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Born
Ocie Lee Smith in Mansfield, Louisiana., he moved to Los Angeles
at an early age with his mother, a music teacher. Attending Jefferson
High School, Smith learned music from the legendary teacher Samuel
Brown, who instructed several top musicians over the years, including
singer Ernie Andrews and saxophonists Dexter Gordon and Frank Morgan. He
said his early influences were not singers but great bebop players like
Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker. He joined the Air Force after high
school and although assigned to the Air Police in Alaska, spent a good
bit of time singing in a special services band.
He landed in New York City after
his discharge and, over the next several years, found work in small
clubs and in the Catskills singing ballads, blues, anything to pay the
bills.
In early 1961, he auditioned
successfully for Count Basie and joined the band, replacing the
legendary Joe Williams. He called Basie "an ideal
leader."
"I had a free hand to sing what I liked and I
got to see a lot of the world over the next 2 1/2 years," he said.
He also recorded several songs for Roulette Records.
"Band experience is the best background
any singer can hope for," he later told Leonard Feather, the jazz
critic and producer. "You learn about people everywhere."
After Basie, he worked the club and
concert circuit across the country, toured the Far East for several
months and settled in Los Angeles afterward. Columbia soon signed him to
a contract and expanded his repertoire.
He had fairly good success with the
song "That's Life," which Frank Sinatra turned into gold years
later and, in 1968, he attained his first commercial breakthrough record
with Dallas Frazier's story-song "The Son of Hickory Holler's
Tramp," which became a big hit in Britain.
Then came his version
of Bobby Russell's "Little Green Apples," winner of the Grammy
as song of the year in 1968. A year later, he had another big R&B
single, "Daddy's Little Man" in 1969, which hit No. 9 on the
charts.
He recorded a number of other songs and albums that
were not as successful. He ended his association with Columbia in 1974
but recorded off and on for various labels and continued working on the
road.
In 1980, his life began to take a new direction after
friends invited him to attend a Science of the Mind service at the
Wilshire Ebel Theater.
"Dr. Joseph Murphy, whom I had heard speak that
morning, became my teacher," he told The Times in 1987. "I
connected soon afterward with a presence that told me which direction I
should take."
Although he began studying for the ministry and
graduated in January 1985, he wasn't ready to give up full-time
entertaining. "I wanted the presence to reveal the right time
to me," he said. "Well, that summer I began to get the feeling
that the moment had come to pull back a little on the reins of show
business. The next step was to find a place where I could work regularly
in the ministry."
He found that place in the ballroom of a
building near Los Angeles International Airport that had burned down a
couple of years earlier and was being reopened.
In October 1985, with the Rev. O. C. Smith
officiating, the City of Angels Church of Religious Science opened on
Aviation Boulevard.
In
January of 1996, Dr. O. C. , his wife Robbie, and the congregation moved into their
new church home at 5550 Grosvenor Blvd. in Los Angeles. This
was the perfect place, with a seating capacity of 1200, a stage with a
cascading waterfall, offices, classrooms and spaces for a bookstore and
kitchen.
click here for Dr. O. C. Interview
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