Gino Vannelli
Vannelli grew up in a family headed by his cabaret-singing father and a  ‘keen-eared’ mother. Instinctively drawn to jazz, drummers in  particular, such as Gene Krupa, Buddy Rich, Joe Morello, Ed Thigpen and  Elvin Jones, as a child Vannelli studied drums and music theory for five  years. Gino’s first foray into pop music came one afternoon as a group  of young drummers stood in line, waiting to take turns to audition for a  Montreal East group called the Cobras. The rite of passage involved  playing a tune called “Wipeout” by the Ventures. Having never heard the  song before, Gino made sure he waited to the very last, studying the  parts every aspiring drummer played (or was trying to play) That  afternoon, Gino came home a little later than usual from school, but as  the official drummer for the Cobras. A year later, with his brother Joe  holding down the keyboard chair, Vannelli headed up the  Motown-influenced Jacksonville 5 (note, this is five years before the  Jackson 5 recorded their first record). Along the way there were guitar  and piano lessons. The urge to compose words and music followed not long  after. At fourteen, Gino began his official singing career when the  singer in the band fortuitously couldn’t make the high water mark in a  then popular tune by a gritty Welshman, Tom Jones, called “It’s Not  Unusual”.