R.I.P. Trudy Melvin, keeper of the flame for Harold Melvin's Blue Notes

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    Photo courtesy of Trudy Melvin Facebook

    (March 1, 2020) She was the daughter of musical royalty, and she worked over the past two decades to keep her father’s musical dream alive. We are sad to inform SoulTrackers of the death of Trudy Melvin, the offspring of soul icon Harold Melvin, who has been keeping Harold Melvin’s Blue Notes going for the 23 years since her father’s death, managing the legendary group.

    The Blue Notes, now consisting of lead singer Donnell “Big Daddy” Gillespie, John Morris, Dave Echo, Tyrone Burwell and Keith Matthews, continue to perform regularly in multi-act soul music shows with such groups as The Chi-Lites, The Stylistics, and Blue Magic. Trudy and her four siblings grew up among the giants of Philadelphia soul, and she continued to love and honor that music to the day of her death.

    (March 1, 2020) She was the daughter of musical royalty, and she worked over the past two decades to keep her father’s musical dream alive. We are sad to inform SoulTrackers of the death of Trudy Melvin, the offspring of soul icon Harold Melvin, who has been keeping Harold Melvin’s Blue Notes going for the 23 years since her father’s death, managing the legendary group.

    The Blue Notes, now consisting of lead singer Donnell “Big Daddy” Gillespie, John Morris, Dave Echo, Tyrone Burwell and Keith Matthews, continue to perform regularly in multi-act soul music shows with such groups as The Chi-Lites, The Stylistics, and Blue Magic. Trudy and her four siblings grew up among the giants of Philadelphia soul, and she continued to love and honor that music to the day of her death.

    While casual Soul Music fans associate Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes solely with the classic period of their association with Gamble & Huff's Philadelphia International Records from 1972-76, the group had been around in Philadelphia for twenty years before hooking up with PIR.  With Melvin as lead vocalist and principal songwriter, the group, with various personnel changes, remained principally a regional act in the 50s and 60s, scoring only a few minor Soul hits. 

    Then in the late 60s Melvin discovered Theodore (Teddy) Pendergrass, a young drummer for the Cadillacs, and recruited him as a member of the Blue Notes' backing band.  Ultimately Teddy's vocal talents led him into the group as its lead singer and brought the group to the attention of the blazing hot songwriters/producers Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff, who signed the group to their PIR label in 1971.  Success was immediate, as the group scored on two smash ballads in 1972, "I Miss You" (later covered by David Ruffin) and the now classic "If You Don't Know Me By Now" (later taken to #1 by Simply Red).  With the latter release Pendergrass quickly emerged as one of the bright young stars of Soul Music, with his distinctive sexy, growling voice ripping through Gamble & Huff's highly orchestrated, sophisticated material.  1973 brought the group its first dance hit, "The Love I Lost," and another smash album. 

    By 1975's "Wake Up Everybody" and "Bad Luck," Harold Melvin & the Blue Notes were Soul Music royalty, on par with the O'Jays and the Stylistics.  However, it appeared incongruent that the group name continued to spotlight Melvin while the vocal and visual highlight was the handsome lead singer, Pendergrass.  The issue came to a head in 1976, and Pendergrass left the group for what would be a very successful solo career.  Gamble & Huff stuck with Pendergrass the solo artist, and the Blue Notes were soon off to MCA Records to try and recover from the loss of their lead singer. 

    The group's first post-Pendergrass album, Reaching For The World was clearly structured to sound like their work on PIR, but neither the material nor new lead singer David Ebo could match the Gamble & Huff/Pendergrass combination, and the title cut barely snuck into the Soul top 10.  It was the group's last hit.  Sporadic group member Sharon Paige (who had dueted with Pendergrass on the previous hit "I Hope That We Can Be Together Soon") took a more prominent role on the group's next LP, 1980's The Blue Album, but it barely charted.   More shake-ups led to a new group composition that lasted nearly a decade, consisting of Melvin, Rufus (Fuss) Thorn, Bill Spratley, Dwight (Blackey) Johnson and new lead singer Gil Saunders.  This line-up released Talk It Up (Tell Everybody) on Philly World Records, but the disc generated little interest domestically (though it received some minor overseas airplay).  By the early-90s, Melvin and a rotating posse of Blue Notes had become permanent fixtures on the oldies circuit. 

    Sadly, Melvin died in 1997 at age 57. But the group has continued to perform, tour and even record ever since, with Trudy playing an important role in managing their work. Today we say a sad goodbye, and thank her for her work keeping Philadelphia soul music alive.

    By Chris Rizik

     
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