Billy Paul, the singer, who has died aged 81, was best known for Me and Mrs Jones (1972), the sultry and heart-rending "Philadelphia Soul" love song which describes the pangs of a man having an extra-marital affair with a married woman; the track was Paul's only No 1, but his achingly smooth and faintly lisping rendition has endured for decades.
He was born Paul Williams in North Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1934. His childhood was steeped in music and his naturally high voice and adaptable vocal range meant that he had a particular affinity for female soul and jazz singers. "They just did more with their voices," he later explained, "and that's why I paid more attention to them."
Educated at the West Philadelphia Music School and the Granoff School of Music, by the time Paul was 16 he was performing at the ritzy West Philadelphia jazz hotspot Club Harlem, where he appeared on the same bill as Charlie Parker, a year before Parker's death.
After changing his name to Billy Paul, he was soon being booked for regular club appearances and concert performances on the Philadelphia music scene. In 1952 he recorded his first single, Why Am I, in New York, described by Billboard magazine as the "expressive warbling of a moody ballad, by the label's new 16-year-old chanter".
Paul recorded several more discs before being drafted, in 1957, into the US Army, where he served alongside Elvis Presley in Germany and performed with the 7th Army Band. In 1959, after being discharged, he returned to the music scene and had a spell in the ever-changing line-up of Harold Melvin's popular Philadelphia soul group, the Blue Notes. During this time, Paul met and befriended Marvin Gaye, who was also working as a jobbing singer with the emerging soul groups.