Former BJ managing editor Mizell
Stewart, vice
president/content of the newspaper division of E.W. Scripps, attended the
celebration of life of his wife’s uncle, “Little Melvin” Underwood, a blues
singer and songwriter, who died at 78.
Little
Melvin’s best-selling record was “Looped.”
He’s described as being between Roy
Brown and Louis Jordan, but when I listened to the song that Mizell suggested via
YouTube, it reminded me of Fats Domino doing “Blueberry Hill.”
Mizell’s
post:
Last
night, we celebrated the life of Valerie’s uncle, Little Melvin Underwood, a
blues singer and songwriter who passed away last week at 78. He was a great
friend of B.B. King and a mentor to up-and-coming artists including Grammy
nominee Mighty Sam McClain.
Melvin’s
talents brought him all of the excitement of life on the road and helped him
overcome the many difficulties he encountered along the way. Best of all, those
difficulties brought him into a close relationship with Jesus and a church
family who surrounded and nurtured him.
We are
grateful to all of them, to his caregiver Candy and to everyone who supported
his return to performing in his twilight years. Here’s some Little Melvin with
which to start your day!
(to hear Little Melvin, click on)
And then there’s this assessment of
Little Melvin by Bruce Eder of AllMusic:
Anyone reading
this can be forgiven for not knowing much about Melvin Smith.
Indeed, if more than a few thousand listeners even remember the name of
"Looped," his most popular recording of the early '50s, that would be
amazing.
In a 15-year
recording career, Smith
never charted a record nationally; he wrote songs, but not one of them was a
hit in any form for him or anyone else; he never sang with any bands that
became famous; and he wasn't an influence -- so far as anyone knows -- on any
major rock or R&B acts that followed in his wake.
None of that,
however, means that his music isn't worth hearing or as enjoyable as any other
R&B of the same era.
Stylistically,
he stood somewhere midway between Roy Brown
and Louis Jordan,
and aside from Piano Red,
he was just about as strong an R&B singer as RCA had on its roster during
the early '50s. It wasn't his "fault" that he never had a hit, and it
is to RCA's credit that they stood by him through three years and 32 recorded
sides.
Smith
was born in Atlanta in 1936, the son of Samuel and Minnie Smith, fourth in a
family of nine children. Samuel Smith, a truck driver, abandoned the family in
the mid-'40s, and all nine children were raised by their mother, a hotel
chambermaid.
Melvin
began listening to music at an early age, and among his favorite singers
growing up were Roy Brown,
Wynonie Harris
and Jimmy
Witherspoon. By the time he was in his early teens, Smith
was winning talent contests in the Atlanta area and singing regularly with a
group called the Arstell Allen Sextet.
In early 1951,
a group of RCA-Victor executives came to Atlanta in search of talent to expand
their R&B roster. They were referred to Smith,
then 15 years old, and were suitably impressed.
On January 11,
1951, Smith
had his first recording date, fronting saxophonist/bandleader Clyde W.
"Blow Top" Lynn and his House Rockers on four songs.
Their first single, "Reliefin' Blues" backed with "School Boy
Blues," was released to little notice in March of that year.
Smith's
career was in high gear, with regular shows outside of Atlanta spaced in
between odd jobs and school whenever he could fit it in -- he was finally
expelled from school sometime in 1951. By the end of that year, he was known as
"Little Melvin" and was singing with Tommy Brown's Maroon Notes. In
the meantime, he recorded four more songs with Lynn
and his band in the spring of 1951.
The first
resulting single, "Rampaging Mama" backed with "Real True
Gal" (the latter co-written by Smith),
also failed to chart. By January of 1952, Smith
was back in the studio with a new band, in a session that generated the
critically well-received but poor-selling Smith-authored
"California Baby"/"Everybody's Got the Blues."
RCA was still
convinced that Smith
had what it took to succeed, however, and in late March of 1952, they brought
him to New York for a recording session with some of the top players of the
period, including jazz legend Tyree Glenn
on trombone, Taft Jordan
on trumpet, Eddie Barefield
on sax and leader Howard Biggs
at the piano. The result was Smith's
most critically acclaimed single, "Looped," which managed to become a
regional hit and elicited a rival cover version.
Somehow,
"Looped" never broke out, and Smith
and RCA were left to look back on another promising failure. The session did
bring Smith
to New York, however, and some very enjoyable and lucrative club dates. These
were good times for Smith,
despite his stagnant recording career, singing before bigger and more
appreciative audiences than ever before.
Unfortunately,
RCA saw the need to make some changes in Smith's
sound, and his next sessions featured the presence of a trio of backup pop
singers whose voices were too prominent for the song's own good. The single
"Sarah Kelly (From Plumnelly)" flopped. Smith's
recording career continued with RCA for another two years without any success,
and he was finally dropped by the label in early 1954.
Smith
was only 18 years old, however, and hardly done singing. He had moved to
Philadelphia the previous year, and for the next decade, he fronted a quintet
called the Nite Riders, whose membership included pianist/composer Van Walls
("Chains of Love"). He was signed to Apollo Records and later
recorded for Sound/Teen, Swan, Cameo, and Sue Records. Smith
and the group reached the pinnacle of their success in the late '50s, playing
an extended engagement at the Wagon Wheel club in midtown Manhattan, and also
enjoyed considerable popularity in Canada and Boston.
Smith
continued working into the 1970s and early '80s with a variety of bands. In his
late forties, at the beginning of the 1990s he decided to quit in favor of a
federal civil service job while he still had his health and some good memories
of a few great times and records of which he was proud.
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