Pedicin might not have been the oldest man ever to play rock & roll -- a few Black musicians with earlier birth dates, like William Perryman (aka Piano Red) and Big Joe Turner, were around in the 1950s -- but he was right up there, eight years older than Bill Haley and 19 years older than Elvis Presley. The saxman/bandleader was born in 1917 in West Philadelphia, and came of age just as the swing era was booming; he played in that idiom for a decade but by the early '50s, he'd moved on to playing an edgy brand of R&B-flavored dance music and was among the very first white musicians doing that kind of crossover music to be signed by RCA Victor. The son of a barber, Pedicin was one of four children, and had taken up the alto saxophone by age ten, in 1927 -- a year later, he was playing as part of a children's band on radio, and in his teens was leading a band of his own, playing local dances. By the time he was in his mid-teens, swing music was starting to make itself felt, and musicians such as Tommy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, and (later) Glenn Miller were ascending to stardom. Pedicin absorbed what they had to say musically and by 1940 had organized his first band, the Four Sharps, with Maurice Belmont on vibes, Louis de Francesco on bass, and Dave Appell on rhythm guitar. The quartet became a fixture on the local bar scene in Philadelphia and locales such as Seaside Heights, New Jersey, and they had plenty of work. Based on the recorded evidence, they had the musical talent to justify the success; they even had a gig with Frank Sinatra in 1944 when he was already a pop superstar.
The group managed to survive into the early '50s, well past the end of swing music's dominance -- the clubs they played were able to support quartets, if not full bands, and the work was there. Interestingly, the group had added drums to their lineup by then and were known variously as the Mike Pedicin Quartet (or sometimes the Mike Pedicin Quintet) or the Four Men of Rhythm, and their development paralleled that of a similarly configured outfit out of rural Pennsylvania called Bill Haley His Saddlemen -- the latter had also added drums to what was basically a country outfit and began absorbing R&B influences. Both bands ended up in just about the same place musically by 1953/1954, essentially white acts doing heavily R&B-influenced dance music -- both outfits even recorded for Ivin Ballen, and Pedicin ended up with a lot more early recordings, but Haley's band (rechristened Bill Haley His Comets) had the advantage of Danny Cedrone sitting in on guitar and access to a pair of songs, "Rock the Joint" and "Rock Around the Clock," that made enough noise to propel them out of Philadelphia and into the national spotlight. According to scholar Bill Millar, the two bands also shared a common link through the songwriting of DJ Bickley Bix Reichner, whose work dated back to the '30s and who provided material to both outfits.
Pedicin and co. were signed to RCA Victor in early 1955, months before anybody at the label was familiar with Elvis Presley. At the time, the label was hoping to find an outfit akin to Haley's band, or the white equivalent to the Treniers or Piano Red on, who could play rocking dance music that sold. The group was awesome, in the studio as well as live, and were so much like Haley's band in their sound that it was a crying shame they never got the break of a good song or a movie appearance. They were a day late and a dollar short on their first session, cutting "Mambo Rock" a month after Haley had done it. Despite their slightly late start, the Mike Pedicin Quintet showed a startling mix on the track, the remnants of their swing-era virtuosity on the tenor sax solo, a pounding drumbeat with lots of ornamentation, slashing and crunching rhythm guitar, and all of it played as loud as any R&B outfit of the era. "I Wanna Hug Ya, Kiss Ya, Squeeze Ya" was a cover of a Chess release from the year before, and they sounded white but played it louder and harder than most white bands would ever have tried to even a year earlier.
Much more successful artistically was the Pedicin-authored "D-E-V-I-L," where they broke down the color line a little in their singing, and "Rock-A-Bye," which broke it down even further. "I'm Hip," written by George Weiss, was a throwback despite its title, a slow swing-style ballad that showed how much class this band had. Any solos that Pedicin couldn't handle easily were given to Sam The Man Taylor, and Dominic Arnone and Sam Cocchia played guitar with the same kind of aplomb that one associates with Frannie Beecher of Haley's outfit. Pedicin's band finally reached the lower echelon of the Top 100 with Reichner's "The Large, Large House." It was a fleeting moment, spending a single week at number 79, and the group would only ever see one more entry on the charts.
Pedicin was busy at RCA for the first ten months of his two-year contract, through November 1955, but after that he only had one session in the spring of 1956. It was clear by then that rock & roll was going through a change, passing into the hands of younger performers and evolving into a more personal and charisma-driven form embodied by the likes of Elvis Presley and Chuck Berry. He'd gone hitless for the duration, though that never affected the band's bookings -- they played some of the best hotels in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and ranged as far west as Detroit and even Las Vegas. A surviving tape from Detroit Stadium in October 1955 captures a bracing, stunning performance and provides 20 of the most exciting minutes of live rock & roll you'll hear this side of Piano Red's incomparable live Magnolia Ballroom tape the following year.
The band recorded a single for Cameo, enjoying a brief chart entry in 1958 with "Shake a Hand," aided by an appearance on American Bandstand (then a Philadelphia-based show). They also cut sides through the 1960s on Federal, ABC/Paramount, and Apollo Records, among other imprints. Pedicin was still making music into the '80s, and in 1994 saw his RCA sides compiled on the Bear Family Records CD Jive Medicin, augmented with the live 1955 Detroit material. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi