Earl-Jean McCrea


Earl-Jean Reavis is an American former pop and R&B singer, who was a member of the Cookies vocal group. Credited as Earl-Jean, she had a solo hit with the original version of "I'm into Something Good", written by Gerry Goffin and Carole King, and later a bigger hit for Herman's Hermits.

Early life

Reavis was born in Brooklyn, New York, but lived with her family in North Carolina from the age of two. They returned to Brooklyn to live in Coney Island when Jeanie was a young teenager, where she attended Lincoln High School. In 1960, she married Grant Reavis, and had a child. Gerry Goffin and Earl-Jean McCrea had a daughter together while Goffin and King were still working together, as author Sheila Weller said in her book "Girls Like Us," which chronicles the lives of King, Joni Mitchell and Carly Simon.

Career

Reavis's older sister, Darlene McCrea, and the other original members of the Cookies - a group first formed in 1954 - eventually evolved into Ray Charles' backing group, the Raelettes. In 1961, Earl-Jean was persuaded to join a new version of the Cookies. The group was signed to Goffin and King's Dimension record label in 1962, and scored hits with "Don't Say Nothin' Bad ", and "Chains".
Reavis became pregnant while on tour, and Gerry Goffin was named as the father; the baby, Dawn Reavis, was born in July 1964. She left the Cookies, and signed for Colpix, where she recorded the Goffin and King song "I'm into Something Good", which reached no.38 in the United States on the Billboard Hot 100. Later that year in Britain, a cover version by Herman's Hermits topped the charts. She recorded a follow-up single in 1964, again written by Goffin and King, called 'Randy You're Quite a Guy" but this failed to chart.
Goffin and King gave Earl-Jean financial support, but she did not have any further hits. She later worked as a specialist in early childhood, and opened a day care center.