Mel Street
Quick Facts
Biography
King Malachi "Mel" Street (October 21, 1933 – October 21, 1978) was an American country music singer who had 13 top-20 hits on the Billboard country charts.
Biography
Street was born October 21, 1933 near Grundy, Virginia. Publications cite his year of birthas 1933, although his family maintains that he was born in 1935 and his gravestone gives the year as 1936. He began performing on western Virginia and West Virginia radio shows at the age of sixteen. Street subsequently worked as a radio tower electrician in Ohio and as a nightclub performer in the Niagara Falls, New York area. He moved back to West Virginia in 1963 to open an auto body shop.
From 1968 to 1972, Street hosted a show on a Bluefield, West Virginia television station. He recorded his first single, "Borrowed Angel" -- which he also wrote -- in 1970 for a small regional record label. A larger label, Royal American Records, picked it up in 1972 and it became a top-10 Billboard hit. He recorded the biggest hit of his career, "Lovin' onBack Streets", in 1972.
Street's last television appearance was in 1977. He performed his 1976 hit "I Met A Friend Of Yours Today" on That Good Ole Nashville Music.
Street recorded several hits in the mid-1970s, such as "You Make Me Feel More Like a Man," "Forbidden Angel," "I Met a Friend of Yours Today," "If I Had a Cheatin' Heart," and "Smokey Mountain Memories". He signed with Mercury Records in 1978, but suffering fromclinical depression and alcoholism, he killed himself by a self-inflicted gunshot on October 21, 1978, his 45th birthday. He had a record debut on the country charts on October 21 as well, called "Just Hangin' On", and later charted four posthumous songs.Street's idol George Jones sang at his funeral.
Discography
Albums
Year | Album | Label | |
---|---|---|---|
1972 | Borrowed Angel | 14 | Metromedia Country |
1973 | The Town Where You Live / Walk Softly On the Bridges | 37 | |
1974 | Two Way Street | 37 | GRT |
1975 | Smokey Mountain Memories | 16 | |
1976 | Mel Street's Greatest Hits | 26 | |
Country Colors | — | ||
1977 | Mel Street | 45 | Polydor |
1978 | Country Soul | 47 | |
Mel Street | — | Mercury | |
1980 | Many Moods of Mel | 61 | Sunbird |
Singles
Year | Single | Chart Positions | Album | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1972 | "Borrowed Angel" | 7 | 9 | Borrowed Angel |
"Lovin' On Back Streets" | 5 | 8 | ||
1973 | "Walk Softly On the Bridges" | 11 | 6 | The Town Where You Live / Walk Softly On the Bridges |
"The Town Where You Live" | 38 | 58 | ||
"Lovin' On Borrowed Time" | 11 | 7 | Two Way Street | |
1974 | "You Make Me Feel More Like a Man" | 15 | — | |
"Forbidden Angel" | 16 | 47 | Smokey Mountain Memories | |
1975 | "Smokey Mountain Memories" | 13 | 43 | |
"Even If I Have to Steal" | 17 | 17 | ||
"(This Ain't Just Another) Lust Affair" | 23 | — | ||
1976 | "The Devil in Your Kisses (And the Angel in Your Eyes)" | 32 | — | Mel Street's Greatest Hits |
"I Met a Friend of Your's Today" | 10 | — | Country Colors | |
"Looking Out My Window Through the Pain" | 24 | — | ||
1977 | "Rodeo Bum" | 56 | — | |
"Barbara Don't Let Me Be the Last to Know" | 19 | — | Mel Street (1977) | |
"Close Enough for Lonesome" | 15 | — | ||
1978 | "If I Had a Cheating Heart" | 9 | — | Country Soul |
"Shady Rest" | 24 | — | ||
"Just Hangin' On" | 68 | — | Mel Street | |
1979 | "The One Thing My Lady Never Puts Into Words" | 17 | — | Many Moods of Mel |
1980 | "Tonight Let's Sleep On It Baby" | 30 | — | |
"Who'll Turn Out the Lights" | 36 | — | ||
1981 | "Slip Away" | 48 | — |
Footnotes
- ^ "October 21, 1935: Country Musician Mel Street Born in Virginia". West Virginia Public Broadcasting. October 21, 2019. Retrieved March 7, 2020.
- ^ Nelson, Dick (August 27, 2017). "Sunday Morning Country Classic Spotlight to Feature Mel Street". 98.1 Minnesota's New Country. Retrieved March 7, 2020.
- ^ Schuler and Delp 2002, p. 23.
- ^ "Mel Street - Grave of a Famous Person". Waymarking.com. The Social Security Death Index also shows 1936.
- ^ Schuler and Delp 2002, p. 46.
- ^ Schuler and Delp 2002, p. 51.
- ^ Schuler and Delp 2002, p. 243.