Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

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Top Releases

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Ooh-Wee Baby! The Best of Frankie Ford

10.3M streams

10,259,983

Ooh-Wee Baby! The Best of Frankie Ford

9.7M streams

9,737,622

Let's Take a Sea Cruise with Frankie F...

4.9M streams

4,890,917

Sea Cruise / Time After Time

4.9M streams

4,862,910

Let's Take a Sea Cruise

521.9K streams

521,872

Cruisin' with Frankie Ford

171.5K streams

171,514

Christmas

26.3K streams

26,270

Quarter To Three

23.5K streams

23,490

On The Street Where You Live

23K streams

23,033

You Talk Too Much

17.7K streams

17,658

Biography

It's ironic that some of the greatest New Orleans R&B of the 1950s was sung by a white man. Although he could have passed for a teen idol, Frankie Ford sang with as much grit as anyone of any color in the Crescent City. He recorded some fine singles for the Ace label in the late '50s, particularly the pounding "Sea Cruise," which made the Top 20 in 1959 and remains one of the hits most identified with the classic New Orleans R&B sound. "Sea Cruise" actually began life as a Huey "Piano" Smith song with Bobby Marchan on vocals, but producer Johnny Vincent had the inspired idea of dubbing Ford's singing on top of Smith's backing track. "Sea Cruise," with its bleating foghorn and irresistible piano groove, was an impossible act to follow, and Ford never approached the Top 20 again. But he cut several more gutsy sides for Ace that featured top New Orleans players like Huey Smith and saxophonist Red Tyler; one of the best, "Roberta," was covered by the Animals in the mid-'60s. A few of his singles found him following ill-advised swing jazz and teen idol directions, and he faded from view in the 1960s, although he made a cameo appearance in the film version of Alan Freed's life. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi