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Mel London

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Birth name
  
Melvin R. London

Role
  
Songwriter

Years active
  
1950s - 1960s

Record label
  
Chief Records


Labels
  
Chief, Profile, Age

Genres
  
Blues, Rhythm and blues

Name
  
Mel London


Born
  
April 9, 1932 Mississippi (
1932-04-09
)

Occupation(s)
  
Songwriter, record producer, record label owner

Associated acts
  
Junior Wells, Elmore James, Earl Hooker, Magic Sam, Ricky Allen

Died
  
May 16, 1975, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Similar People
  
Junior Wells, Muddy Waters, Earl Hooker, Magic Sam, Bo Diddley

Organizations founded
  
Chief Records

02 19 19 "Messin' With the Kid" Bill Heston (by Mel London*) VID 20190219 225246


Mel London (April 9, 1932 – May 16, 1975) was a songwriter, record producer, and record label owner. He was active in the Chicago blues and R&B scenes in the 1950s and 1960s. London is best known for his compositions for Chicago blues artists Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, Elmore James, and Junior Wells as well as being the record producer and owner of Chief Records (and its Profile Records and Age Records subsidiaries).

In 1954, Mel London wrote the first of several hit songs for the blues and R&B markets. His "Poison Ivy" was recorded by Willie Mabon and reached #7 in the Billboard R&B chart in 1954. In 1955, three hits written by London followed: "Who Will Be Next" by Howlin' Wolf and two by Muddy Waters - "Sugar Sweet" and "Manish Boy." Not content with just songwriting, in 1957 he started his own record label, Chief Records. Chief's first single, the London-penned "Man from the Island," featured London's solo outing as a lead vocalist. Subsequent Chief releases were produced (and sometimes written) by London and featured Chicago blues artists, such as Elmore James, Junior Wells, Magic Sam, Earl Hooker, and A.C. Reed. London's "Little by Little" was a hit for Junior Wells in 1960, reaching #23 in the Billboard R&B chart. London also wrote several R&B songs that were recorded by Chief artists, including "Cut You A-Loose" by Ricky Allen, which reached #20 in 1963.

Chief/Profile/Age experienced financial difficulties in the early 1960s and went out of business in 1964. Later, Mel London was associated with a number of small record labels, including All-Points, Mel/Mel-Lon, Bright Star, and Starville, but none had the impact of his earlier labels. In 1975, London died at age forty-three. During his career, he wrote (or cowrote) forty-three songs and produced about eighty singles by approximately thirty-seven artists.

References

Mel London Wikipedia