/LP sets helped break this log-jam in the late '80s, and Rhino's 1996 triple-CD set Rockin' & Driftin': The Drifters Box opened the floodgates of their history. That same year, Sequel Records in England issued seven CDs devoted to the group's history, and more recently Collectables Records has been busy re-releasing the group's classic albums on CD.

Hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters For Corporate Events, Private Parties And Public Concerts Is Easy With Booking Entertainment

For more information on booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters, please contact Booking Entertainment. One of our top booking agents will be happy to work on your behalf to get you the best possible price to book any big name entertainer for your upcoming public, private or corporate event worldwide.

The agents at Booking Entertainment have helped clients book famous entertainers like Bill Pinkney's Drifters for private parties, corporate events and public shows around the world for over 27 years.  Our agents will be happy to assist you with any of your famous entertainment buying needs.  All you need to do is fill out an entertainment request form or call our office at (212) 645-0555, and one of our agents will help you get pricing information and available dates for Bill Pinkney's Drifters or any other A-list entertainer for your next event.
Booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for corporate events is a great way to thank your employees and clients, and in addition, hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a corporate event is a fantastic way to promote your company's image to your industry. Booking Entertainment can book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for corporate events worldwide, providing you with the fee to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and their availability on your specific date. We have helped our clients book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and thousands of other acts for almost 27 years. Whether you are looking at hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a corporate event, product launch, trade show, holiday party or an employee appreciation event, your assigned Booking Entertainment agent will be happy to get you the best price for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters and help make sure that every aspect of the entertainment portion of your corporate event is executed flawlessly.
If you are looking to hire Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a corporate event and are looking for Bill Pinkney's Drifters’s booking fee for corporate events, Booking Entertainment will be happy to get you pricing to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for your date for free. The cost of hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for your corporate event can include just the price of booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a corporate event, or we can give you an estimate for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters that includes absolutely everything that goes into hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters including all fees, flights, hotel, ground, production, green room requirements and our veteran production team onsite to make sure everything runs smoothly from load in to load out.
Looking for Bill Pinkney's Drifters booking cost, fee or pricing?  When you are booking an act like Bill Pinkney's Drifters, many factors determine the final price, including the artist's touring schedule and other shows they may have in your area. Fill out an entertainment request form or call our offices at (212) 645-0555 and one of our booking agents will get you a pricing fee and availability for your date and assist you in booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters or a different well-known act for your next event.
Wondering how much does it cost to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a private concert or will Bill Pinkney's Drifters play a private party? Whether you are looking to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a wedding, private party or anniversary party, our Bill Pinkney's Drifters booking agent who specializes in booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters will be happy to help you to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and take care of everything necessary to make sure the show is executed flawlessly. Fill out an entertainment request form or call our office at (212) 645-0555 and one of our Bill Pinkney's Drifters booking agents will assist you in hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a private event anywhere in the world.
Booking talent for college and university events is something Booking Entertainment has been helping college talent buyers do for almost 27 years. Whether you are looking to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a sorority party / fraternity party or a college concert event sponsored by the college entertainment committee, college talent buying is something we specialize in at Booking Entertainment. Simply fill out our form, email us or call the office and one of our college booking agents will be happy to help you make sure that every aspect of booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters or anyone else for you college event is taken care of to ensure your college or university concert runs smoothly and cost effectively.
When college entertainment buyers book famous entertainers such as Bill Pinkney's Drifters to play for college concerts, sorority parties or fraternity parties at colleges and universities, we know the acts tend to charge a lower fee than they would cost for a traditional public or private concert. Of course, how expensive it is to book college entertainment depending on how big of an act they are, but colleges and universities tend to get a better fee for booking big name entertainment for college and university events. One of our college entertainment booking agents will work closely with you to make sure you get the best possible price for your college’s concert.
Buyers who don't have a lot of experience booking famous acts often find the process frustrating when they try to do it on their own. Our Bill Pinkney's Drifters agent that specializes in booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters can use our reputation and relationships to help you navigate the entertainment buying process and get your offer for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters seriously considered. The artist’s managers want to know that everything will be handled properly, and Booking Entertainment’s stellar 27-year reputation and our attention to detail provide them with the peace of mind that the show will be flawlessly executed from beginning to end.
Wondering how much does it cost to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a fundraiser or will Bill Pinkney's Drifters play a gala? Your assigned Bill Pinkney's Drifters agent will be happy to help you to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and we can even take care of everything necessary to make sure booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters is easy and trouble free. Fill out our entertainment request form or call our office at (212) 645-0555 and one of our booking agents for Bill Pinkney's Drifters will assist you to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters or any other entertainer or celebrity for your next fundraiser or gala anywhere around the world.
You might ask yourself, “How do I hire Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a wedding?" We have helped hundreds of clients book acts like Bill Pinkney's Drifters for weddings and wedding ceremonies worldwide. Your assigned Booking Entertainment agent will not only be happy to assist you in hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters to perform at your wedding, we will be onsite to make sure booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for your wedding is executed flawlessly.
If you are serious about booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a wedding, Booking Entertainment will gladly get you the Bill Pinkney's Drifters booking fee and availability for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for your wedding date. The price for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters will include all of the fees and additional expenses necessary to hire Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a wedding including all production costs, flights, hotels, ground and green room requirements.
Hiring celebrity entertainment for a wedding is a great way to surprise the guests or even the bride or groom. When we book big name acts like Bill Pinkney's Drifters for weddings, we work closely with the wedding planner beforehand to make sure everything involved with the entertainment integrates seamlessly with the flow of the wedding . Our staff of veteran producers will then be onsite at the wedding to make sure when you book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for your wedding, everything runs smoothy from load in to load out.
Even if you have Bill Pinkney's Drifters contact information, Bill Pinkney's Drifters’s management contact info like Bill Pinkney's Drifters’s manger's email or even Bill Pinkney's Drifters’s manager's phone number, you still need a company like Booking Entertainment to help coordinate everything that is necessary to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters to perform for your event. Agents and managers contact us all the time to help people that find the agency contact info or management contact info and contact the agents and mangers directly. Managers and agents trust our agency to handle everything to the industry standard as we have for almost 27 years.
Booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for corporate events is a great way to thank your employees and clients, and in addition, hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a virtual corporate event is a fantastic way to promote your company's image to your industry. Booking Entertainment can book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for corporate events worldwide, providing you with the fee to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and their availability on your specific date. We have helped our clients book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and thousands of other acts for over 27 years. Whether you are looking at hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a virtual corporate event, product launch, trade show, holiday party or an employee appreciation event, your assigned Booking Entertainment agent will be happy to get you the best price for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters and help make sure that every aspect of the entertainment portion of your corporate event is executed flawlessly.
BookingEntertainment can also help book virtual celebrity chef appearances, virtual sports celebrity appearances and virtual famous comedian performances
Booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a virtual event, virtual meeting, virtual appearance, virtual keynote speaking engagement, webinar, video conference or Zoom meeting is a great way to thank your employees and clients, and in addition, hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a virtual private event is a fantastic way to promote your company's image to your industry. Booking Entertainment can book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for private events worldwide, providing you with the fee to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and their availability on your specific date. We have helped our clients book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and thousands of other acts for over 27 years. Whether you are looking at hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a virtual private event, product launch, trade show, holiday party or an employee appreciation event, your assigned Booking Entertainment agent will be happy to get you the best price for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters and help make sure that every aspect of the entertainment portion of your corporate event is executed flawlessly.
Booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for livestream or livestreaming events is a great way to thank your friends and family or employees and clients, and in addition, hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a virtual event is a fantastic way to promote your company's image to your industry. Booking Entertainment can book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for livestream or livestreaming events worldwide, providing you with the fee to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and their availability on your specific date. We have helped our clients book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and thousands of other acts for over 27 years. Whether you are looking at hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a virtual event, product launch, trade show, holiday party or an employee appreciation event, your assigned Booking Entertainment agent will be happy to get you the best price for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters and help make sure that every aspect of the entertainment portion of your private event is executed flawlessly.
Booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for pre-recorded event entertainment is a great way to thank your employees and clients, and in addition, hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a virtual event is a fantastic way to promote your company's image to your industry. Booking Entertainment can book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for livestream or livestreaming events worldwide, providing you with the fee to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and their availability on your specific date. We have helped our clients book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and thousands of other acts for over 27 years. Whether you are looking at hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a creating pre-recorded entertainment for your virtual event, product launch, trade show, holiday party or an employee appreciation event, your assigned Booking Entertainment agent will be happy to get you the best price for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters and help make sure that every aspect of the entertainment portion of your private event is executed flawlessly.
Booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for pre-recorded holiday event entertainment is a great way to thank your employees and clients, and in addition, hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a virtual event is a fantastic way to promote your company's image to your industry. Booking Entertainment can book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for livestream or livestreaming events worldwide, providing you with the fee to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and their availability on your specific date. We have helped our clients book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and thousands of other acts for over 27 years. Whether you are looking at hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a creating pre-recorded entertainment for your virtual holiday event, product launch, trade show, holiday party or an employee appreciation event, your assigned Booking Entertainment agent will be happy to get you the best price for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters and help make sure that every aspect of the entertainment portion of your private event is executed flawlessly.
Booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters for pre-recorded event or living streaming entertainment is a great way to thank your employees and clients, and in addition, hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a virtual fundraising event is a fantastic way to promote your cause to your donors. Booking Entertainment can book Bill Pinkney's Drifters for livestream or livestreaming events worldwide, providing you with the fee to book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and their availability on your specific date. We have helped our clients book Bill Pinkney's Drifters and thousands of other acts for over 27 years. Whether you are looking at hiring Bill Pinkney's Drifters for a creating pre-recorded entertainment for your virtual fundraising event, party or an donor appreciation event, your assigned Booking Entertainment agent will be happy to get you the best price for booking Bill Pinkney's Drifters and help make sure that every aspect of the entertainment portion of your fund raiser is executed flawlessly.
With Booking Entertainment, booking premium seats and backstage meet & greets with Bill Pinkney's Drifters is easy and accessible to anyone around the world. Fill out an form or call our office at (212) 645-0555 and one of our agents will assist you to get pricing and availability to have Bill Pinkney's Drifters VIP experience at a concert or event.
 

 


 

As an experienced entertainment booking agency, Booking Entertainment agents represent buyers of big name entertainment, providing pricing fees and full turn key concert events for our clients.  We are a full-service booking entertainment agency for clients hosting corporate events, galas, private events, fundraisers, corporate functions, college concerts, private parties and speaking engagements worldwide.

Booking Entertainment can provide world-class celebrity entertainers your next event. From a small intimate gathering in your backyard, bars, night clubs, lounges to large venues worldwide including hotels, theaters, ballrooms, college, dance clubs, fairgrounds, parks, casinos, festivals, arenas, convention centers, and stadiums anywhere worldwide.

Booking Entertainment works to get the best possible Bill Pinkney's Drifters booking fee and Bill Pinkney's Drifters price for our clients while also providing the celebrity or famous entertainer with the level of professionalism and industry norms that they expect from an event run by a professional booking agency and production management.

Booking Entertainment uses our agency / management relationships and over 27 years of production experience to help buyers of headline / top name entertainers and does not claim or represent itself as the exclusive Bill Pinkney's Drifters agent, manager or management company for any of the artists on our site.

Booking Entertainment does not claim or represent itself as the exclusive booking agency, business manager, publicist, speakers bureau or management for Bill Pinkney's Drifters or any artists or celebrities on this website.

 

Please feel free to fill out our entertainment request form below and your assigned agent will contact you to see how Booking Entertainment can assist you.

IF WE DON'T BOOK SOMEONE FOR YOU, OUR SERVICE IS FREE.

Want to talk about your event now?
Give us a call and one of our booking agents
will be happy to help you immediately.

Fields marked by asterisks (*) are required

Contact Information

Event Information