A young sunshine pop group that came from the East Coast rather than California (the home of most such acts in the 1960s), the Blades of Grass had a mild hit in 1967 with "Happy." Their version made #87, while a competing version by the Sunshine Company from Southern California got higher, making #50. Actually the Blades of Grass's single was the much bigger hit in some markets, like New York, Washington DC, and St. Louis. But the two competing versions of the same song split sales, with the Sunshine Company generally speaking doing better in the western half of the country, and the Blades of Grass better in the eastern half.
Much of the Blades of Grass's personality was subsumed in the studio, where their tracks were given rather heavy orchestration, and where they seldom recorded original material. They were, however, a real band from the New York metropolitan area, with two of the members coming from Maplewood, NY, and the other two from South Orange, NJ.