Mike Smith (singer-songwriter)
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- For other people by this name, see Michael Smith.
Larry Michael Smith, commonly known as Mike Smith, was born October 3, 1939 and lived in various small towns in Kansas until moving to Hollywood in 1958. Smith first appeared on Decca Records in 1960 with a rockabilly backbeat song, "Sara Ruth" which was written as a joke for a high school friend.
The other side of the record, "Week of Loneliness," had a limited success in the Bay Area of California, and in his adopted home town of Stockton, it was number one. In 1962, Smith had a release on Era Records of "By The Time You Read This Letter" b/w "That's What I'd Do" which were recorded in the Gold Star Studios of Hollywood, the inventors of flanging and phasing.
Smith pursued writing and performing and any opportunity to record. In 1980 one of his compositions, "We Have So Much To Give", was the California State Theme Song for The Council on Aging. During Smith's career he was managed by Abe Olman, Fred Stryker and Prewitt Rose. Smith now lives in Coffeyville, Kansas and continues to write and record.