Composer,
lyricist and accomplished pianist, Walter Smith first published in 1914. Songs like
Dreamy Moon, While the Incense is Burning and Don't
Sing Aloha When I Go built a steady fan base. Smith
was hot, pumping out hit tunes and
selling them to publishers like Villa Moret, Sherman Clay and Daniels
&
Wilson. Sheet music, piano rolls and
records containing songs written by Smith were top sellers. His career was at its peak in the late teens
and twenties with ongoing club appearances at the piano performing his
own
music. Fans followed him from one engagement to the next, from the
Palace to
the Cliff House, from the Fairmont
and the St. Francis to dives and speakeasies on the Barbary
Coast. He was a radio
show regular on stations KJBS
and KFWI in San Francisco
in the
middle and late 1920s. He often played
fill-in for name bands. Glen Miller
asked Smith to join him on a road tour in the early 1930s.
Although he steadfastly refused to go on the
road, he remained a local celebrity. He
wrote and copyrighted well over 200 songs, most during his early years
with
more than 70 known to be in publication and available today. He also published a book in 1922 titled The
Walter Smith Course of Jazz Piano Playing in Eight Lessons.

Born
on January 16,
1885,
Walter Smith was a second generation native of San Francisco. His mother, Rachel Reuben, was born to
middle-class Jewish immigrants. She
studied music, mastering the harp. His father, Josef
Vlad
Seibert, a Russian immigrant, gained his US
citizenship via the 1867 Alaska Purchase Treaty. Seibert
took the name William Smith when he
obtained U.S.
citizenship.
Smith
studied music as a child and learned the piano under his mother's
tutelage. Music was an integral part of
their family. His older brother Benjamin
went on to play violin in orchestras and symphonies from San Francisco to New York while
brother Arthur played the Base
Trombone locally. Their mother died in
1899 when Smith was fourteen. On the
death of their mother, Walter and his younger brother Arthur boarded at
Bishop Scott Academy
in Portland. They attended the academy for two years
before returning home to San Francisco. By then, his father had quit his job and
wanted his son Walter to work the mines with him in the Tehachapi area,
digging
for gold. To encourage him, the senior
Smith gave his son Walter title to a productive claim but Walter’s only
interest was music. He deserted the mine
and his father, playing piano in bars and taverns at the age of 18. His skills kept him employed and allowed him
to begin composing music and writing lyrics.

Smith
married Ruth Elizabeth Coats, a California
native of Scotch-Irish descent in 1916. A
tavern in Alviso near San
Jose
offered steady engagements and Miss Coats had followed him there from San
Francisco. She
was 19; Smith was 31. Her sisters
berated her for the remainder of her life for marrying Smith, a Jew,
but she
adored him until her death. Their one
child, Robert William Smith, was born October 22, 1922 in San
Francisco.

The
depression took its toll on Smith as a writer.
He remained prolific but the market of the `30s
& `40s was
hard. He sold songs to publishers who
released them under the names of other authors who were selling well. Needless to say, he received no royalties on
those. He taught piano at San Francisco
State College under the WPA. Though
never impoverished, the good times were over.

By
1950 his name was forgotten and membership in ASCAP eluded him. Smith was unable to find anyone who would
publish his songs. He took on the nom de
plume of Josef V. Seibert, his father's name prior to becoming a
citizen. His last known published piece
was Some Fine Morning, released in 1952 by
Cowboy Copas. That song was moderately
successful and still draws small royalties.

Smith
developed the
shakes in the early 1950s making it tough to get engagements. Though not formally diagnosed, one
doctor
told him he had Parkinson’s disease. It
grew progressively worse through his later years. By
the early 1960s, he could barely play the
piano. He still maintained a few friends
and followers. Sometimes he tutored
music students. Smith wrote the campaign
song for San Francisco Mayor George Christopher, Let George Do It,
but
by then, his career was over. He died on March 31, 1968
of colon cancer in the city of San Francisco, 20 days
after his
son Robert died of lung cancer. Ruth,
his wife died the following year.
Walter
Smith left the rights to his music to his grandchildren; a legacy per
his
claims. While out of date and producing
few royalties, Smith was right.