Ralph Young, a former big-band singer who became half of the internationally popular singing duo Sandler & Young, has died. He was 90.
Young died after a brief illness Friday at his home in Palm Springs, said his wife, Arlene.
Ralph Young, a former big-band singer who became half of the internationally popular singing duo Sandler & Young, has died. He was 90.
Young died after a brief illness Friday at his home in Palm Springs, said his wife, Arlene.
After becoming a duo in 1965, the Belgium-born Sandler and the Bronx, New York-born Young recorded more than 20 albums, headlined in showrooms, concert halls and nightclubs and frequently appeared on "The Ed Sullivan Show," "The Tonight Show" and other top TV variety and talk shows.
From London in 1969, they also hosted "Kraft Music Hall Presents Sandler & Young," the summer replacement for "The Kraft Music Hall" variety show on NBC. "They were glorious years," Tony Sandler told The Times on Monday from the airport in Minneapolis, on his way to California for Young's funeral today in Palm Springs.
"They were extremely successful years," Sandler said. "We did every possible TV show; we did it all. There were ups and downs like in everything, but Ralph was my friend and a great singer, and I have the greatest admiration for him."
As performers, Sandler & Young were known for what a Times writer in 1969 called "European sophistication plus down-to-earth American comedy."
"Ralph was very humorous; he was a very funny cat, actually," said Sandler, 75, and "still very much in the business."
"There was a lot of humor in Sandler & Young. I mostly played the straight man, and he played . . . a bit of a buffoon type. And me being European was supposed to be the more suave of the pair, and Ralph was more the typical, brash American."
But it was, of course, the distinctive blending of their baritone voices that attracted audiences. Young, Sandler said, "was considered more a bass-baritone, where I'm more a baritone cantabile" -- he had a more flexible voice and a wider range, he said. "That's why I mostly harmonized with him, which created that Sandler & Young sound.
"It was just a close harmonic effect by the two baritone voices, which was unique. You can't predict something like that. When two voices click like that, it's unusual, and it's rare."
Young was born in the Bronx on July 1, 1918. He dropped out of high school to help out his family. After a stint as a messenger for Warner Bros. in New York City, he launched his singing career in small restaurants and clubs.
He had been a vocalist for the Tommy Reynolds band before joining Les Brown's Band of Renown in 1940. While with Brown, Young was vocalist on the hit record "Tis Autumn."