The Three Chuckles sounds like an improbable name for a rock 'n' roll act, and to hear their sound and see them in action in one of the handful of movies in which they appeared -- Rock, Rock, Rock (which was shot in the Bronx, New York) -- they seem an equally unlikely group to be designated a rock 'n' roll act at all. They were more of a harmony pop trio who happened to be young enough to "pass" for a rock 'n' roll act at a time when that designation was a little less well defined than it finally became. Tommy Romano (vocals, guitar) and Tommy Gilberto, aka Russ Gilberto (vocals, bass) hailed from Red Hook, Brooklyn in New York City, and linked up with accordionist Phil Bentl to form the Three Chuckles, the name derived from a popular candy bar of the early 1950's. This all pre-dated rock 'n' roll, and the group established themselves in clubs, lounges, and bowling alleys up and down the East Coast well before the new music was heard by a mass white audience. They were contemporaries of the Four Lovers and other Italian pop-vocal ensembles of the period, and were obviously good, because they were so busy that it cost them their keyboard man, Bentl deciding he didn't want to spend so much time on the road. The group found a successor in then 15-year-old Teddy Randazzo, more than a decade younger than Romano and Gilberto but already a fine player on the accordion. It was this version of the group that, following a gig in New Jersey, were handed a song called "Run Around" by its author, a truck driver named Cinino Colacrais. A couple of years later, when they got their first opportunity to make a record, they remembered the song, and it was cut as the B-side of "At Last You Understand". Issued on Boulevard -- the newly-christened pop imprint of the r&b-oriented Great...