Billy Myles

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William Myles Nobles, known as Billy Myles, is an award-winning American R&B songwriter active in the 1950s and 1960s. He is best known for "(You Were Made for) All My Love" recorded by Jackie Wilson (1960), and "Have You Ever Loved A Woman" recorded by Freddie King (1960), then Eric Clapton.

[edit] History

Billy Myles specialised in love ballads (sometimes in the doo-wop style) and 'Uptown Blues' songs, occasionally co-writing with vocalists such as Jackie Wilson and Brook Benton. Artists who recorded his songs include Wilson, Benton, Little Willie John, Freddie King and Gladys Knight. He has over 170 works registered with the collecting society BMI.

Myles is sometimes classified as a one hit wonder: he recorded a handful of singles for labels Ember, Dot and King, but only one made any impact. "The Joker (That's What They Call Me)" charted in the U.S. and Canada (US Pop #25, R&B #13) in 1957. He was working as a staff songwriter for Al Silver's New York City-based Herald/Ember labels, Silver thought the song wasn't suitable for doo-wop act The Mello-Kings and issued Myles' own recording. The success of the single led to Myles appearing on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1958 (alongside Buddy Holly), and the 1959 UK film Swing Beat with labelmates The Mello-Kings and The Five Satins.

Blues guitar maestro Freddie King recorded Myles "Have You Ever Loved A Woman" in 1960, and King aficionado Eric Clapton covered the track on Derek and the Dominoes' album Layla and Other Assorted Love Songs (1970). This album is highly regarded in Clapton's catalogue and classic rock in general, with Myles' song, like the title song "Layla", having a biographical resonance with Clapton's unrequited love for Patti Harrison.

Billy Myles lived in Greenville, North Carolina and managed his music publishing company Selbonn Music Inc. ('Nobles' spelled backwards) until his death in October 2004. The music publishing is now managed by his son Steven Myles Nobles. www.selbon.com

[edit] Selective discography of Myles' compositions

[edit] References