Jimmy Norman  was an American 
rhythm and blues and 
jazz musician and a 
songwriter  died he was 74.. In his early career, Norman had a 
charting single of his own, "I Don't Love You No More (I Don't Care About You)", as well as performing 
session work with 
Jimi Hendrix, but he is better known as a 
lyricist and songwriter.
(August 12, 1937 – November 8, 2011) 
He wrote the expanded lyrics of the song "
Time Is on My Side", which became a hit for 
The Rolling Stones,and
 later in 1985 re recorded and produced by Stephen Vanderbilt featuring 
"St. Tropez" as the A side of a 45 released on the album "Home" 
throughout Europe. Norman composed a number of songs performed by 
well-known musicians including 
Johnny Nash and 
Bob Marley. In 1969 he became involved with 
doo-wop band 
The Coasters,
 first as a producer and then as a touring member. He was also recording
 independently, releasing a solo album in 1998, the same year poor 
health forced him to retire from performance. Like many other musicians 
of his time, he was not financially prepared for retirement or heavy 
medical bills, and with few 
royalties for his writing soon found himself in economic crisis. With the assistance of charitable organization 
Jazz Foundation of America, Norman regained his feet and resumed performing, releasing his first wide distribution album in 2004, 
Little Pieces. He performed in the 
Manhattan area until shortly before his death.
 Early life and career
Born August 12, 1937 as 
James Norman Scott in 
Nashville, Tennessee,
[2]
 Norman relocated to California as a teenager, beginning his career as a
 touring musician throughout the Midwest and southern regions of the 
United States before settling in 
New York.
[3][4] There, he wrote music for 
Broadway and performed.
[4]
 In 1962, Norman released his biggest charting single, "I Don't Love You
 No More (I Don't Care About You)", which reached #21 on the 
Billboard "
Black Singles" chart and #47 on the "
Pop Singles" chart.
[5]
 Songwriting and session work
In 1964, singer 
Irma Thomas went into the studio to record the single "Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)". It was decided that the 
b-side, a cover of 
Kai Winding's "
Time Is on My Side",
 needed additional lyrics, since the only words in the original 
composition were "Time is on my side" and "You'll come runnin' back." 
Norman was contacted and composed the rest of the lyrics to the tune.
[6]
 The Rolling Stones also recorded the song with Norman's lyrics and 
released it as a single, which became the band's first hit to break the 
top ten.
[7]
 The Rolling Stones' releases did credit Norman as lyric writer for a 
number of years, but eventually his name was removed; in the early 
1990s, he was told by the publisher that the credit was not legally 
binding, as it had been a "clerical error".
[6]
In 1966, Norman recorded several tracks with 
Jimi Hendrix
 on session at Abtone Studio in New York: "You're Only Hurting 
Yourself", "Little Groovemaker" and "On You Girlie It Looks so Good".
[8][9] The second of these songs was retooled under the title "Groove Maker" and has been included on a number of Hendrix releases.
[10][11] According to 
Black Gold: The Lost Archives of Jimi Hendrix, Norman—not 
Lonnie Youngblood as popularly supposed—was the primary performer besides Hendrix on this song.
[12] Jimi Hendrix – From the Benjamin Franklin Studios 3rd Edition Part 1: The Complete Guide to the Recorded Work of Jimi Hendrix posits Youngblood on 
saxophone, but gives writing credit to Norman.
[8] Jimi Hendrix: Musician
 documents the confusion surrounding this and other Hendrix sessions of 
the time, including the difficulty in tracking contributions when they 
also rose from later manipulation of the material as Hendrix became 
famous.
[13]
 "You're Only Hurting Yourself" and "Little Groovemaker" were first 
released under Norman's name as Samar records single 112 in 1966 and 
never again released in original form.
[13] "On You Girlie It Looks so Good" remains unreleased.
[8]
In 1968, Norman was visited by a young Bob Marley in his 
Bronx
 apartment. Norman had at that time written a number of songs for Johnny
 Nash, whose record label had just signed Marley, and Marley wanted to 
learn more about rhythm and blues.
[14] Along with 
Al Pyfrom,
 Norman's co-writer, and Marley's wife Rita, the pair spent several days
 in a jam session that ultimately resulted in a 24-minute tape of Marley
 performing several of his own and Norman-Pyfrom's compositions. 
According to 
Reggae archivist 
Roger Steffens, the tape—which was lost among Norman's possessions for decades—is rare for Marley in that it was influenced by 
pop music rather than reggae, highlighting a point in Marley's career when he was still trying to find his path.
[14] Some of the songs from this early jam session were released on the Marley album 
Chances Are.
[15]
Following these sessions, Norman went to 
Kingston, Jamaica and spent more than half a year there, working in the studio with Marley and composing songs.
[4][14] A number of his compositions were recorded by Marley, 
Peter Tosh, 
Byron Lee and the Dragonaires, and Neville Willoughby.
[4]
 Some of the tapes recorded by Norman during his sessions with Marley 
have been commercially released as part of the Marley compilation album,
 
Soul Almighty.
[14]
 Coasters years
After producing a single for the doo-wop band The Coasters in 1969 for 
Lloyd Price's Turntable Records, Norman replaced 
Vernon Harrell as the regular substitute (permanently, later on) for 
Billy Guy in the group in the 1970s,
[16] touring with them until forced to retire by ill-health in 1998, the same year his album 
Tobacco Road was released by independent label Bad Cat Records.
[4][14] In interview, Norman cited the limited repertoire, noting that fans of the band were only interested in hearing hits like "
Yakety Yak", "
Charlie Brown" and "
Poison Ivy"; "In 30 years we did maybe 10 songs."
[6] Norman did have opportunity to deviate with other love songs from the 1950s, the era when The Coaster's rose to fame.
[17]
During his time with the Coasters, Norman teamed up with Eddie Palmieri as lead vocalist in the group 
Harlem River Drive, which released a self-titled album in 1971.
 Health and economic crisis
Norman suffered multiple heart attacks and respiratory disease which restricted him, impoverished, to his home in Manhattan.
[3]
 Though he had a successful career that allowed him at one point to own 
several clubs, he did not plan for retirement and, like many composers 
of his time, receives little to no royalties for his compositions.
[3] In 2002, he told 
The Jamaica Observer
 with respect to the songs he wrote that were released by Marley, 
"Periodically, I get chump change, nothing big. A lotta people have been
 making money off of it, not me."
[4]
 Norman attempted to get local work without success and, lacking health 
insurance and investment funds, was near the point of eviction when he 
came to the attention of the Jazz Foundation of America, which helps 
redress what 
The Crisis
 characterizes as the exploitation of "less savvy or uneducated 
performers" by record labels and other more powerful members of the 
music community.
[3][18][19]
 Recovery and death
 
Jimmy Norman records in studio in 2004. Photo by Frank Beacham.
 
 
 
Wendy Oxenhorn, director of the Foundation, arranged for housekeeping
 and free medical care for Norman, as well as helping him plan for his 
future, providing back rent and negotiating with Norman's landlord.
[19]
 In the course of that housekeeping, in July 2002, Norman's rare tape of
 his jam session with Marley was located in his apartment and placed on 
auction, retrieving considerably above its estimated value when 
auctioned at $26,290. During the same housekeeping session, Norman 
rediscovered old notebooks containing his compositions.
[6] Producer 
Kerryn Tolhurst
 recorded Norman performing the songs on a tape recorder in his 
apartment, taking the tapes into the studio later to add parts by other 
musicians.
[6] Judy Collins,
 whose drummer Tony Beard contributed to the project, released the 
resultant album under her own Wildflower label in 2004. The project, 
titled 
Little Pieces, is the first album Norman has ever released with wide distribution.
[6] In 2006, 
Little Pieces won in The 5th Annual 
Independent Music Awards for Best Blues Album.
[20]
In the 2000s, Norman has performed live. In 2003, he performed a benefit concert for the Jazz Foundation at the 
Gilsey House in New York.
[21] In 2007, he took part in the Jazz Foundation's annual "Great Night in Harlem", performing "Time Is on My Side".
[22] As of 2007, Norman was performing locally in Manhattan.
[19]
Norman died on November 8, 2011, in New York City after a long 
illness. He had held his last public performance on October 29, 2011, 
for the Jazz Foundation of America.
[23] Married three times, he was the father of two children.
[3][4]
 Discography
 Chart singles
| Year | Single | Chart Positions | 
| US Pop[24] | US R&B[25]
 | 
| 1962 | "I Don't Love You No More (I Don't Care About You)" | 47 | 21 | 
| 1966 | "Can You Blame Me" | - | 35 | 
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