Maurice Rocco
Maurice Rocco was an American pianist, singer, actor, and composer known for playing boogie-woogie piano and his disdain for using a piano bench. He was a top nightclub and theater draw in the 1940s, and made several film appearances. He toured the United States, Canada, and Europe before becoming a fixture in Bangkok, Thailand, where he was murdered.
Biography
Maurice Rockhold was born in 1915 in Oxford, Ohio to a music teacher mother. His mother taught him classical piano starting at age 10, but did not interfere with his interest in rhythm playing as long as he finished his lessons.He entered Miami University as a music student but soon quit to work for radio station WLW. His work at WLW impressed Noble Sissle so much that he hired him to work with the Rogers Sisters at the Kit Kat Club in New York, and the act was renamed The Three Roccos. He was to later legally change his last name from Rockhold to Rocco. In 1938, Rocco left the club to participate in two films, Vogues of 1938 and 52nd Street. He returned to New York to form his own band, which included Alton Moore, Arville Harris, and Bobby Holmes among its members. By the early 1940s he was no longer fronting a band, but was working as a solo act.
Between 1940 and 1941 he cut 14 sides for Decca, most of which were released on their "Sepia" series. He did not join active military service because his poor eyesight classified him as 4-F, but during World War II he entertained American troops, both in person and as part of the American Forces Network Jubilee radio program. Rocco spent most of the 1940s headlining at nightclubs and theaters and participating in vaudeville revues. By 1944 he had a US $500,000 insurance policy on his hands. Alongside Mary Lou Williams, he represented the United States in the second African Dance Festival at Carnegie Hall in April 1945. He married a woman named Iantha on July 3 of that year. Later in 1945, he appeared in his most famous role in the film Incendiary Blond. His earnings in 1945 topped U.S. $250,000. Despite all the professional success, this marriage was short lived. Iantha filed for divorce before their first anniversary amid allegations of physical and mental abuse. He signed to RCA Victor Records in 1949.
In the early 1950s he made tours of Europe and Southeast Asia. Alongside Slim Gaillard, he was in 1953 solicited to play a lead role in a film to be entitled "Two Joes from Georgia". Rocco fell into legal difficulties in the late 1950s regarding bad checks: he was jailed over Christmas 1957 in Cleveland, and was accused of the same offense in July 1958. He moved to Europe before spending the last 15 years of his life performing in Thailand, where he was a regular tourist attraction at the Bamboo Bar in the Oriental Hotel in Bangkok. He was found slashed to death in his apartment, death having occurred on March 24, 1976. The murder weapon was his own Malaysian knife. At the time of his death he was married to Mary Arlene Rocco. He is buried at Woodside Cemetery in Oxford.
Performance style
Rocco was billed as "Maurice Rocco and His Rockin' Rhythm" in nightclubs and his recordings. Maurice was most famous for standing while playing, not using a piano bench. The origin of his playing posture has been credited to different sources. In 1944 Rocco claimed that he started standing in 1941, when a customer was sitting on his piano bench and Rocco, intimidated by the heft of this customer, decided that it would be best to play without the customary seat. He eschewed a piano bench from this point on because of the positive reaction from the crowd that night. While playing, he would alternately beat out the rhythm with his feet, or perform dance moves. Billboard described his playing as "Rocking and Riotous" but panned his singing ability. His nightclub performances were known to be uncommonly boisterous for the period, even moving the piano from one end of the stage to the other with "violent energy," but Duke Ellington and Mabel Mercer praised his ability to perform in a sophisticated manner. His showmanship was as recognized as his piano playing, and he was known to favor wearing a pea-green dinner jacket. His performance style is said to have influenced Little Richard and Jerry Lee Lewis. Critic Peter Silvester describes Rocco's boogie-woogie style as "technically slick" but "devoid of genuine boogie-woogie tone coloring."Legacy and influence
Rocco was a headlining act for much of the 1940s, both in the United States and England. His stand-up piano playing became a byline. Because of his appearances in Hollywood musicals and "soundies" that were exported to Britain during the Second World War, Rocco's playing style was to influence several European post-war boogie-woogie specialists. He was an early influence on Ramsey Lewis and Bobby Short.Recordings
Rocco made his first recordings, for Decca, recording 12 sides in 1940 and '41. Some of his most popular recordings first appeared on the Guild label, where he recorded 8 sides, with Cozy Cole on drums and Mack Stewart on bass. When this label went out of business, its catalog was sold to Musicraft Records in 1946, which re-issued all 8 of them. He cut 10 new sides for Musicraft in September, 1946, 7 of which were re-issued by Allegro on a vinyl 10 inch LP in 1957. A Musicraft album of 78's numbered 449-452 was issued in 1946.Discography
Title | Recording Date | Issue | Notes |
Rhumboogie | September 27, 1940 | Decca 8504 | |
Rocco Blues | September 27, 1940 | Decca 8504 | |
Rocco's Boogie Woogie | September 27, 1940 | Decca 8523 | |
Tonky Blues | September 27, 1940 | Decca 8523 | |
Donkey Serenade, The | September 27, 1940 | Decca 8533 | |
Jungle Drums | September 27, 1940 | Decca 8533 | |
Java Jive | March 11, 1941 | Decca 8544 | |
Little Rock Getaway | March 11, 1941 | Decca 8544 | |
Hold Me Baby | March 11, 1941 | Decca 8558 | |
How Come You Do Me Like You Do? | March 11, 1941 | Decca 8558 | |
Tea for Two | March 11, 1941 | Decca 8574 | |
One I Love, The | March 11, 1941 | Decca 8574 | |
St. Louis Blues * | 1945 | Guild 102, Musicraft 353* | |
Begin the Beguine * | 1945 | Guild 102, Musicraft 353* | |
In the Shade of the Old Apple Tree | 1945 | Guild 103, Musicraft 368 | |
Tunke Blues | 1945 | Guild 103, Musicraft 368 | |
Cocktails for Two | 1945 | Guild 117, Musicraft 364 | |
Sugar | 1945 | Guild 117, Musicraft 364 | |
I Can't Get Started | – | Musicraft 427 | |
Blue Skies | 1945 | Guild 148, Musicraft 427 | |
Lullaby of Broadway | 1945 | Guild 148 | |
At Sundown | September 1946 | Musicraft 443, Allegro 4110 | |
My Tzatzkela | September 1946 | Musicraft 443 | |
Somebody Loves Me | September 1946 | Musicraft 449 | |
Invitation to the Blues | September 1946 | Musicraft 449, Allegro 4110 | |
You Can Depend of Me | September 1946 | Musicraft 450, Allegro 4110 | |
On the Sunny Side of the Street | September 1946 | Musicraft 450, Allegro 4110 | |
Hour of Parting, The | September 1946 | Musicraft 451 | |
Rose Room | September 1946 | Musicraft 451, Allegro 4110 | |
Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams | September 1946 | Musicraft 452, Allegro 4110 | |
Easter Parade | September 1946 | Musicraft 452, Allegro 4110 |
Compositions
- Boogie Woogie
- Rocco's Boogie Woogie
- Tonky Blues
- Tunke Blues
Film
- 1938 – Vogues of 1938 – "Rocco"
- 1938 – 52nd Street – himself
- 1943 – Rhumboogie – himself
- 1945 – Incendiary Blonde – himself
- 1947 – Rocco Blues – himself
- 1947 – Sunny Side of the Street
Radio