* En anglais uniquement
Saxophonist
Chuck Higgins earned R&B fame for his composition "Pachuko Hop," which remains a perennial favorite among Latino fans, but didn't gain enough general R&B acclaim to chart in the early '50s.
Higgins also played trombone and trumpet. He moved from his native Gary to Los Angeles in 1940 as a teen.
Higgins played trumpet in his high-school band and later attended the Los Angeles Conservatory. While there,
Higgins started a band with pianist
Frank Dunn and saxophonist
Johnny Parker, among others.
Higgins later became the band's saxophonist and wrote "Pachuko Hop." Its furious pace, roaring sax solo, and raw sound, plus the inclusion of the term "Pachuko," which was slang for a Mexican-American dressed in baggy pants with a key chain, made the song a '50s anthem for area Latinos. The B-side, "Motorhead Baby," was later the inspiration for
Frank Zappa sideman
James "Motorhead" Sherwood and the heavy metal band
Motörhead.
Higgins played dates in Los Angeles with everyone from
Charlie Parker to
the Orioles, and his band at one point included
Johnny "Guitar" Watson. Although none of
Higgins' many singles for Aladdin, Caddy, Lucky, Specialty, or Dootone ever earned national acclaim, he was an extremely popular regional attraction through the '50s and into the early '60s, when he retired from performing to become a music teacher at local high schools and a college. A comeback faltered in the mid-'70s, when
Higgins tried to update his sound by going disco. He returned to honking R&B in the late '70s and toured England in the mid-'80s, while performing once again in Los Angeles clubs. ~ Ron Wynn