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Mike Pedicin Quintet - Jive Medicin (1993)

Mike Pedicin Quintet - Jive Medicin (1993)
  • Title: Jive Medicin
  • Year Of Release: 1993
  • Label: Bear Family Records
  • Genre: Rock'n'Roll, Mambo, Doo Wop
  • Quality: Flac (image, .cue, log)
  • Total Time: 78:37
  • Total Size: 257 Mb (scans)
  • WebSite:
Mike Pedicin Quintet - Jive Medicin (1993)


Tracklist:

01. Mambo Rock
02. I Want to Hug You, Kiss You, Squeeze You
03. D-E-V-I-L
04. Rock-A-Bye
05. I'm Hip
06. The Large, Large House
07. Jackpot
08. Fe-Fi-Fo-Fum
09. The Hot Barcarolle
10. You Gotta Go!
11. When the Cats Come Marching In
12. The Banjo Rock
13. The Large, Large House
14. Rock-A-Bye
15. Hotter Than a Pistol
16. Teen Age Fairy Tales
17. The Beat
18. Save Us, Preacher Davis
19. Close All the Doors
20. TD's Boogie
21. The Hucklebuck
22. Calypso Rock
23. Hi-Yo Silver
24. Tiger Rag
25. Ain't That a Shame
26. Crazy Ball
27. You Gotta Go!
28. When the Cats Come Marching In
29. I Want You to Be My Baby
30. Night Train-Sweet Georgia Brown
31. Rock-A-Bye
32. Hotter Than a Pistol

The Mike Pedicin Quintet was among the earliest white rock & roll acts -- if not the very first -- signed by RCA Victor, at the outset of 1955, nearly a year before Elvis Presley came to the label. They only ever scored one chart entry in two years at the label, and that was for exactly one week, but such national obscurity was no reflection on them or their music. These guys were huge in Philadelphia -- which had no shortage of good bands -- and played some of the best venues in New Jersey and points west, as far as Nevada. The first 23 songs here comprise the group's complete output for RCA, only 18 of which were originally released. The band consisted of Mike Pedicin on alto sax, Buddy La Plata at the piano, Sam Cocchia on the guitar, Lou De Francis on bass, and Al Mauro on vocals and drums, with Robert Sentenari (drums) and Louis "Ace" Devecchis (piano, trumpet, trombone) augmenting their forces and Sam "The Man" Taylor (sax) and Lloyd Trottman (bass) participating as well. The sound is solid dance-oriented rock & roll, akin to Johnny Otis or Bill Haley & His Comets, a mix of serious R&B with a level of virtuosity derived from the band's swing-era origins, all played very loud. "Mambo Rock" may sound hokey today, but in 1955 it was considered perfectly valid rock & roll, at a time when the latter was dance music, and "I Want to Hug You, Kiss You, Squeeze You" is one of the best white covers of a Chess Records single that one is likely to encounter from the mid-'50s. Mauro's singing was strangely analogous to the work of any number of Italian doo wop singers from later in the decade, crossing partly over to a "black" sound -- the crossover partially worked in the studio, but on-stage it was totally effective. And that's where the real treat on this disc comes in: nine tracks recorded live in professional quality from the Detroit Stadium in October of 1955. This is as good as this kind of music got, played loud and hard with few inhibitions and lots of virtuosity. The results are as exciting as any live recording of its decade, and rate right alongside Piano Red's 1956 Magnolia Ballroom live sides as a priceless artifact of what rock & roll was supposed to be in the mid-'50s.


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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 22:47
    • Like
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.