Jerrold Laurence Samuels (May 3, 1938 – March 10, 2023) was an American singer, songwriter, record producer, and talent agent.[1] Under the pseudonym Napoleon XIV, he achieved one-hit wonder status with the #3hitnovelty song "They're Coming to Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!" in 1966.[1] Samuels occasionally revisited the Napoleon XIV character to record other songs, usually comedy records with an insanity theme.
Jerrold Laurence Samuels was born in Manhattan and was raised in the Bronx.[2] He played the piano and wrote music throughout his childhood, and began his recording career in 1956 when he cut the single "Puppy Love" for the Vik Records subsidiary of RCA Victor Records.[2][3]
Samuels was an acclaimed songwriter during the early 1960s. Under the name Scott David (his son's name), he cowrote "As If I Didn't Know" with Larry Kusik, a top-10 hit for Adam Wade in 1961. Samuels also wrote "The Shelter of Your Arms", a top-20 hit for Sammy Davis Jr. in 1964.
The success of the single inspired a Warner Bros. album of the same name in 1966 (reissued by Rhino in 1985), most of which continued the mental illness theme, for example: "Bats in My Belfry" and "I Live in a Split Level Head", the latter of which features different vocal parts in each stereo speaker.[1] A second single of two recordings from that album went relatively unnoticed. His manager was Leonard Stogel.
In the following years, Samuels would occasionally revisit the Napoleon XIV character to record other songs, usually comedy records with an insanity theme.
His songs were often played on Dr. Demento's radio show.
Later career
In his later years, Samuels worked as a singer and agent who booked various performers in the Delaware Valley.[2] In 1984, he founded the Jerry Samuels Agency, and later operated it with his second wife, Bobbie. They retired in 2021.[2]
In February 2022, Needlejuice Records teased the release of "an album that's 50 years old".[5] The following year, they revealed that it was Samuels' long-lost second studio album, For God's Sake, Stop the Feces![6] The album was recorded between April 1968 and December 1970, but was rejected by Warner Bros. due to its macabre content; notably, the eighth track, "Rape", which provides a detailed account of a sexual assault, and the fourteenth, "The Note", which portrays a man writing a suicide note. Stop the Feces was released on April 20, 2023, one month after Samuels died.
Personal life
Samuels was married twice: first to Rosemary Djivre, divorcing in 1968, and then to Bobbie Simon from 1996 until his death. He was also in a relationship with Petra Vesters from 1973 to 1987. He had a son from his first marriage and another from his relationship with Vesters. Another son predeceased him.[2] Samuels was a longtime resident of the Oxford Circle neighborhood of Philadelphia, though he moved to an assisted living facility in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, after retiring.[2][7]