Rating:
Genre:
R&B
Release Date: 07/08/2008
After a three-year (1955 -- 1958) meteoric rise to international fame,
Frankie Lymon (vocal) was ready to emerge from beneath the shadow of
the Teenagers, with whom he'd scored the Top 20 pop entries
"Why Do Fools Fall in Love," "I Want You to Be My Girl," and
"Goody Goody" for
Gee Records. It was just one of several labels founded in the mid- to late '50s in New York City by record producer
George Goldner,
Joe Kolsky, and nightclub owner
Morris Levy. The trio felt
Roulette Records, another of their "holdings," might prove a more suitable venue for
Lymon to strike out as a solo artist. With his trademark falsetto still intact, the vocalist was paired up with
Roulette's A&R department heads
Hugo Peretti and
Luigi Creatore -- one of the most important producing/engineering partnerships of the pre-British Invasion golden age of American pop music. Their contributions to
Lymon's debut long-player
Rock & Roll (1958) are particularly noteworthy. Nowhere is that as evident than the remakes of
"Wake Up Little Suzie" and
"Little Bitty Pretty One" as the singer can be heard double-tracking his own leads. The resulting resonance created a richer texture for the harmonies. Elsewhere,
Lymon's phrasing on the wailing opener
"Waiting in School," the swinging
"It Hurts to Be in Love," as well as an update of the early West Coast R&B rave-up
"Buzz, Buzz, Buzz" are among the best of the lesser-known titles. Here he likewise places his stamp on material that had become indelibly linked to other artists -- such as
Elvis Presley and
"Jailhouse Rock" or
Paul Anka's
"Diana." While a slight departure from most of the album, the jazzy and optimistic
"Send for Me" and the midtempo ballad
"Silhouettes" reveal
Lymon's criminally underutilized potential as a crooner. Half a century after it its initial release,
Collectors' Choice Music reissued
Rock & Roll in 2008, marking its availability for the first time in several decades.
~Lindsay Planer, All Music Guide