Arthur Lee Maye was a above average baseball player and damn good singer.......the other dude was a decent boxer....add on.....first one to mention Shaq loses.
Herb Bernstein was a producer and arranger and also put out the braek heavy "Herb Bernstein's New Crusade" LP...he played in the NBA, for the Bucks I believe
Herb Bernstein was a producer and arranger and also put out the braek heavy "Herb Bernstein's New Crusade" LP...he played in the NBA, for the Bucks I believe
Rosey Grier (sometimes billed as Roosevelt Grier) put out a shitload of great soul singles in the 60s and 70s. He also had an album. If he weren't busy with the Los Angeles Rams, I could see him tearing it up on the chitlin-circuit. He sang like a less-paranoid James Carr.
Ernie Terrell, the boxer, also had a few good soul 45's to his credit.
Herb Bernstein was a producer and arranger and also put out the braek heavy "Herb Bernstein's New Crusade" LP...he played in the NBA, for the Bucks I believe
Golden Gloves was standard bio for soul singers. Like singing in church.
James Brown (who also claimed to have been a great baseball player) and Barry Gordy can be added to the above.
Willie Mays has a Duke 45 that doesn't suck.
Before the Shaqs there were lots of other sport celebrities who made records. Rosie Grere (also movies) Medowlark Lemon...
HarveyCanal"a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
Jack Johnson and Donovan Frankenreiter and Tom Curren.
One of the few albums by a pro athlete that's sweated for musical reasons.
Wow.....I've passed this up many times....what style is it??
I've never heard the whole thing, but the cuts people go for have sort of a rural soft-psych sound.
The higher numbers on Popsike are, I think, the result of a contest that a radio station was having that involved finding a copy of the album. I can sell it easy for $20 - $25, though.
I had never seen this....worth the price of admission to this thread alone!!
Thanks.
"The late Tony Conigliaro, who at the age of 20 was the youngest player ever to lead the American League in homeruns, quietly recorded several records worth of material in the 60s, earning him a spot on ???The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.??? Cancro also pointed out that, while the current lineup is obviously musically-inclined, the 60s had its fair share of musical talents on the team. In addition to Tony C., ???Rico Petrocelli played drums and one other player participated,??? Cancro reveals."
Scott Radinsky was a pretty decent pitcher for the White Sox, Dodgers and a couple of other teams in the 90's. He also was lead singer for the hardcore band Scared Straight who put out a "classic" 7" called "You Drink, You Drive, You Die" in the late 80's. The band changed their name to Ten Foot Pole in the 90's and kicked him out because he was too busy with baseball. I think he owns a skate park in California now.
HarveyCanal"a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
I had never seen this....worth the price of admission to this thread alone!!
Thanks.
"The late Tony Conigliaro, who at the age of 20 was the youngest player ever to lead the American League in homeruns, quietly recorded several records worth of material in the 60s, earning him a spot on ???The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.??? Cancro also pointed out that, while the current lineup is obviously musically-inclined, the 60s had its fair share of musical talents on the team. In addition to Tony C., ???Rico Petrocelli played drums and one other player participated,??? Cancro reveals."
Comments
Waymond Tisdale had some Jazz joints.
kobe had a rap joint too, would never describe him as a musician though
edit: haha didnt read all of rock's post, I lose...
Last 30 game winning pitcher in MLB.....
Bonus pun caption:
Make 'em say...
Very cool....is that LP on Metromedia??
So was Jackie Wilson.
http://www.houstonpress.com/2007-11-29/music/pro-athlete-musicians/
:shreddin_it: b/w
Plus guys like Meadowlark Lemon of the Globetrotters, Joe Frazier and I think Oscar Robertson...
Bukka White was a boxer
Ernie Terrell, the boxer, also had a few good soul 45's to his credit.
I had never seen this....worth the price of admission to this thread alone!!
Thanks.
yep
Wow.....I've passed this up many times....what style is it??
I heard that guy Hannibal played basketball.
Oliver Sain played for the Cardinals.
James Brown (who also claimed to have been a great baseball player) and Barry Gordy can be added to the above.
Willie Mays has a Duke 45 that doesn't suck.
Before the Shaqs there were lots of other sport celebrities who made records. Rosie Grere (also movies) Medowlark Lemon...
I've never heard the whole thing, but the cuts people go for have sort of a rural soft-psych sound.
The higher numbers on Popsike are, I think, the result of a contest that a radio station was having that involved finding a copy of the album. I can sell it easy for $20 - $25, though.
Not sure what's up with the weird video:
Damn.....very Neil Young-like.......I know where there is a copy that I'll scoop up tomorrow....thanks.
"The late Tony Conigliaro, who at the age of 20 was the youngest player ever to lead the American League in homeruns, quietly recorded several records worth of material in the 60s, earning him a spot on ???The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson.??? Cancro also pointed out that, while the current lineup is obviously musically-inclined, the 60s had its fair share of musical talents on the team. In addition to Tony C., ???Rico Petrocelli played drums and one other player participated,??? Cancro reveals."
There's also this:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=370488217931&nma=true&rt=nc&si=4EhN9Nz/E9/H/jRVkGOQzLokweg=
Won a Grammy in 1984 for co-writing...
some of the tracks are surprisingly good. a couple of e-40 appearances and a song with snoop. his older stuff is cringe-worthy:
(cant get it to embed)
Wow... very cool! I have an autographed Tony Conigliaro bat that my mom got as a kid. Such a sad story...
http://www.bostonspastime.com/tonycbeaning.html