Background
Frisco was born in Saint Louis, Missouri.
Frisco was born in Saint Louis, Missouri.
He moved to Tulsa and attended Central High School in the 1950s, where he met JJ Cale and graduated in 1955.
He was best known as the longtime pianist for JJ Cale, and for his role in the development of the music style known as the Tulsa Sound. Frisco and Cale played together in Gene Crose"s band starting in 1957. In the Fall of 1958, Frisco moved to Pennsylvania to form a band for Clyde Stacy.
When Stacy retired in 1959, Frisco became lead singer for the band, The Four Flames, recording a Columbia Harmony album in New York entitled The Big Ten, as "Rocky Curtiss and the Harmony Flames." Frisco performed voice work for radio and television commercials, most recently for Chris Nikel and Nelson Mazda in the Tulsa area.
During the mid-1960s, Frisco, disgusted with the music business after having thousands of dollars in royalties embezzled by an A & R man he trusted, quit playing, moved to Ontario, Canada, and worked for International Business Machines Corporation and raced MG"s and Mini Coopers at Harewood Acres and Mosport. He drove a Morris Mini in the preliminary races for the 1967 Canadian Grand Prix, reverting to the name, Don Joseph.
In 1972, Frisco returned to Tulsa and started playing again, first with the Don White Band and then with the John Doctorate. LeVan Band. In the years since, he played with Bill David, Gus Hardin, Tommy Overstreet and others
Frisco rejoined Cale"s band in 1994, and toured the United States and Europe that summer and fall, with television broadcasts from France, Germany, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom.
Cale"s 1996 tour included a concert on March 29 at Carnegie Hall with The Band. Frisco can be heard on the Cale CDs JJ Cale Live, To Tulsa And Back, and Roll On as well as Eric Clapton"s Crossroads Guitar Festival Digital Video Disc set and the JJ Cale Band"s Digital Video Disc tour video for To Tulsa and Back. And artists Frisco played and recorded with:
Frisco occasionally appeared in films and videos.
He can be seen in the short film, Melvin, A Midwestern Tale, and in the 2003 Disney remake of Where the Red Fern Grows Frisco also appeared in Lata Gouveia"s documentary: Red Dirt: Songs from the Dust.
In July 2011, Frisco appeared in a full-length feature: Red Dirt on 66: A Road Movie. In his spare time, Frisco wrote novels and restored English Austin and Morris Mini Coopers and MGs.
He was an occasional candidate for political office in Tulsa.
In May 2008, Frisco was inducted into the Oklahoma Blues Hall of Fame with a lifetime achievement award. On September 17, 2009, Frisco was inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame as a winner of the Eldon Shamblin Session Musician Award. In April 2012, Frisco received the Bare Bones Film Festival"s "Living Legend" Award.