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'''Peter Lemongello''' is an ] ] from ], ]. In ], he became the first person to sell a million records through a television ] campaign.<ref>http://www.charlesrapp.com/Details.aspx?mId=136 Charles Rapp Enterprises – Peter Lemongello Retrieved 5 May 2007</ref> He also was the first entertainer to underwrite a television direct advertising campaign selling shares in the project to private investors.<ref>http://mailman.xmission.com/pipermail/exotica/2002-September/006055.html Exotica@mailman.xmission.com Exotica .com</ref> '''Peter Lemongello''' (born 1947) is an ] ] from ], ]. In ], he became the first person to sell a million records through a television ] campaign.<ref>http://www.charlesrapp.com/Details.aspx?mId=136 Charles Rapp Enterprises – Peter Lemongello Retrieved 5 May 2007</ref> He also was the first entertainer to underwrite a television direct advertising campaign selling shares in the project to private investors.<ref>http://mailman.xmission.com/pipermail/exotica/2002-September/006055.html Exotica@mailman.xmission.com Exotica .com</ref>


Using a city-by-city marketing strategy, he and his partners began their '''''Love ‘76''''' advertising campaign on late-night TV in ] on January 1, 1976 targeting all six New York metropolitan channels 70 to 100 times a week. The album, ''Do I Love You'', a two-record set, took off slowly at first, selling 43,000 copies in New York, ] and ] in 13 weeks. After signing with ] in April 1976, they began the same campaign in ] and ]<ref>“The $390,000 Man” Time; Monday, May. 31, 1976</ref> and the album began to sell at an unprecedented rate, attracting widespread media attention. Using a city-by-city marketing strategy, he and his partners began their '''''Love ‘76''''' advertising campaign on late-night TV in ] on January 1, 1976 targeting all six New York metropolitan channels 70 to 100 times a week. The album, ''Do I Love You'', a two-record set, took off slowly at first, selling 43,000 copies in New York, ] and ] in 13 weeks. After signing with ] in April 1976, they began the same campaign in ] and ]<ref>“The $390,000 Man” Time; Monday, May. 31, 1976</ref> and the album began to sell at an unprecedented rate, attracting widespread media attention.

Revision as of 11:16, 11 September 2010

Peter Lemongello
Musical artist

Peter Lemongello (born 1947) is an American singer from Islip, Long Island, New York. In 1976, he became the first person to sell a million records through a television direct marketing campaign. He also was the first entertainer to underwrite a television direct advertising campaign selling shares in the project to private investors.

Using a city-by-city marketing strategy, he and his partners began their Love ‘76 advertising campaign on late-night TV in New York, New York on January 1, 1976 targeting all six New York metropolitan channels 70 to 100 times a week. The album, Do I Love You, a two-record set, took off slowly at first, selling 43,000 copies in New York, Connecticut and New Jersey in 13 weeks. After signing with Private Stock Records in April 1976, they began the same campaign in Los Angeles and Las Vegas and the album began to sell at an unprecedented rate, attracting widespread media attention.

Lemongello came up with the idea after a failed cabaret career and repeated appearances on national TV, including three on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. After the success of the ad campaign, he performed at Carnegie Hall, Madison Square Garden and Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.

Lemongello was spoofed in the episode of Saturday Night Live that originally aired May 22, 1976, with Chevy Chase playing a singer named Peter Lemon Moodring. Chase would also invoke Peter Lemongello as an alias in his 1989 movie Fletch Lives.

The Love '76 commercial was parodied by recording artist Will Dailey in May, 2009. This video captures the scene of two stereotypical show business managers coercing Dailey to appear in a TV advertisement for his new album, Torrent, so that he can recreate the success of Peter Lemongello, Zamfir and Slim Whitman. The commercial itself is a scene-by-scene recreation of the original Lemongello spot that first aired on television in 1976.

Lemongello continued his career in Branson, Missouri, billed as Branson's "Italian Crooner". Most recently Peter has adopted "The Great American Songbook" and appears frequently across the country.

References

  1. Wansley, Joy (1976-09-20). "Roll Over Again, Beethoven; the Hustle's On, and Walter Murphy Has Taken 'A Fifth'". People. 6 (12). Time Inc.
  2. http://www.charlesrapp.com/Details.aspx?mId=136 Charles Rapp Enterprises – Peter Lemongello Retrieved 5 May 2007
  3. http://mailman.xmission.com/pipermail/exotica/2002-September/006055.html Exotica@mailman.xmission.com Exotica .com
  4. “The $390,000 Man” Time; Monday, May. 31, 1976
  5. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1711180/ IMBd Direct

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