Saturday 20 July 2019

Mary Mayo born 20 July 1924


Mary Mayo Riker Ham (born July 20, 1924 in Statesville , North Carolina , † December 1985 in New York City ) was an American singer in the field of jazz , folk , exotica , easy listening and pop music. She had an amazing voice with a range of four octaves.  She could sing baritone, tenor, alto soprano and high violin.

Mary Mayo, the daughter of Lois Long and Franklin Riker, both opera singers, attended high school in Statesville and then Peace College in Raleigh. In 1945 She studied voice, piano and musical theory at New York's Juilliard School. The following year she won a talent show.

Mayo first got started as a singer appearing on broadcasts from radio station WBT in Charlotte, North Carolina just after the end of World War Two. Gifted with a four-octave range, she was soon spotted by talent scouts and wound up working for Tex Beneke, who was leading the post-war version of the Glenn Miller Orchestra. While singing with Beneke, she married Al Ham, an arranger and bass player in the band. Regarding her voice she said: "My voice runs from low to high, but it's not something you ever need."

She moved to New York City where she sang in the Roxy Chorus. The magazine Down Beat dedicated a cover story to her on June 15, 1951, and Johnny Mercer got her a record contract with Capitol Records where she recorded  a handful of sides including “A Penny a Kiss, A Penny a Hug”, “ Bring Back the Thrill”  and the Sammy Cahn songs “I Can See You” and “Dark Is the Night.”
Frank Sinatra heard her cover version of Blue Moon and brought her as a guest on his first TV show.  This was followed by appearances at Cavalcade of Stars (1952) and in the shows of Jackie Gleason (1953), Perry Como and Jack Parr. She then became a member of the Tex Beneke led Glenn Miller Orchestra. During this time she married Al Ham, who worked as an arranger and bassist in the Beneke band.


                               

After the birth of their daughter Lorri, the couple was in 1956 in New York City down where her husband Al Ham in the music studios of Columbia Records worked as a producer. He also worked in 1965 on the Paramount production of B-movie Harlow (directed by Alex Segal), for which Mayo participated in the film music, which came from Ham and Nelson Riddle. In the following years
she appeared sporadically on other film productions and soundtrack albums from Broadway musicals as a session singer for
Johnny Mathis and Tony Bennett. She also sang alongside Don Elliott in the short-lived vocal ensemble The Manhattanaires.

Her biggest hit was Dick Hyman's album Moon Gas (MGM Records, 1963) in the space-age-pop genre that features Mayo's mostly wordless spherical vocals, Hyman's Theremin- like sound effects on the Moog synthesizer, and Vinnie Bell's signature guitar.
When Duke Ellington was honoured at the White House on his 70th birthday, Mary Mayo was the female vocalist chosen to sing in his honour. The event was recorded and released on Blue Note Records as "1969 All Star Tribute To Duke Ellington at the White House.” (see photo below)













In the 1970s, she appeared as a member of the folk group The Hillside Singers, which became popular in the United States through the jingle I'd Like to Give the World a Coke. The group had Ham as a replacement for The New Seekers composed of studio musicians, including Mayo and her daughter Lorri. Another success story was I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing, which was also published by the New Seekers soon after.

The Hillside Singers

The Metromedia label subsequently released two full-length Hillside Singers LPs, including a Christmas recording, both featuring Mayo. In the following years, Mayo appeared on the radio show The Music of Your Life, mainly Easy Listening Music offered.

In the late 1970's, Mary Mayo performed to sold out crowds at several prominent nightclubs in New York City including the Copacabana, Michael's Pub, and the Roseland Ballroom. Mary Mayo also teamed frequently with North Carolina composer Loonis McGlohon.  The Land Of Oz theme park on Beech Mountain and the annual production of McGlohon's classic musical, "A Child's
Christmas" at Oven's Auditorium in Charlotte featured both Mary Mayo and her daughter Lorri.

Mary Mayo and Loonis McGlohon performed at jazz clubs in Japan and did several radio shows for the "American Popular Song" series with Alec Wilder on NPR. Selections from that radio series were recorded and released on Audiophile Records as "Time Remembered."  Unfortunately, Mayo did not live to see the album's release in 1986. She continued to work professionally until her death from cancer in December 1985. 

(Edited from Wikipedia , All Music & Statesville History)

1 comment:

boppinbob said...

Although a prolific recording artist from the late 1940’s onwards, there is no compilation of her 1950’s recordings on CD. I have managed to trawl through the internet to gather as much material as I could. I have found 23 tracks from the 1950’s and 3 tracks from 1968-1971. Please note all mp3’s are from various sources and may vary in quality and volume. Some from the early 50’s are taken from 78’s courtesy of archive org. The remainder are from You Tube with 3 mp3’s from audiotut. In the track list below I have included year of issue and catalogue number to keep in chronological order. Below my little compilation are 4 complete albums. I just need her late 1940’s recordings to cover most of her output.

For “Mary Mayo – Collected” go here:

https://www.upload.ee/files/10247610/Mary_Mayo___Collected.rar.html

01. The Old Refrain – Roy Bloch & Hos Orchestra (voc. Mary Mayo & Art Gentry (Signature 1950)
02. The Wedding Samba – Mary Mayo & The Riddles / Scott Fisher’s Quartet (Hi-Tone 1950)
03. Dancing In The Dark - Mary Mayo with orch (1950 Capitol F1318)
04. A Penny A Kiss, A Penny A Hug – Mary Mayo with Four Chicks & Chuck (1951 Capitol F1350)
05. Bring Back The Thrill - Mary Mayo with orch (1951 Capitol F1350)
06. It Only Takes A Minute - Mary Mayo with orch (1951 Capitol F1439)
07. Serenata - Mary Mayo with orch (1951 Capitol F1504)
08. The Springtime Cometh - Mary Mayo with orch (1951 Capitol F1504)
09. Dark Is The Night (C’est Fini) - Mary Mayo with orch (1951 Capitol F1579)
10. I Can See You - Mary Mayo with orch (1951 capitol F1579)
11. Domino - Mary Mayo with orch (1951 Capitol F1849)
12. Find Me - Mary Mayo with orch (1951 Capitol F1849)
13. Oh To Be Young Again - Mary Mayo with orch (1952 Capitol F1950)
14. What’s The Reason (I’m Not Pleasin’ You) - Mary Mayo with orch (1952 Capitol F1950)
15. Invisible Hands – The Three Suns (voc. Mary Mayo & Buddy Nee) (1953 RCA)
16. East Of The Sun - MGM Strings cond. Leroy Holmes (ft. Mary Mayo) (1953 MGM )
17. Street of Dreams - MGM Strings cond. Leroy Holmes (ft. Mary Mayo) (1953 MGM)
18. Lisa – Leroy Holmes & His Orch (w. the voice of Mary Mayo) (1954 MGM 11761)
19. Come To Baby Do – Mary Mayo (1954 Benida 5014)
20. This Is the Place – Jerry Vale & Mary Mayo (1958 Columbia 11761)
21. Goodbye Now - Jerry Vale & Mary Mayo (1958 Columbia 41141)
22. It Seemed So Right Last Night - Mary Mayo (1958 Columbia 41190)
23. Memory Book - Mary Mayo (1958 Columbia 41190)
24. Nun Me Deixes - Bobby Hackett, Billy Butterfield, (voc. Luiz Henrique & Mary Mayo) (1968 Verve)
25. Come Saturday Morning – The Urban Renewal ft. Mary Mayo (1969 Paramount)
26. I’d Like to Teach the World to Sing – Hillside Singers (1971 Metromedia MMS 231)
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For “Mary Mayo – Time Remembered (2000) ” go here:

http://www.imagenetz.de/fb8032248/Time-Remembered.rar.html

Thanks to Jake @ loadsamusics forum for active link
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For “Mary mayo – The Magic of Christmas (1958)” go here:

http://www.filedropper.com/marymayo-themagicofchristmas

Thanks to giampiero @ loadsamusic forum for active link.
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For “Mary Mayo & Earl Wrightson – Kiss me Kate” go here:

https://www.sendspace.com/pro/dl/2wpnq8

Thanks to Miw @ loadsamusics forum for active link.
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For “Dick Hyman & Mary Mayo – Moon Gas (1963)” go here:

http://www.mediafire.com/file/elvj1c72xh22cv2/D%252Ack_Hyman_%252B_Mary_Mayo_-_Moon_Gas_%2528Stereo_Version%252C_1963%2529_%255BFLAC%255D.rar/file

Thanks to E Mendes @ loadsamusics forum for active link.
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I am still looking for “Dancing in the Dark” which is a compilation of her late 40’s recordings.