June Smith (jazz singer)

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June Smith
Born
June Robinson

9 June 1930
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died6 May 2016 (2016-05-07) (aged 85)
Australia
NationalityBritish-Australian
Alma materUniversity of Western Australia
Occupation(s)Jazz musician, singer
SpouseLew Smith
ChildrenFour

June Smith (9 June 1930 in Edinburgh – 6 May 2016) was a British-born Australian jazz singer, trumpeter and music teacher who performed in her later years in the region around Perth, Western Australia.[1]

Life[edit]

June Robinson was born in Edinburgh, Scotland on 9 June 1930. Her mother was a singer and pianist and her father was a saxophonist.[2] At 16, she officially began her performing career as a singer and trumpeter with the girls' band of Blanche Coleman. Three years later she became a member of "Britain’s most famous all female swing band, Ivy Benson and Her All Girl Orchestra,"[2] performing in British music halls and during several overseas tours, including North Africa, to entertain the armed forces.[1] Bands like Benson's were formed during World War II when most male musicians were called up for combat duty.[2]

In 1951, she met the saxophone and clarinet player Lew Smith at Butlin’s Holiday Camp in Filey, North Yorkshire.[2] They married on 8 December 1952, and she changed her name to June Smith. In 1955, the couple were both playing in the Denny Boyce Orchestra, at the Orchid Ballroom, Purley, in London.[1]

Emigration[edit]

In 1961 she emigrated with her husband to Australia. In Melbourne, June and Lew were performing in the rock band Maximum Load, which had a local hit with Riding Through the Dandenong Ranges.[1][2]

In 1974, they moved to Perth, Western Australia, with June appearing on the radio, in addition to performances with the West Australia Symphony Orchestra. On the jazz scene, she became a member of Helen Matthews's Jazz Divas and she later founded her own group: June Smith and the Apple Band with her husband Lew. In 1992 she founded the club Jazz Fremantle, south of Perth.[1][2]

According to Lee:

June embodied two vital ingredients with her vocal delivery: an ability to swing and an ability to create blues inflexions with her voice... June’s deep understanding of the nuances of jazz gleaned initially as a trumpeter gave her jazz performances an integrity that can only come after years of performing and listening.[2]

The Perth Jazz Society, of which she was a founder in 1973,[2] chose Smith for its annual Lifetime Achievement Award in 2005. She continued to perform musically until 2013 at age 83.[1]

Personal life[edit]

Although she had completed her childhood education in Scotland, she returned to university in Perth and in 1981 received a librarian's degree. She also found employment as a librarian at the University of Western Australia, Department for the Arts.[2]

She died peacefully on 6 May 2016 surrounded by family and her husband of 63 years.[1][2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Bevis, Stephen (10 May 2016). "Jazz stalwart June Smith dies - The West Australian". Archived from the original on 10 May 2016. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Lee, Garry (2016). "OBITUARY: JUNE SMITH 1930-2016" (PDF). Retrieved 1 June 2021.