Monday, 22 November 2021

Ethel Smith born 22 November 1902

Ethel Smith (born Ethel Goldsmith; November 22, 1902 – May 10, 1996) was an American organist who played primarily in a pop or Latin style. She became known as the “Empress of Hammond” for her titanic organ playing career, and near-exclusive use of Hammond’s electric organs. She had a long recording career and appeared in many films. Her trademark was her selection of hats and penchant for costumes and bright colours, travelling the world during her more than 30 years in show business. 

Little is known about Ethel’s early years. While she widely expressed that she was born in 1910, she was actually born in 1902. She was raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where her parents Max and Elizabeth, did their best to give Ethel every opportunity to pursue her interests and passions. In her formative years, she quickly began her working in her three lifelong passions of golf, music, and languages. 

She began her golf career at the age of 16, playing regularly at the courses in Pittsburgh. Later, she began studying languages at the Carnegie Institute of Technology and became fluent in German, French, and Spanish. At the same time, she began her studies of the organ with Dr. Caspar Koch, the organist to the city of Pittsburgh, and an accomplished author of many pedagogical works for the organ, and music studies more generally. 

After her time at the university, she sought employment in the performing arts and took a job playing piano with a local theater group. When a traveling show, a Shubert show performing Romberg’s “The Student Prince,” stopped in Pittsburgh, the show’s manager quickly realized that Ethel was destined for more than just theater hall performances, and invited her to continue on with the tour for the next 28 weeks. The tour took her across the entire country and eventually landed her in California. 

It was here that Ethel’s organ career would begin its path toward stardom. While working on a Hollywood studio lot in 1935, Ethel, already an accomplished pianist and organ player, was asked if she could play the recently developed Hammond electric organ. Having never worked with an electric organ before, Ethel went to a nearby Hammond store and asked to practice on their floor models. She quickly took the instrument, later saying in a New York Times interview, “I just ran my fingers over it and said ‘That’s for me!’” She hosted small concerts at the store, and people flocked to hear her impromptu performances as she practiced the new instrument. 


                             

Hammond recognized that they had a star in their midst, and quickly offered a 26-week engagement to play their new instrument at the famed Copacabana Club in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. She spent nearly a year there, immersing herself in the local culture, and exploring the unique sounds of Latin music. 

Her tenure in Brazil would prove to be an invaluable experience. While visiting a rough part of Rio, Ethel stopped to listen to a local dancehall combo play a song she’d never heard before. The musicians were playing a traditional Argentine favorite, but the composer and the name of the tune were unknown. Ethel took the tune, called it “Tico Tico,” and included it in her performances. It quickly became a favorite for her and her audiences. 

The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor late in 1941 brought Ethel back to the United States, where she was invited to perform on the smash-hit radio show “Your Hit Parade.” Because of her skill, and personality, she quickly became the highest paid performer on the show. Her work on “Your Hit Parade” opened the door for Ethel to begin her own recording career. In 1944, she recorded “Tico Tico,” and became an overnight success. The record would go on to sell well over a million copies, and become one of the best-selling albums of the 1940s. 

Ethel, in addition to her incredible organ playing, was an accomplished actress. In 1944, she had her onstage debut in Bathing Beauty. Smith performed in several Hollywood films such as George White's Scandals (1945) and Melody Time (1948). She was married to Hollywood actor Ralph Bellamy from 1945 to 1947, at the height of her fame, and their acrimonious divorce made headlines. She never had children. 

Ethel played in shows, and performances, and starred in films well into her 80s. She would appear in non-musical roles on Broadway, and toured throughout the 1950s and 1960s, riding on the success of “Tico Tico.” Ethel Smith would live to be 93 years old and was active in making music for nearly all of it. She made organ music accessible and fun for generations of audiences, and introduced new genres of music to American listeners. In her later years occasionally played the guitar live for audiences, but all her recordings were on the organ. She recorded dozens of albums, mostly for Decca Records. She continued to perform at local clubs in the Palm Beach area after retiring in the mid-1970s. 

Ethel Smith died following a progressive illness at her Palm Beach home in Florida, on May 10, 1996. At Mrs. Smith's request, no memorial service was held.  

(Edited from Viscount Organs & Wikipedia)

12 comments:

boppinbob said...

FOR “ETHEL SMITH - THE FIRST LADY OF THE HAMMOND ORGAN
PLAYS TICO TICO & OTHER GREAT ORIGINAL RECORDINGS” GO HERE:

https://workupload.com/file/4S68EthqAXX

Disc One
1. TICO TICO
2. LEMON MERENGUE
3. FIDDLE-FADDLE
4. BLAME IT ON THE SAMBA
5. DELICADO
6. KITTEN ON THE KEYS
7. LIMEHOUSE BLUES
8. THE BREEZE AND I
9. DIZZY FINGERS
10. MADEMOISELLE DE PARIS
11. POINCIANA
12. THE SYNCOPATED CLOCK
13. THE TEDDY BEARS' PICNIC
14. THE TUBBY THE TUBA SONG
15. MAMBO JAMBO
16. MONKEY ON A STRING
17. PARADE OF THE WOODEN SOLDIERS
18. ST. LOUIS BLUES
19. TENNESSEE WALTZ
20. FASCINATION
21. BY THE WATERS OF MINNETONKA
22. LIZA

Disc Two
1. CASI CASI
2. THE SAMBA POLKA
3. THE GREEN COCKATOO
4. MOCKIN' BIRD HILL
5. ANNIVERSARY SONG
6. CUBAN CUTIE
7. DANCIN' WITH SOMEONE
8. DOMINO
9. JAZZ ME BLUES
10. SUMMERTIME IS SUMMERTIME
11. TIC-TOC RHUMBA
12. SINCOPADO
13. THREE CORNERED TUNE
14. CATANA
15. BEAUTIFUL BROWN EYES
16. LA BAMBA DE VERA CRUZ
17. THE LOVELIEST NIGHT OF THE YEAR
18. BEAUTIFUL WISCONSIN
19. SHENANDOAH WALTZ
20. LONGING FOR YOU
21. CHARMAINE
22. LARGO ("Ombra Mai Fu")

Ethel Smith took immediately to the complicated Hammond electric organ when it was first introduced in the 1930s, and made full use of the wonderful sounds which could be coaxed from it. Always a fan of Latin-American rhythms, she discovered a tune whilst working at the famous Copacabana in Brazil’s Rio de Janeiro and in her hands that tune, "Tico Tico", became an international hit in 1944. She appeared in several films and during the 1950s established herself as an album recording artist. Her work has been sadly neglected for many years but this generous Two-CDs-for-the-Price-of-one, 44 track CD will revive memories of her consummate skill. Note that "Monkey On A String" became a particular favourite to more than one generation of young Americans because of its use as the theme song for a children's’ TV show from Chicago, "Garfield Goose And Friends", which ran from 1952 to 1976 (Jasmine notes)

Aussie said...

very nice my friend thank youuuuuuuuuuuu

Phil said...

You neglected to mention that for a short time she was married to Bo Diddley and co-wrote the Mickey and Sylvia hit "Love Is Strange"

Crab Devil said...

Thank you! At first, I was wondering whether to skip this
download, what with my being overloaded with stuff to listen
to as it is. But then I saw "The Teddy Bears' Picnic" on
there, and that clinched the deal.

@Phil,

It's true that love is strange. Even so, this Ethel Smith
is reportedly not the one to whom Bo Diddley was married:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk%3AEthel_Smith_(organist).

boppinbob said...

Dear Phil,
I neglected to mention that she was married to Bo Diddley because she wasn’t. There is some incorrect information that is rife on various music blogs that state the organist Ethel Smith was married to Bo Diddley. This in fact is Ethel Mae Smith, also known as “Tootsie”, his second wife,(a completely different person). There is no reference in any of the Music Encyclopaedia biographies that give Ethel Smith the organist as a wife of Bo Diddley. Also not mentioned in AllMusic Guide or Wikipedia. As Prez Trump would say “Fake News.” Regards, Bob.

Doccus Rockus Maximus said...

Stuff like this is really why I check out the blogs.. what a great bio. Kind of surprising folks would have pegged her as having been married to Bo, even with the similarity in names, since she would have been almost 60 at the time ;-) Maybe they never considered that?
Wonderful post, anyways. Thanks! Doc

boppinbob said...

Hi DRM, Thanks for your comment. Have visited your old Blogs. Sad to hear you lost your cassette collection. I used to have hundreds when they were in their heyday. Gave mine all away to charity shops. In fact you can still find bins full of them being sold at silly money(usually 5 for a £1)seems no-one is interested nowadays.
I did keep however my home recordings of my kids when they were growing up (now in their 40's.) Regards, Bob

Creedmoor said...

Ms. Smith's "Monkey on a String" joined "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down" as one of the first songs I danced to while in diapers. WGN-TV in Chicago chose it as their theme to "Garfield Goose and Friends." Good to hear it again. Thanks, Bob!

Phil said...

I stand to be corrected. I always questioned that that statement that I heard about six or eight years ago from an oldies jock on SiriusXM radio. He played "Love Is Strange" by Mickey & Sylvia and stated that the song was originally written by Bo and Ethel Smith while in the background was playing "Tico Tico". Thanks for the update.
Love your site by the way. I see a lot of effort and passion here. It is deeply appreciated. ...Phil

Gabriela Erbetta said...

Dear boppinbob, I found your blog while searching for information about the time Ethel Smith lived in Brazil. Do you mind sharing with me the source for this bit you wrote? "While visiting a rough part of Rio, Ethel stopped to listen to a local dancehall combo play a song she’d never heard before. The musicians were playing a traditional Argentine favorite, but the composer and the name of the tune were unknown. Ethel took the tune, called it “Tico Tico,” and included it in her performances. It quickly became a favorite for her and her audiences."

I kindly ask you this because I'm doing a research on the song for a documentary. "Tico-tico no fubá" is a Brazilian song composed by Zequinha de Abreu in 1917. By the time ms. Smith was in Rio, it has already been recorded by Orquestra Colbaz. I guess that she learned it through another Brazilian musician, Benedito Lacerda, but this bit of info still needs confirmation. :-)

Best regards,
Gabriela

boppinbob said...

Hello Gabriela, No problem. the source is as stated at the bottom of post, but here's the direct link. It's under the heading "The Start Of Something."

https://www.viscount-organs.com/famous-organists-ethel-smith/

Gabriela Erbetta said...

Thank you very much! Best wishes from Brazil!