The Daily Telegraph

April Stevens

Singer who took Deep Purple to the top of the American charts

-

APRIL STEVENS, who has died aged 93, was a singer whose career was dominated by one song, the sentimenta­l 1930s jazz standard Deep Purple, with which she topped the US charts in 1963 with her brother, Nino Tempo.

It had been covered by a panoply of artists, from Bing Crosby to Screamin’ Jay Hawkins – and even the avant-garde jazz great Sun Ra – but it was the two siblings who took it to No 1 in the US the week before the assassinat­ion of President John F Kennedy. It went on to sell more than a million copies and won the pair a Grammy.

She was born Caroline Vincinette Lotiempo on April 29 1929 at Niagara Falls, New York, to the Italian immigrants Samuel, a grocer, and Anna, née Donia. Her brother Antonino followed in 1935, and he was the first to make inroads into show business, singing with the Benny Goodman Orchestra before he was 10.

The family moved to Los Angeles to further his ambitions – he went on to play saxophone for acts such as Bobby Darin – and she attended Belmont High School before establishi­ng her own musical career.

Taking the stage name of April Stevens, she had a string of releases in the 1950s, taking Cole Porter’s

I’m in Love Again into the Top 10 in 1951. Later in the decade came Teach Me Tiger (co-written by Nino), whose mildly suggestive lyric and

Je t’aime-style heavy breathing saw it spurned by most radio stations – though in 1983 it was used by Nasa to wake up astronauts on the space shuttle.

Brother and sister formed a double act, and hit upon

Deep Purple, published in 1933 as a piano instrument­al written by Peter Derose. Sheet-music sales were so strong that in 1938 Mitchell Parish added a lyric, and Bing Crosby and Jimmy Dorsey were among the first of many to have hits with it. In 1957 the Dominoes transforme­d it into a doo-wop classic, then in 1975 Donny and Marie Osmond took their cover into the Top 20 on both sides of the Atlantic.

April Stevens and Nino Tempo recorded their version, with its shuffling, laidback beat overlaid by gentle harmonica, in 14 minutes at the end of a recording session with the Atlantic supremo Ahmet Ertegun (who had signed them to his Atco label), with April softly speaking the lyric in the second half, echoed in falsetto by her brother.

It was intended as the B-side of I’ve Been Carrying a Torch for You So Long That it Burned a Great Big Hole in My Heart but was promoted when DJS began playing it instead (the new flip-side would go on to claim the niche distinctio­n of being the longest B-side title to reach No 1 in the US). Ertegun, though, was unimpresse­d, telling the duo that he and his partners rated it as “the worst record you’ve ever made”.

John Lennon, for one, seemed to disagree, as April Stevens recalled of meeting him in the studio: “I was so excited I was tripping over myself... As he walked up to me, he started to sing my harmony part to Deep Purple. I really flipped.”

The song’s title found fame beyond its jazz-ballad confines thanks to Ritchie Blackmore’s grandmothe­r, who loved it and would play it on the piano during his childhood. When the lad grew up and became a guitarist he nabbed the title for the name of his new heavy-rock band.

The siblings toured extensivel­y and had a few more minor hits – April’s 1967 single Wanting You

went on to become a Northern Soul classic – but were never able to emulate the success of Deep Purple.

While Nino Tempo went on to resume his career as a jazz saxophonis­t, April Stevens wound hers down. In 2013 she published a memoir, Teach Me Tiger.

April Stevens married, in 1985, William Perlman; he survives her with two stepsons. Nino Tempo also survives her.

April Stevens, born April 29 1929, died April 17 2023

 ?? ?? Formed a double act with her brother
Formed a double act with her brother

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom