Cruisin' With Frankie Ford

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Cruisin' With Frankie Ford album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 36:49

eMusic Features

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Teenage Graceland

By Wayne Robins, eMusic Contributor

After Elvis went into the Army and before the British Invasion, the years 1958-63 were rock's forgotten years. But they were the years that shaped the musical tastes of baby boomers and of acts from the Beatles and Rolling Stones to Bruce Springsteen and the Ramones. Hear the dance sensations, the one-hit-wonders, the girl groups and doo-wop singers, surfers and rockabilly twangers, the birth of Motown, the evolution of R&B into soul and so much… more »

They Say All Music Guide

This has both sides of all six singles Ford did for Imperial from 1960-62 and a couple of unissued tracks from the same era, as well as his 1984 Ace recording New Orleans Dynamo. The main attraction is the Imperial material, which was very hard to find before this reissue. Ford’s association with Imperial wasn’t very fruitful commercially, producing just a couple of small hits in covers of Joe Jones’ “You Talk Too Much” and Boyd Bennett’s “Seventeen.” This batch lacks anything on the order of “Sea Cruise,” but it’s still pretty solid vintage New Orleans R&B, produced by Dave Bartholomew. Some of the cuts are sweetened up with strings and backup female singers, but it’s mostly on the earthy side; when he slows the pace down on “Dedicated to Fats” and “One Hour,” he can sound uncannily like Fats Domino. New Orleans Dynamo is well above average for a 1980s effort by a 1950s rocker; nothing new here (in fact, many of its songs are covers of old New Orleans classics), but Ford and the London musicians execute the Crescent City R&B sound convincingly. – Richie Unterberger

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