Jay Traynor

John "Jay" Traynor (March 30, 1943 ā€“ January 2, 2014) was an American singer.

Jay Traynor
Background information
Birth nameJohn Traynor
Born(1943-03-30)March 30, 1943
Brooklyn, New York, United States
DiedJanuary 2, 2014(2014-01-02) (aged 70)
Tampa, Florida, U.S.
Occupation(s)Pop, doo-wop
Instrumentsvocals
Years active1960sā€“2014
Associated actsThe Mystics
Jay and the Americans
The Tokens

Background

Traynor was the third lead vocalist of the Mystics, singing falsetto on "The White Cliffs of Dover", and lead on "Somewhere Over The Rainbow" and "Blue Star". Later, he started Jay and the Americans with Kenny Vance and Sandy Yaguda, and was the original lead singer. He sang lead on the group's first hit, "She Cried", which was followed up by the album She Cried. All recordings were produced by Jerry Leiber & Mike Stoller, who produced numerous artists and wrote many hits for Elvis Presley, the Drifters, the Coasters, and many more.

Traynor left the Americans, releasing solo records, including "I Rise, I Fall" on the Coral label in 1964. His name on the label was denoted as "JAY ... formerly of Jay & the Americans".[1] Later in the 1960s, he released "Up & Over", produced by Dennis Lambert for Don Costa Productions. The song became a big hit with the UK "Northern Soul" underground dance clubs. Traynor was replaced in the Americans by David Blatt, who agreed to perform under the stage name Jay Black. After working for Woodstock Ventures, the company that put on the Woodstock festival, Traynor began a career working behind the scenes with such 1970s acts as Mountain, West, Bruce & Laing, The Who, Ten Years After, Yes, and gospel singer Mylon LeFevre.

In 1977, Traynor moved to Albany, New York, near his roots in [[Greenville (town), New York|( He attended Greenville Central School)] and worked at WNYT as a studio camera operator. He then performed with cover bands (George and "Friends"), jazz trios, and finally as the singer with the Joey Thomas Big Band, where his love for Frank Sinatra's music began. The Big Band put out a few CDs with Traynor, including Live On WAMC & The Sinatra Show. In 2006, Traynor received a call from Jay Siegel, and he toured with Jay Siegel's Tokens for the remainder of his life.

Jay Traynor died January 2, 2014 of liver cancer at a hospital in Tampa, Florida, at the age of 70, although some sources gave his age as 69.[2][3]

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References

  1. The first Jay and the Americans, 2007-03-18, retrieved 2010-06-25
  2. Notice of death of Jay Traynor, theepochtimes.com; accessed January 4, 2014.
  3. Notice of death of Jay Traynor, abcnewsradioonline.com, January 2, 2014.
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