Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

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Top Releases

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I Don't Want To Set The World On Fire

234.1M streams

234,112,517

The Anthology

228.7M streams

228,655,769

20th Century Masters: The Millennium C...

218.1M streams

218,097,379

The Ink Spots' Greatest Hits

132.4M streams

132,412,951

The Ink Spots' Greatest Hits

132.4M streams

132,412,951

We Four - The Best of the Ink Spots

38.9M streams

38,911,395

More Memories from We Four

13.5M streams

13,493,702

The Golden Age Of The Ink Spots -The B...

3.3M streams

3,345,703

The Final Album

3.1M streams

3,099,254

If I Didn't Care: An Anthology

3M streams

3,020,086

Biography

The Ink Spots played a large role in pioneering the Black vocal group-harmony genre, helping to pave the way for the doo wop explosion of the '50s. The quavering high tenor of Bill Kenny presaged hundreds of street-corner leads to come, and the sweet harmonies of Charlie Fuqua, Deek Watson, and bass Hoppy Jones (who died in 1944) backed him flawlessly. Kenny's impeccable diction and Jones's deep drawl were both prominent on the Ink Spots' first smash on Decca in 1939, the sentimental "If I Didn't Care." From then through 1951, the group was seldom absent from the pop charts, topping the lists with "We Three (My Echo, My Shadow, and Me)" (1940), "I'm Making Believe" and "Into Each Life Some Rain Must Fall" (both in 1944), and "The Gypsy" and "To Each His Own" (both in 1946). Watson eventually split to form his own group, the Brown Dots, and appeared in numerous low-budget film musicals, while Kenny attempted a solo career, notching a solo hit in 1951 with the uplifting "It Is No Secret." Countless groups masquerading as the Ink Spots have thrived across the nation since the '50s. ~ Bill Dahl, Rovi