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Sammy Samwell 3/2003

sammy samwellMarch 13, 2003 – Sammy Samwell was born Ian Ralph Sawmill on January 19th 1937.

Not many residents in Sacramento, California knew that a British rock legend walked among them for two decades prior to his death. He was a gentle soul, a music-biz lifer, and the twinkle in his eye belied more rock influence than most players here could conjure up in a lifetime.

Imagine being a pivotal player in rock ’n’ roll in 1958—that was just a handful of years after Jackie Brenston made the very first rock ’n’ roll song, “Rocket 88,” and one year after Elvis was drafted. It was when guitarist Samwell, then 21, penned “Move It” for his band’s lead singer, Cliff Richard, the first British rock star.

In 1999, that shakin’-all-over ditty was voted one of the top 10 rock ’n’ roll records of all time by BBC Radio. In America, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame tapped it as one of 500 songs that shaped the genre. Most importantly, John Lennon called “Move It” the most influential British record ever made.

Seven years later, Samwell wrote and produced another landmark song, “Whatcha Gonna Do About It?” It was the song with which The Small Faces, those diminutive Cockney rebels and leaders of the mod movement, roared onto the 1965 charts. It also was the song with the first use of controlled guitar feedback on record.

In 1971, Samwell was a London-based A&R rep for Warner Bros. Records. He not only signed the revamped Faces with rooster-haired Rod Stewart as lead singer, but also was the liaison to North American acts the Grateful Dead, Frank Zappa and Joni Mitchell. That same year, an audition tape led him to the biggest commercial success of his career. The singer was Gerry Beckley. His dulcet-harmony group decided to name itself America. Under Samwell’s guiding hand, “A Horse With No Name” became a worldwide smash.

In 1980, Samwell was drawn to Sacramento by the smart, Beatlesque band Bourgeois-Tagg. He produced its 1986 debut album. In the ensuing years, before and after his successful heart transplant in 1991, Samwell continued to mentor local musicians, cut demos, write country songs and tell wonderful stories of rock ’n’ roll lore.

Sammy Sawmill may have been best known as the writer of Cliff Richard’s debut hit “Move It” and his association with the rock band America with whom he had his biggest commercial successes. He worked with bands such as Small Faces, The Grateful Dead, Frank Zappa, Joni Mitchell, John Mayall and Hummingbird. He wrote for many other UK artists, including Joe Brown, Elkie Brooks, Kenny Lynch, and Dusty Springfield. Several of his songs were recorded in Spanish for Mexican group, Los Teen Tops and were released in Latin America and the Spanish speaking territories of the world. He also worked as a record producer with Sounds Incorporated, Georgie Fame, John Mayall and back in the 60s, Sammy worked as a rock and roll pioneering Disc Jockey at The Orchid Ballroom Purley.

Ian Samwell, the man some dubbed “the father of British rock ’n’ roll,” passed away in his sleep in Sacramento, California on March 13, 2003  from heart failure. He was 66.

 

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