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HIGHLIGHTS

“CITY OF ANGELS”

(Nick Joven, Bev Dusham)

Bally 1016

No. 19    November 24, 1956

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“The Highlights.  God, I haven’t seen any of those guys in years, years,” said Frank Pizani

(b. Jan. 24, 1935, Chicago), the group’s lead voice, in an exclusive interview.  “Nobody has even

asked me of them in ages, ages.

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While attending DePaul University as an education major, Frank worked as an usher for Chicago’s

answer to Philadelphia’s “American Bandstand.”  “I ushered for Jim Lounsbury’s ‘Bandstand.’  This

show was starting to get out of hand.  Now and then, they’d have like a riot, so what I did was sing to

them while they were waiting in line outside the studio to get let in.  One day, some of the kids asked

Jim to put me on the show.  I remember I sang ‘Sh-Boom’, a cappella.  Now, the show’s producer

Holly Christensen and another fellow Jim Cross heard me and lined it up for me to make a record;

‘Cry Baby,”  it was called.  For Klick records, yeah.  I recorded it with the George Rank Orchestra.  On

the other side was this instrumental, ‘Tic Toe Melody.’  You won’t find that record.  I don’t even have

a copy.  It got some play on the show and did okay, locally.”

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Meanwhile at DePaul, Pizani met Frank Calzaretta (lead vocals).  “He had a group with his brother

Tony (tenor) and a couple of other guys [Bill Melshimer (baritone) and Jerry Oleski (bass)] that he

called the Highlights.  They’d do hops and high school dances.  I knew a Frank McNulty [later, music

coordinator for the “Oprah Wmfrey Show”] and had done some demos for him.  He had this song

he wanted me to do called ‘Jin­ gle-Lo;’ with all kinds of complex parts.  I told him, ‘I know this group

and together I think we can do a good number on it.’  So we went downstairs in the hallway of WGN

Studios.  There was this great echolike chamber sound and with the help of Joe Scotti on piano we

did a take on the song right there in this hallway on Michi­gan Avenue.  Scotti had cerebral palsy.  He

was a genius, but he’d hit the wrong notes; he couldn’t help it.  McNulty said, ‘This is great’ and took

the tape around.  He brought it to Bally Records, and they liked it and wanted to sign us up, immediately.

Immediately!  It was all happening fast.

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“Now, from my way of looking at it, this was the beginning of the end for the Highlights.  Frank

[Calzaretta] wanted to sign as a group, without me, Frank Pizani.  There was some friction as to who

was going to sing lead and all that, but we did sign up.  Unfortunately, looking back, we had a really big

hit record with ‘City of Angels’, the very first thing we cut.  The group was still not happy.  They wanted

to be their own group, not some back-up for me.  So the fellows’ parents got a lawyer, and they took the

name away.  They then approached the label and me and said that if I wanted to record with them I’d

have to work for them.  I wasn’t happy with this and left.. . . Ah, what are ya gonna do?  Even if we had

our problems most of the guys were still underage and in high school so we wouldn’t have been able to

travel or work the night­ clubs.  Hey, it wasn’t meant to be”

Bally had “To Be With You,” with Frank singing lead, in the can and issued it posthumously.  It charted

(#84, 1957).  Pizani was signed on as a solo act and charted with “Angry” (#70, 1957).  “Indiana Style,”

the first and only Pizani-less Highlights record, was released during the summer of 1957.  It bombed

and the group broke up.  Pizani, meanwhile, went into the service. “When I returned, Bally Records

was gone.  The other guys, well, they finished their schooling and college and got 9-to-5 jobs.  Jerry,

he’s an insurance salesman.  Billy is a high school coach.  Tony works at Ditka’s [a night spot owned

by former Chicago Bears coach Mike Ditka] as their entertainment director.  His brother, Tony is off

doing business type stuff somewhere.

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Before his momentary retirement, Pizani had a few singles issued (“Wanna Dance” for Alton and Warwick

and “You’re Breakin’ My Heart” for Carlton) and then returned to college to complete the requirements

for his teaching certificate.  For years in the ’60s and ’70s, he taught in Chicago’s grammar schools.  Most

recently, Frank appeared in a number of local TV commercials, worked as a comedian, and for some years

was the Vice President of Carl Bonedfede’s Chi-Town Records.  The label and Pizani’s own Happyday label

released a few Pizani obscurities [“Fighting Jane,” “ILove You Papa”…].  In the 80s, he signed up with Ron

Smith’s Look-a-Likes, as a Tony Bennett imitator.  In that capacity he briefly appeared in the Rick

Springfield flick Hard to Hard (1984) crooning–yeah, you guessed it–“I Left My Heart in San Francisco.”

They didn’t even included me on the soundtrack album.  That Springfield, he was an ass.”

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Piazni also heads Custom Phone Announcements, a firm that creates personalized celebrity impersonation

messages.  Their moto:  “We Touch Tone Your Funny Bone.”