They began singing together in grade school and performed in several plays at the Old Brewery Theatre, a summer stock playhouse in Helena.
[1][3] They secured regular singing gigs at coffeehouses and clubs in Greenwich Village, where they were discovered by Decca Records executive Bill Downer.
[2][3] After signing with Decca Records, Twinn Connexion began work on an album with producer Jerry Keller, his frequent collaborator Dave Blume, and session musicians from the Carolyn Hester Coalition.
The cover features the brothers standing next to each other wearing identical yellow and white Nehru suits with green ascots and pins with "2x" written on them.
The critic wrote that the song's happy beat and duo's sound "could easily hit with much play and sales impact.
[6] Decca was acquired by Westinghouse Electric and promotion for Twinn Connexion dwindled, so Jerry Hopkins went back to school, earned an art degree and lived in Woodstock, New York.
[2][3] Twinn Connexion songs have appeared on compilation albums such as Morning Glory Daze: Universal Soft Rock Collection, Vol.
The 24-page booklet features liner notes by three-time Grammy® nominee Sheryl Farber, with commentary from the surviving member of the duo, Jerry Hopkins.