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Mayme Watts

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mayme Watts
Also known asMaymie Watts
Occupation(s)Songwriter, vocalist
LabelsGroove, Glory, MGM, Roulette

Mayme P. Watts, aka Maymie Watts, was an American songwriter and R&B singer.[1] Watts is best known for co-writing the jazz standard "Alright, Okay, You Win" with Sid Wyche.[citation needed] Watts also co-wrote (with Robert Mosely) the charting songs "Give Me Your Love" and Midnight Flyer" by Nat King Cole, "Since I Made You Cry" by The Rivieras, "Point of No Return" by Adam Wade, and "Ooh! What a Day!", recorded by both Craig Douglas and Sarah Vaughan.[2]

Watts was a vocalist with the Lionel Hampton Orchestra.[3] She also recorded singles as a solo artist as well as in the duo Mayme & Robert.

In March 1958, Watts married Ralph Sawyer in Germany.[3] In August 1959, Watts filed a lawsuit against former Mercury Records executive Brad Shad, for songwriting royalties she believed were owed to her from “Alright, Okay, You Win”.[4] By the mid-1960s she was performing as a vocalist with the Walter Davis Jr. Trio, and married pianist Walter Davis.[5]

Discography[edit]

As Maymie Watts (solo)

  • "Quicksand" / "There Goes That Train" (Groove 4G-0103, 1955)
  • "Doo Ba Dee" (Track 23, Rockin' the Groove, Bear Family BCD 17412, 2016)
  • "Wheel of Time" (Track 35, Rockin' The Groove, Bear Family BCD 17412, 2016)

With Mayme & Robert / Maymie and Robert

  • "Ain't No Way in the World" / "Parting Tears" (Glory 45-260, 1957)
  • "Sweet Lips" / "Ha Ha Hee Hee Ho Ho Hum Hum" (MGM K12702, 1958)
  • "You Ought to Know" / "That's When" (Roulette R-4347, 1961)

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Songs written by Mayme Watts". Secondhandsongs.com.
  2. ^ "Mayme Watts • Top Songs as Writer". Musicvf.com. Retrieved 30 March 2023.
  3. ^ a b Washington Afro-American, March 11, 1958, Page 19
  4. ^ Jet Magazine, Vol 16, No. 18, August 27, 1959, Page 62
  5. ^ Jet Magazine, Vol 38, No. 10, June 11, 1970, Page 33