Best known for their hits as
the Rip Chords, the vocal duo of
Bruce Johnston and
Terry Melcher collaborated on countless hot-rod and surf records during the mid-1960s, working under a seemingly endless variety of studio guises. While Johnston was already a well-known West Coast session player,
Melcher (the son of
Doris Day) had released a series of singles under the name Terry Day before being named Columbia Records' youngest-ever staff producer; he brought Johnston to the company to release 1963's Surfin' Round the World, and the pair soon began collaborating regularly. As
the Rip Chords, they scored their biggest hit with 1964's "Hey Little Cobra; " a series of singles credited to
Bruce and Terry followed before the duo went their separate ways, with Johnston joining
the Beach Boys and
Melcher enjoying even greater success as a producer. In mid-1998 the Sundazed label compiled The Best of Bruce and Terry, a 20-track collection of their hits. ~ Jason Ankeny