Danny Diaz & The Checkmates were a
Filipino rock band, based in
Hong Kong in the 1960s.
Background
They were part of the Hong Kong
beat group scene between 1964 and 1969, that included other Hong Kong
groups, such as Anders Nelson & The Inspiration, D'Topnotes, Fabulous Echoes, Joe Jr. & The Side Effects, Teddy Robin & The Playboys, Lotus, Magic Carpets, Mod East and Mystics and
The Thunderbirds.[1][2] They entered into a "Battle of the Sound" contest and conquered various groups, and in the final beat Teddy Robin & The Playboys to become the winner. Some recordings were released on the
Diamondrecord label. In the late 1960s they
covered a song that
The Foundations had released, the
Eric Allandale composition, "
Solomon Grundy".
Career
1960s
In 1964, Danny Diaz and the Checkmates released the single, "
Wonderful World" backed with "
Stand By Me" on
Diamond D.224 X 45. Interestingly on the single, the A side was credited to Barbara Campbell.[3] The song was originally composed by Lou Alder and Herb Alpert with additional input from Sam Cooke.[4] On the week ending December 12, 1964, the single entered the Hong Kong Top Ten at no. 8.[5] On week ending December 26, it was at no. 6.[6] On the week ending January 2, 1965 it reached its peak position of no. 3.[7][8][9] It stayed in the charts until the week ending January 23.[10][11][12]
In 1966, the group released " It's So Easy" bw "
She's So Fine" on Diamond D.240 X 45.[13] It was also released on Australia on Stateside OSS 259.[14]
In 1969, they recorded the song "Solomon Grundy" backed with "Goodbye Baby" which was released in the UK on Pye 7N 17690.[15] Having won the "Battle of the Bands" competition, which was organized by Levi Strauss, and a $10,000 recoding contract with
Trend Records[16][17] they were pictured in the February 8 issue of Record Mirror with composer
Eric Allandale and two other
Foundations members,
Alan Warner and Tony Gomez. The Foundations were hosting the group who were in London for the single's launch,[18] and Foundations manager Barry Class had arranged for them to come to the UK.[19]
1970s to 1990s
In the 1970s, Danny Diaz formed the Danny Diaz trio with his brothers Rudy and Romeo.
Around the mid 1970s, Danny Diaz moved to Canada.[20]
Discography
"Solomon Grundy" / "Goodbye Baby" –
Pye Records 7N.17690
"What Ever Happened to Romance" – Jewel 71387
Compilation albums
Diamond Records Best Selection (Four
CD) – Various artists – Universal Music (HK) (2006)