Frank Joseph Guida (May 26, 1922 â May 19, 2007) was an Italian-American songwriter and independent music producer credited with creating what he dubbed the âÂÂNorfolk Sound." The âÂÂNorfolk Soundâ was an amalgam of GuidaâÂÂs roots in Calypso music, rhythm and blues, novel production techniques, an entirely original double-bass drumbeat, overmodulated party sound, and talented musicians steeped in jazz and rhythm and blues traditions. The distinct sound he created has been credited as influencing such major songwriters and producers as Bruce Springsteen, Phil Spector, The Beatles, and Motown. Two of GuidaâÂÂs hits, âÂÂNew Orleansâ and âÂÂQuarter to Threeâ were favorites of John LennonâÂÂs. GuidaâÂÂs recordings have been used in such films as Mask, Mermaids, Jaded, Chances Are, Clean and Sober, The Fabelmans, and Bikeriders.
Guida was born in Palermo, Sicily on May 26, 1922. At age two, his family immigrated to The Bronx neighborhood of New York City where he grew up. He married his wife, Carmela (âÂÂMillieâÂÂ) in 1942 in New York City prior to his enlistment in the U.S. Army for World War II. He was stationed at Port of Spain, Trinidad, where he became interested in calypso music and performed as the âÂÂCalypso Kidâ in the USO.
After the war, he returned to New York City and continued his singing career performing at calypso clubs in New YorkâÂÂs Harlem neighborhood. The Guidas moved to Norfolk, Virginia in 1953 and opened FrankieâÂÂs Birdland, a popular record store featuring jazz, R&B, and pop music records that became one of the most prominent retailers in the region. Guida also became active in the local music scene promoting and managing musical acts. He had a Friday night radio show on local station WLOW and hosted FrankieâÂÂs Jazz Workshop on WTOV-TV Channel 27.
Not content merely selling records, Guida decided to start making them as well. âÂÂI decided that if I was going to make a success it would have to be by productions that make other people a success,â he told a music historian.
It was a former backing musician for Gene Vincent, Tommy Facenda who performed GuidaâÂÂs first hit with the novelty record âÂÂHigh School USA.â Guida cut twenty-eight different regional versions of the song, each mentioning a different local high school. The gimmick worked and the record made the national Top 30 in November 1959.
The following year Guida bought his own studio and established a cast of regular session men, including tenor saxman Gene âÂÂDaddy Gâ Barge, who would form the backbone of what became known as âÂÂThe Norfolk SoundâÂÂ.
Guida discovered and recorded a Norfolk singer, Gary Anderson, and, noticing a poster urging Americans to buy U.S. bonds, changed the vocalistâÂÂs name to U.S. Bonds as a gimmick to get disk jockeys to play the recording on air. With a song that Guida had co-written with Joseph Royster called âÂÂNew Orleans,â and with a studio technique that created what Professor Terry Pender, technical director of the Columbia University Computer Music Centre, has called âÂÂa strange outdoor sound featuring double-tracked vocals squeezed to the hilt with compressionâÂÂ, Guida was rewarded with a Top 10 hit. âÂÂNew Orleansâ reached #5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the summer of 1960.
Further hits followed. In 1961, Guida had his first #1 hit with âÂÂQuarter to Threeâ by Bonds. âÂÂQuarter to Threeâ is listed by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Museum as one of the 500 songs that shaped rock and roll. That recording was cowritten by Guida, Royster, Barge, and Anderson. Guida and Bonds (Anderson) had several more billboard hits in 1961-1962, including School Is Out, Dear Lady Twist, and Twist, Twist Senora.
Guida again had a #1 hit in 1963 with âÂÂIf You Wanna Be Happyâ co-written by Joe Royster and Guida's wife Millie Guida. In making this record, Guida looked back on his music experience in Trinidad with singer James McLeese (whom he renamed Jimmy Soul).
Following those successes, he continued to record what he termed âÂÂblack popâ by artists such as Lenis Guess, Barbara Redd, and Oliver Christian, who was known as âÂÂthe Soul Cop.âÂÂ
Guida released more than four hundred records on various labels until the 1980s and lived to see his records become pop music standards. SpringsteenâÂÂs interest in the music also helped to rekindle Gary U.S. BondâÂÂs career and many of GuidaâÂÂs productions were reissued on CD in the U.S. and U.K.
Guida also owned a number of record labels, including Legrand and SPQR.
Guida and his wife, Carmela (âÂÂMillieâÂÂ) were married for almost 65 years until his death. Millie also grew up in New York City and graduated from Evander Childs High School. While in school, she attracted the attention of her teachers for her extraordinary singing voice and was strongly encouraged to study voice at New YorkâÂÂs Juilliard School. However, World War II and marriage put her on a different path. Guida and his wife had three children. He died in Virginia Beach, Virginia in 2007.
He was an advocate for the local and national Italian American community, a business leader, and at times an outspoken business representative at NorfolkâÂÂs City Council meetings. For his work in promoting cultural and business ties between the United States and Italy, he was awarded the title of âÂÂCavaliereâ by the Italian Republic, the equivalent of a knighthood.
In addition to Birdland, Guida Also owned a second popular record shop, âÂÂFrankieâÂÂs Got ItâÂÂ, on Granby Street in Norfolk, Virginia from the late 1960âÂÂs to 1989. He is also honored with a star on the âÂÂLegends of Music Walk of Fameâ on Granby Street in downtown Norfolk across the street from the former location of âÂÂFrankieâÂÂs Got It.