Helene Smith
On the Miami soul scene Betty Wright is the first name that springs to everyone’s mind, but Helen Smith was there first, and, in the opinion of a few knowledgeable fans could give her more famous sister a good run for her money. Helen was the first female vocalist that Willie Clarke and her future husband Johnny Pearsall recorded, initially for Steve Palmer’s Blue Star concern, and then for an excellent run of 45s for other Miami labels once the talented Clarence Reid had joined the set-up.Although Helene’s voice could sound rather insipid on some of the more poppy arrangements that her writers/producers asked her to sing in front of, when given a decent ballad to interpret – and there were several – she was able to let go with both power and passion. The doo-woppy ballad “Somebody Tell Me” has an undeniable charm, but she really hit her stride on her next release. While the Northern side of the Reid/Deep City is nothing to write home about, the flip certainly is. On “Willing And Able” Helene sounds much more mature, getting a good grip on the slow beat, aided by the way Clarence Reid hammers away at the piano and the drummer really slams his bass drum. The horn lines are beautifully set up as well. “I Am Controlled By Your Love” is slightly lighter in tone but still worthwhile.Sides like the dramatic minor keyed “True Love Don’t Grow on Trees”, the superb deep soul of “Wrong Or Right He’s My Baby”, and the funky “You Got To Be A Man” with it’s JB horn line confirmed her growing confidence. The delicate “(Without) Some Kind Of Man”, another song in a minor key, was good too, but her one true masterpiece was the much heralded “A Woman Will Do Wrong”. This has been covered several times – southern fans should know Dee Dee Sharpe’s Atco cut – but the original with Reid’s idiosyncratic piano lines and one of the most delayed backbeats ever to come out of Miami will always be the one I return to.







