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Sandpipers

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'''The Sandpipers''' were an all-female vocal trio that included sisters Charlyne and Debbie Kilpatrick, and Sally Hirst. The group formed in 1964, after singing in the glee club at Warrington Middle School, and from there graduated to doing shows at NAS and the officers wives clubs.
Their 1965 performance at a fashion show caught the attention of Tom Smith, general manager of country radio station WNVY. They, along with local band The Phatons, soon opened for country music star Red Foley at the Municipal Auditorium. That show was followed by weekend employment at the Sahara Club, where they teamed-up with a little-known band called the Allman Joys, later known in 1967 and 1968 as Hour Glass, and from 1969 forward as the Allman Brothers Band. They travelled with the Allmans for two weeks for shows at fraternity parties in Tallahassee and Hattiesburg, then to New York's Greenwich Village where they were offered a recording contract. In all, the Sandpipers spent six months touring with the Allman JoysAllmans.
By the early 1970s, the ladies had musically gone their own separate ways and were no longer performing regularly as a group. In the '70s, Debbie Kilpatrick sang at the Gold Nugget club, Charlyne Kilpatrick sang with local band ZigZag, and Sally Hirst sang with several bands, married and traveled the world.
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