Bob Kuban

[1] Kuban was heavily influenced by Ike & Tina Turner, whom he would watch perform at Club Imperial in St. Louis before his band became regulars.

[1] For this hit single Kuban is honored in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's permanent exhibit on one-hit wonders.

[4] Kuban continued to be a fixture on the St. Louis music scene, and still toured and performed at private parties.

In the 1960s, a spin-off of the group was a band called The Guise, led by In-Men organist and songwriter Greg Hoeltzel.

[6] In a tragic coincidence, Walter Scott, who was the frontman for The In-Men and the lead singer of "The Cheater", a song whose lyrics speak of infidelity,[1] was murdered in 1983 by his wife's lover in a case that did not come to light until 1987.