Allan Smethurst


Allan Francis Smethurst, aka The Singing Postman was an English folk singer and postman. He is best known for his self-penned novelty song, "Hev Yew Gotta Loight, Boy?", which earned him an Ivor Novello Award in 1966, and "A Miss from Diss". The Guardian dubbed him a "bookishly melancholy folk-satirist".

Life and career

Born in Walshaw, near Bury, Lancashire, England, the son of Allan and Gladys Mabel, Smethurst was raised in Sheringham, Norfolk from the age of 11. His mother came from the nearby village of Stiffkey. He became a postman in Lavenham, Suffolk, in 1953, and later in Grimsby.
Smethurst hummed tunes on his daily post round for twelve years, writing and singing songs in his native Norfolk dialect. An audition tape sent to a BBC regional radio programme earned him a spot on Ralph Tuck's BBC Radio Norfolk show Wednesday Morning, and Tuck recorded Smethurst on his own record label, The Smallest Recording Organisation in the World, based in Lowestoft. A four track EP made the EP charts in 1965 and, after another EP release by Ralph Tuck, and an album The Singing Postman's Year, he was signed to EMI who re-released earlier songs and recorded new items. He made numerous live and promotional performances, including on Top of the Pops, but was afflicted by nerves and stage fright. His live performances included a summer season in 1965 at the Windmill Theatre in Great Yarmouth.
In 1966, the Singing Postman's best known hit "Hev Yew Gotta Loight, Boy?" won Smethurst the Ivor Novello Award for best novelty song of the year. Rolf Harris recorded a cover version without success. The song had a small comeback in 1994, when it was featured on a television commercial for Ovaltine.
Smethurst left the music industry in 1970, later admitting he had an alcohol problem and that he had spent all of his money and was penniless. He spent his last twenty years living quietly in a Salvation Army hostel in Grimsby, where he died from a heart attack in December 2000.
In September 2010, a BBC Radio 4 programme, "In Search of the Singing Postman", was broadcast which was written and presented by D. J. Taylor.

Discography

Albums