Verdelle smith biography

Verdelle Smith

American singer

For the boxer, see Verdell Smith.

Verdelle Smith is an American pop singer who was a one-hit wonder with the song "Tar and Cement" in 1966, an adaptation of the Italian massive hit "Il ragazzo della via Gluck" from Adriano Celentano. She currently lives in Brooklyn, New York.[1]

Selective discography

Singles

Issued on Capitol Records in the United States. Some also on Capitol in Canada and Australia; EMI in the UK; Peak Records in New Zealand.

  • "(Alone) In My Room" was originally a Spanish song written by Joaquin Pieto, and was later recorded by the Walker Brothers on their second LP, Portrait (1966); by Nancy Sinatra, also in 1966, for her debut album Boots; Willie and the Walkers (#40 in Canada, Jan.1968);[2] and by Marc and the Mambas for their 1983 album Torment and Toreros. The English lyrics were also written by Pockriss and Vance. Her version reached #57 in Canada.[3]
  • "Oh How Much I Love You"
  • "Tar and Cement": Verdelle Smith recorded "Tar and Cement", an English-language version

    Biography

    Verdelle Smith is a female pop singer from America who was a one-hit wonder with the song "Tar and Cement" in 1966. She currently lives in Brooklyn, New York.

    Edit this wiki

    Similar Artists

    1. The Dynels

      262 listeners

    2. Roberta Day

      804 listeners

    3. Darlene McCrea

      528 listeners

    4. The Victorians

      1,961 listeners

    5. Donna Loren

      3,543 listeners

    6. Bev Harrell

      280 listeners

    7. Diane Renay

      9,844 listeners

    8. The Murmaids

      15,564 listeners

    9. Bryan Davies

      347 listeners

    10. Ellie Greenwich

      13,280 listeners

    11. Emma Rede

      692 listeners

    View all similar artists

    I've stated elsewhere that (and I'm quoting from myself, here) "I 'became aware' of the music playing on AM radio during the years 1962 and 1963, when I was roughly six years old. I say 'roughly' because I didn't turn six until very late1962, namely, November."

    Close to twenty years ago, not long after I first started using the internet, I decided to look for a song I remembered from my childhood. I use the word "remembered" very loosely. I couldn't recall what year the song was released, but I was pretty sure that it hit the airwaves sometime during the early 1960s, maybe even before the Beatles arrived in America.

    The biggest obstacles to my search were the facts that:
    • I didn't know the title of the song.
    • I didn't know who sang it.
    • I couldn't even remember more than a few random words from it!
    Not a hell of a lot to go on, right? My faded memories told me that one line was "I can see it all so clearly now."

    Needless to say, as far as my search went, I was what they call "S.O.L."!

    Several years later -- "several" being more than ten -- I tried again, and I have

Copyright ©yambump.pages.dev 2025