Joey Castle (24 June 1942 – 15 Dec 1978) was like a lot of the kids who came up in the wake of Elvis Presley, trying to sound like him and not making it, but with a difference -- Castle left behind a dozen or so records that are well worth hearing.
Among the ranks of Elvis Presley sound-alikes, there are
the imitators who came along in the wake of his death in 1977 and then there
are those who came to the sound a little more honestly, back in the formative
days of rock & roll. Joey Castle, aka Cliff Rivers, real name Jospeh Fohn
Castaldo, fits into the latter category -- he was even signed to RCA. He never
had the chance to cash in on Elvis' death as a sound-alike artist, succumbing
to brain cancer less than 18 months after the demise of his onetime idol.
Joseph Castaldo was born in the Bronx, NYin 1942 and was
13 years old when rock & roll broke nationally -- the family was a musical
one, his uncle Lee Castle having become famous as a bandleader in the 1940s,
but Joey took to the new music. By the end of 1957, at 15, he was ready to take
the plunge, and a year later his demo tapes landed him a contract with RCA.
1958 and RCA Victor’s best selling recording artist – Elvis Presley – goes into the Army. For two years. What to do? Since 1956 – Elvis has been a goldmine for the record label. Elvis has some songs in the can. so the record company will have it covered. But what if they bomb? Everyone knows Elvis is in the Army! Answer – come up with a new star. Joey Castle. He sounds like Elvis and can gyrate with the best of them. RCA took out a record ad – and proclaimed Joey Castle, “The New King of Rock ‘N’ Roll.”
1958 and RCA Victor’s best selling recording artist – Elvis Presley – goes into the Army. For two years. What to do? Since 1956 – Elvis has been a goldmine for the record label. Elvis has some songs in the can. so the record company will have it covered. But what if they bomb? Everyone knows Elvis is in the Army! Answer – come up with a new star. Joey Castle. He sounds like Elvis and can gyrate with the best of them. RCA took out a record ad – and proclaimed Joey Castle, “The New King of Rock ‘N’ Roll.”
His
first and only RCA release, "Come a Little Bit Close Baby" b/w
"That Ain't Nothing But Right," failed to chart, and he was dropped
from the label at the end of the year. Joey next turned up on the Headline label with a
rockabilly screamer, "Rock 'N Roll Daddy-O," backed with the brooding
"Wild Love," both extraordinarily effective rockabilly tunes to come
out of New York City -- it didn't sell, but it did become a highly prized
collector's item.
Castle kept performing locally but didn't record again
until 1963, when he hooked up with entrepreneur Sid Prosen, who had previously
recorded the teenaged Simon & Garfunkel as Tom & Jerry. Castle cut a
series of sessions that yielded one single, "Marsha" b/w "True
Lips," on Prosen's Thanks label, credited to
"Cliff Rivers" -- intentional or not, it was an Elvis homage, recalling the latter's performance as "Deke Rivers" in the best of his early movies, Loving You, as well as alluding to English rock &
roller Cliff Richard. The A-side sounded like Elvis Presley crossed with Del Shannon, while the B-side recalled the Elvis of 1956 in a softer moment. Ironically, it was his best-selling record, although it never moved more than a few thousand copies and most of those in England -- too far away to do Joey Castle/Cliff Rivers any good.
"Cliff Rivers" -- intentional or not, it was an Elvis homage, recalling the latter's performance as "Deke Rivers" in the best of his early movies, Loving You, as well as alluding to English rock &
roller Cliff Richard. The A-side sounded like Elvis Presley crossed with Del Shannon, while the B-side recalled the Elvis of 1956 in a softer moment. Ironically, it was his best-selling record, although it never moved more than a few thousand copies and most of those in England -- too far away to do Joey Castle/Cliff Rivers any good.
Apart from a handful of unreleased tracks that year and
the demos that got him signed to RCA in the first place, much of Castle's work
consisted of cutting demos for publisher Hill & Range. He made his last
single in the late '60s, still true to his rock & roll roots even amid the
changing tastes of the era. During the 1970s, he re-emerged in a rock &
roll/variety act featuring music and comedy, and put out an album of his own
under the name of Cliff Rivers. Joey evidently had enough of a following
locally to perform at least part-time and sell the album after his shows.
Joey Castle died of a brain tumour on December 15, 1978 at
the age of only 36 years old. The bulk of his discography was published by the
German Bear Family Records
(Edited mainly from Bruce Eder @ AllMusic, with info from
Wikipedia & mrpopculture.com)
For “Joey Castle = Rock 'n' Roll Daddy-O” go here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.imagenetz.de/f8835585d/Joey-Castle-Rock-and-Roll-Daddy-O.rar.html
1. True Lips
2. Don't Knock It
3. That Ain't Nothin' But Right
4. Please Love Me
5. Shake Hands With A Fool
6. Come A Little Close Baby
7. Wild Love
8. Rock & Roll Daddy-O
9. Marsha
10. That Ain't Nothin' But Right
11. Please Love Me
12. That Ain't Nothin' But Right
13. Phantom Lover
14. That's My Secret
15. Cathy
16. Lucy Ann
The original recordings made by Joey Castle for labels including Headline and RCA and including previously unissued material. A mixture of uptempo Rockabilly and Elvis Presley styled Rock 'n' Roll, sometimes sounding remarkably like the King.
A big thank you to Jake for active link.
Hello Bob,
ReplyDeletecan you please make or give an Re Up of this CD from Joey Castle.Many thanks!! Greetings Thomas
Hello Tom, Here you are....
ReplyDeletehttps://www.upload.ee/files/12869769/Joey_Castle.rar.html
Hello Bob,
ReplyDeletethat is great!! Man thanks for your help!! Great to have your offer and greatful web side!! Keep your health!!b Many greetings Thomas
Hi Bob, could you put the Joey castle link back
ReplyDeleteHello Manolex, Here's Joey
ReplyDeletehttps://mega.nz/file/1jJlyCrA#IEmyA7gX52St2G72NJ8ilZSFBTTPeOiO35DueJuszh4