John Cafferty

简介: by John DouganArguably the quintessential one-shot band of all time, Cafferty and company (who, back in the early 70s, were simply a hack N 更多>

by John DouganArguably the quintessential one-shot band of all time, Cafferty and company (who, back in the early 70s, were simply a hack New England bar band) had their 15 minutes of fame courtesy of a ridiculously overwrought 1983 film called Eddie and the Cruisers (starring Michael Pare). The movie dealt with the suspicious death of a fictional singer/songwriter, modeled on a conflation of Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen, who had made the transition from smart rock & roller to serious artist. Seems as though Eddie had recorded a brilliant but unreleased album that fused Chuck Berry-style rock & roll with French Symbolist poetry. A record way ahead of its time, the master tapes of The Dark Side went missing, right around the time of Eddies death. Needing a band to supply music for the film, the producers used the Springsteen-ish sounding Cafferty and his clock-punching backup band. With the Springsteen-ish single On the Dark Side paving the way, Cafferty led, arguably, the most anonymous band with a hit record in the history of rock & roll. With the movie doing reasonably well in theaters and extremely well on video, sales of Caffertys album — which, ironically, had been out for months before the bands involvement with Eddie and the Cruisers and barely caused a murmur — skyrocketed. But, as the movie faded from the public consciousness, so did Caffertys imitation of Springsteen.

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