Frederick Anthony Picariello (b. 4 December 1940* in Lynn, Massachusetts) is an American rock and roll singer.
In looking back over the history of rock & roll, the sad fact remains that very few of its original practitioners stayed true to its original big beat vision. Some made a handful of brilliant sides before broader horizons — television or the movies — beckoned. Others were rockers in name only, pop


Frederico Anthony Picariello was born in Revere, MA on December 4, 1940. His dad was a truck driver by day, a bandleading trumpeter by night. Frederico taught himself to play guitar at age 16 and formed The Hurricanes, a small combo that played high school dances. By 1956 he was a session musician, playing guitar behind The G-Clefs on their hit, "Ka-Ding-Dong."
One afternoon Frederico’s mother handed him a poem she had written called “Rock ‘n’ Roll Baby.” He set it to music
and cut a demo that was heard by producer Bob Crewe and

With the help of WMEX’s Arnie “Woo Woo” Ginsberg, “Tallahassee Lassie” broke in Boston and soared to #6 nationally in June 1959. Its mix of a powerhouse vocal, pounding piano, raunchy guitar, infectious handclaps and


Of special note: the solid gold revival of a black vaudeville song from 1922, “Way Down Yonder In New Orleans.” (For some reason, Freddy’s first name was misspelled “Freddie” on most copies of that single.) Then in 1964, Cannon moved over to the Warner Brothers label. The hits rolled on with “Abigail Beecher,” “The Dedication Song” and the classic party starter “Action” (the theme from Clark’s TV series Where The Action Is).
In recent years, Freddy Cannon has concentrated on being a tireless live performer at Disneyland, Madison Square Garden and elsewhere. (info edited from AMG & hit parade hall of fame.org)
Here's a video of Freddy singing "The Dedication Song"
"The Dedication Song" just missed the national Top 40 following it's debut in February 1966. Over it's six week chart run it peaked at #41 -- inxplicably -- because it is such a GREAT record. It was also Freddy's last to reach Billboard's Hot 100 national singles chart until 1981, when he came back with "Let's Put The Fun Back in Rock 'n' Roll."
* I note there are some that give Freddy's birth date as 1939, but I have opted for 1940 as it is given by more sources.
1 comment:
Here's some comments from my original Multiply post back in 2008.
Richard Astley-Clemas said... A case could be made that says Freddie Cannon is the True King of Rock'n'Roll
4 December 2008 08:36
Peter Smith said...Thanks Robert, This back ground information makes the music more enjoyable
4 December 2008 10:20
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