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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsFrom The BBC/Entertainment & Arts 5-6-20: Millie Small: My Boy Lollipop singer dies aged 73
"Jamaican singer Millie Small has died at the age of 73 after suffering a stroke.
The star was most famous for her hit single My Boy Lollipop, which reached number two in both the US and the UK in 1964.
It remains one of the biggest-selling ska songs of all time, with more than seven million sales."
more at link: https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-52557332
I first heard about Millie when I watched a documentary about Jamaican music and musicians some
years ago. RIP, Millie...
Kingofalldems
(38,419 posts)jrthin
(4,832 posts)malaise
(268,664 posts)HipChick
(25,485 posts)Hardly aged at all..great attitude..May she Rest In Power..
Interview from a couple of years ago..
Norbert
(6,038 posts)and we never knew it.
RIP Millie.
Greybnk48
(10,162 posts)thanks to this song. One of my all time childhood favorites! Everyone loved it!
HarlanPepper
(2,042 posts)She sang My Boy Lollipop the song with the pop is Lollipop Lollipop
Neither are particularly important musically unless you like lollipops.
malaise
(268,664 posts)mahatmakanejeeves
(57,283 posts)I love that song.
Fri Oct 6, 2017: Happy 71st birthday, Millie Small
http://www.thisdayinrock.com/index.php/general/1946-millie-small-who-scored-one-of-the-first-reggae-hits-in-america-with/
Millie Small in 1964
Career
Small was born at Gibraltar in Clarendon, Jamaica, the daughter of a sugar plantation overseer. Like many Jamaican singers of the era, her career began by winning the Vere Johns Opportunity Hour talent contest, which she won at the age of twelve. Wishing to pursue a career as a singer she moved to live with relatives in Love Lane in Kingston. In her teens, she recorded a duet with Owen Gray ("Sugar Plum" ) in 1962 and later recorded with Roy Panton for Coxsone Dodd's Studio One record label as 'Roy and Millie'. They had a local hit with "We'll Meet".
These hits brought her to the attention of Chris Blackwell who became her manager and legal guardian, who in late 1963 took her to Forest Hill, London, where she was given intensive training in dancing and diction. There she made her fourth recording, an Ernest Ranglin rearrangement of "My Boy Lollipop", a song originally released by Barbie Gaye in late 1956. Released in March 1964, Small's version was a massive hit, reaching number two both in the UK Singles Chart and in the US Billboard Hot 100, and number three in Canada. It also topped the chart in Australia. Initially it sold over 600,000 copies in the United Kingdom. Including singles sales, album usage and compilation inclusions, the song has since sold more than seven million copies worldwide. Her later recordings, "Sweet William" and "Bloodshot Eyes", also charted in the UK, at numbers 30 and 48 respectively, and "Sweet William" also peaked at number 40 in the US, her only other American chart single. "My Boy Lollipop" re-charted in the UK in 1987 at no. 46.
"My Boy Lollipop" was doubly significant in British pop history. It was the first major hit for Island Records (although it was actually released on the Fontana label because Chris Blackwell, Island's owner, did not want to overextend its then-meagre resources; in the US, the record appeared on the Smash Records subsidiary of Mercury Records), and Small was the first artist to have a hit that was recorded in the bluebeat style (she was billed as "The Blue Beat Girl" on the single's label in the US). This was a music genre that had recently emerged from Jamaica, and was a direct ancestor of reggae.
Chris Blackwell's mom died about two months ago. She was Ian Fleming's mistress. See:
Mistress and muse of James Bond's creator, Ian Fleming, dies at 104
I love this tune. This video doesn't have the best sound, but it is the most "of the moment":
If you remember the single, you'll recognize this:
Enjoy.