Frank Frost

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
My Back Scratcher 02:34 Tools
Jelly Roll King 00:00 Tools
Lucky to Be Living 00:00 Tools
Scratch My Back 00:00 Tools
Big Boss Man 00:00 Tools
Now What You Gonna Do 00:00 Tools
Harp and Soul 00:00 Tools
Got My Mojo Working 00:00 Tools
Things You Do 00:00 Tools
Ride With Your Daddy Tonight 00:00 Tools
Midnight Prowler 00:00 Tools
Feel Good Babe 00:00 Tools
So Tired Living By Myself 00:00 Tools
Didn't Mean No Harm 00:00 Tools
Never Leave Me At Home 00:00 Tools
Pocket Full of Money 00:00 Tools
Everything's Alright 00:00 Tools
Five Long Years 00:00 Tools
Baby You're so Kind 00:00 Tools
Undertaker 00:00 Tools
Jack's Jump 00:00 Tools
Harpin' on It 00:00 Tools
Mustang Sally 00:00 Tools
Just Come On Home 00:00 Tools
Gonna Put Her Down 00:00 Tools
Ernest's Groove 00:00 Tools
So Tired of Living By Myself 00:00 Tools
Crawl Back 00:00 Tools
Cummins Prison Farm 00:00 Tools
Pocket Full of Shells 00:00 Tools
Gonna Make You Mine 00:00 Tools
Just Like A Rabbit 00:00 Tools
Janie On My Mind 00:00 Tools
I Wanna Get Close 00:00 Tools
Now Twist 00:00 Tools
Crawlback 00:00 Tools
Quarter To Twelve 00:00 Tools
Pretty Baby 00:00 Tools
Unseen Eye 00:00 Tools
Mean Black Spider 00:00 Tools
Who Told You 00:00 Tools
My Back Scratcher - Original 00:00 Tools
Jelly Rolly King 00:00 Tools
Deep Blues 00:00 Tools
Born to Be Wise 00:00 Tools
You're So Kind 00:00 Tools
What You Gonna Do 00:00 Tools
Harpin' On It (Inst.) 00:00 Tools
Repo Man Blues 00:00 Tools
Everything's Alright - Original 00:00 Tools
My Baby 00:00 Tools
Sweet Woman 00:00 Tools
Harp and Soul (Inst.) 00:00 Tools
Baby Youre So Kind 00:00 Tools
Crawlback (Instrumental) - Instrumental 00:00 Tools
Nothin' I Wouldn't Do For You 00:00 Tools
Baby Your So Kind 00:00 Tools
Somebody Tell Me 00:00 Tools
Jack's Jump - Original 00:00 Tools
Crawlback (Instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Harp & Soul 00:00 Tools
Ride With You Daddy Tonight 00:00 Tools
Nothin I Wouldn't Do For You 00:00 Tools
Things To Do 00:00 Tools
Frank's Mambo 00:00 Tools
St. Louis Serenade 00:00 Tools
You Better Watch Yourself 00:00 Tools
I Didn't Know 00:00 Tools
Janie's On My Mind 00:00 Tools
mebody Tell Me 00:00 Tools
Back Scratcher 00:00 Tools
Scrarch My Back 00:00 Tools
Cotton Needs Pickin' 00:00 Tools
Helena Boogie 00:00 Tools
Somemebody Tell Me 00:00 Tools
Pocketful Of Shells 00:00 Tools
My Black Scratcher 00:00 Tools
Hrap And Soul 00:00 Tools
Got My Mojo Workin' 00:00 Tools
Everything's Allright 00:00 Tools
Feels good babe 00:00 Tools
Crawlback - Original 00:00 Tools
Keep Things Right 00:00 Tools
Jack's Jump [Tape Stretch on Master] 00:00 Tools
Jack's Jump (Tape Stretch on Master) 00:00 Tools
Cummings Prison Farm 00:00 Tools
Pretty Babe 00:00 Tools
Ride With You Daddy 00:00 Tools
Harp And Soul - Inst. 00:00 Tools
So Tired Living Be Myself 00:00 Tools
Now What You Gonna Do? 00:00 Tools
my backscratcher 00:00 Tools
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Frank Frost (Born April 15, 1936 in Auvergne, Arkansas; Died October 12, 1999 (aged 63) in Helena, Arkansas) was one of the foremost Delta blues harmonica players of his generation. Frost's first exposure to music came as a young boy when he learned to play the piano for the choir in his family's church. Frost moved to Saint Louis, Missouri when he was 15 and began his musical career as a guitarist. He toured in 1954 with drummer Sam Carr and Mr. Carr's father, Robert Nighthawk. Soon after, he spent several years touring with Sonny Boy Williamson, who helped teach him to play harmonica. After a hand injury, Frost turned his attention to the harmonica and piano. Around 1960, Frost moved with Carr to the Mississippi Delta. After he played a show with the guitarist Big Jack Johnson, they added him to their group. Together they attracted the interest of the producer Sam Phillips, who years earlier had overseen Elvis Presley's first recording sessions. He produced Hey Boss Man for Phillips International in 1962, with blues hybrids like Frank's Jump showing off Frost's diverse, intensely melodic harmonica solos. Presley's guitarist, Scotty Moore, produced Frost's next album in Nashville, Tennessee. In the late 1970's, Frost was re-discovered by a blues enthusiast, Michael Frank, who began releasing albums on his Earwig Music Company label by the trio, now called the Jelly Roll Kings after a song from Hey Boss Man. Over the years, cigarettes and alcohol wore Frost down but he continued to record, tour and diversify his repertory, appearing in the films Deep Blues: A Musical Pilgrimage to the Crossroads and Crossroads. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.