Sammy Salvo

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Sammy Salvo (born George Anselmo in 1937 in Birmingham) was a pop and rock and roll crooner who recorded in the late 1950s.

Salvo got his break performing for disc jockey Joe Rumore on tours around the state and in radio advertisements for Golden Eagle Syrup and Sunbeam Bread. He recorded two of his own compositions, "One Little Baby" and "Lonely Dreamer" in Rumore's basement recording studio which were released on the local Mark V label. He and his brother shopped the .45s to record shops around the South and, through Rumore's connection, played a demo for Chet Atkins in Nashville. Atkins liked the record, but had a full stable at the time. When word got around that one of his records had sold 10,000 copies in Houston, Atkins called him back to sign a record deal with RCA Victor.

Salvo re-recorded his earlier songs in Nashville, as well as covers of the Crescendos "Oh Julie" and Wayne Handy's "Say Yeah", which ended up being his biggest hits. He performed "She Takes Sun Baths" on Dick Clark's American Bandstand and treated himself to a new Thunderbird at Jim Skinner Ford. On tour, Salvo fit the mold of popular singer Bobby Darin and drove around with a trunk-load of fan letters from admiring girls. One of them, Carol Park, inspired the song "Don’t Cast Your Spell on Me" (originally intended for Fats Domino to record). Despite the lyric's plea, he married Park in 1961.

After fulfilling his RCA contract, Salvo recorded for the Imperial, Dot, and Hickory labels. He performed his own compositions as well as songs by David Gates, Hank Williams, Roy Orbison. Meanwhile other performers, such as Jimmy Newman, made successful records from Salvo's compositions.

After leaving behind his music career, Salvo and his brother George opened SRA Foods which supplies meat to barbecue restaurants.

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