This compilation was released by Liberty Records in 1960, shortly after
Eddie Cochran's death that spring, the first of several memorial albums (including one called Memorial Album) to come out on
Cochran. And while it doesn't really live up to its title -- sad to say,
Cochran never had a dozen hits, big or otherwise, to compile -- it is a surprisingly good collection as an overview of
Cochran's career and sound (flaws and all), the hits included. At the time of its release, this album would have presented the very first chance that anyone would have had for an overview of
Cochran's career -- the problem with the record, as with most early
Cochran compilations, lies in the errors made by Liberty Records in handling
Cochran's career in the first place; the label apparently saw him developing in the same manner as
Elvis Presley (which was understandable, as
Elvis was the quintessential white rock & roll star of the era), and, like
Presley, doing ballads as often as rockers, and found nothing incongruous in the fact that
Cochran just didn't have the voice to pull that off the way that
Elvis did. It wasn't that
Cochran couldn't do it -- he could -- but it was more of a stretch, and became an impossible one when he was saddled with second-rate material, as was often the case (where
Elvis, until he started doing the movies full-time, never had that problem). But this album starts off on the right foot, with "C'mon Everybody" -- one of
Cochran's best songs but never a huge hit in the U.S. -- leading off the set, which proceeds with the deceptively complex rocker "Three Steps to Heaven." We jump back to
Cochran's country roots with "Cut Across Shorty" and "Have I Told You Lately That I Love You," the latter a ballad that
Cochran handled surprisingly well -- trying for a sound akin to what
Elvis was doing on slow numbers -- given his relative antipathy to the form. "Hallelujah, I Love Her So" puts us back in the heart of
Cochran's mature sound, showcasing his guitar amid its string accompaniment and some very strong singing as well. The first side closes with the obligatory "Sittin' in the Balcony" -- which, in fairness, was his first Liberty single, and does have a more than decent guitar break even if the song is a little wimpy. Side two storms out with "Summertime Blues," as powerful a song as any white rock & roller charted in 1957. But listeners who skip the sappy "Lovin' Time" and jump to "Somethin' Else" will be doing
Cochran's memory a world of good. "Tell Me Why" is another slowie, but it shows some power to
Cochran's singing, even if he doesn't pull off what the record label wanted. "Teenage Heaven" was probably obligatory, as it was featured in the then relatively recent movie Go Johnny Go, and it avoids being totally lame by virtue of
Cochran's raspy vocalizing and a reasonably hot sax solo. And "Drive In Show" closes the set out in a manner that probably ought to be skipped, except out of curiosity over some of the more absurd numbers that
Cochran was made to record in his tragically brief career. It's not an ideal collection, by any means, but it is an honest snapshot of his music, warts and all. ~ Bruce Eder