X-Nico

unusual facts about Freddie Roach



Jamie Kavanagh

It was confirmed in June 2013 that Kavanagh had moved from Freddie Roach and would be trained by Joel Díaz

Next Time You See Me

Several blues and other artists have recorded "Next Time You See Me", including Frankie Lymon from his debut album Rock & Roll (1958); Freddie Roach from Brown Sugar (1964); James Cotton from Cut You Loose! (1967); Mike Bloomfield from It's Not Killing Me (1968); Hank Crawford from Midnight Ramble (1982); and Rick Danko from Live on Breeze Hill (1999).

On Freddie Roach

On Freddie Roach is a documentary series about boxer and trainer Freddie Roach, produced by Jim Lampley.


see also

All That's Good

The Allmusic review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine awarded the album 2 stars and stated "On his final album for Blue Note, Freddie Roach decided to step outside -- way outside -- the tasteful soul-jazz that had become his trademark. Roach decided to make a concept album... in a weird way, it's almost fortunate that Roach attempted something grand, because All That's Good sounds like no other Blue Note record of the early '60s".